黑料视频 The 黑料视频, the state鈥檚 largest union, harnesses the collective power of teachers, education support professionals, higher education faculty and staff, students and retirees. Thu, 11 Jun 2026 13:41:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2024/03/iea-circle-logo-100x100.png 黑料视频 32 32 IEA president urges Gov. JB Pritzker to reject federal voucher plan /2026/06/11/iea-president-urges-gov-jb-pritzker-to-reject-federal-voucher-plan/ Thu, 11 Jun 2026 13:41:40 +0000 /?p=63352 SPRINGFIELD听鈥撎诹鲜悠 President听Karl Goeke joined Illinois Federation of Teachers President Stacy Davis Gates, and many other union presidents and educators across the country,听in a letter听urging Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and other Democratic governors to reject a federal voucher plan.

Students, parents, and educators are counting on Pritzker and other governors to protect public education.

鈥淎s it stands now, more than 60 percent of public schools are underfunded in Illinois. The federal plan, much like Illinois鈥 recently lapsed 鈥淚nvest in Kids鈥 program, takes tax dollars away from public schools and gives that money to private schools. In Illinois, it drained up to $75 million in state money from schools that educate 90 percent of our students. Our public schools are engines of opportunity, community focal points, and places where every child is welcome to grow and thrive,鈥 Goeke said.

In Illinois, we learned that vouchers:

  • Benefit more white students than students of color;
  • Fund schools that are not subject to the same testing standards as those in public schools
  • Do not hold private school teachers to the same professional standards as those in public schools;
  • Fail to show how many students actually switched from public schools to private schools, or whether public money funded students who had been in private schools all along;
    Sent public money to private schools, which听can and听DO discriminate based on physical or emotional special needs, gender identity issues, moral听values听and religion.

IEA knows from its own bipartisan polling that 69 percent of residents in Illinois support increasing funding to public schools in Illinois and that 85 percent believe ALL students are entitled to a public education.

鈥淧ublic money should stay in public schools. We鈥檝e already walked this path in Illinois and we learned that vouchers are a scheme and a scam. Education is the great equalizer for the youth in our state. We owe our children — no matter where they live, the color of their skin, how much money their parents earn — the best we can possibly give them. Vouchers do the exact opposite. We鈥檝e already learned this lesson. Let鈥檚 not repeat it,鈥 Goeke said.

Davis Gates agreed, saying this is a test and Pritzker should strive to earn an 鈥淎.鈥

鈥淒emocratic governors are being handed a test right now. Will you stand up for public school students or will you help Donald Trump normalize a voucher scheme that Illinois has already rejected? The Democratic Party platform opposes vouchers, our governors should, too,鈥 said Davis Gates. 鈥淭he Illinois General Assembly already said no to vouchers because they funded discrimination and diverted $315 million from our state鈥檚 General Revenue Fund to fund private schools. Now Trump is repackaging the same failed experiment as a federal tax credit, and Democratic governors across the country are being asked to give it a stamp of approval. Every governor who opts in colludes with Donald Trump at the expense of their own public schools. Illinois should not be one of them. The Governor owes our students $6 billion from Pre-K to PhD. Illinois should be making good on what it owes our students, not considering a program that will take even more resources away from them.鈥

Goeke said the governor鈥檚 rejection can send a powerful statement to all Illinois students and families by saying 鈥渘o.鈥

鈥淭his is a moment to lead, once again, like you have on the statewide ban on book bans, free universal mental health screenings and expanded pre-school, and prove to our students and their families that you have their backs. Be like the governors of Wisconsin, Kentucky, Minnesota and Arizona and reject vouchers,鈥 he said.

Proponents contend that this is 鈥渇ree money鈥 for states. That’s not true. While the tax credit is federally funded, participation carries real and predictable fiscal risks for states and local school districts. Because public education funding is tied to enrollment, if vouchers incentivize some students to leave public schools, that will mean losing vital funding while leaving behind fixed costs 鈥 threatening key programs and school personnel needed to adequately support our students.

Vouchers are unpopular with voters across political parties and threaten the stability of the state budget and the strength of public schools. They harm the vast majority of students who continue to rely on public education. Those harms are particularly acute in rural areas, where public schools serve outsized roles as employers, community focal points, healthcare providers to children and adults, shelters in emergencies, and a major source of pride. The future shouldn鈥檛 be gambled on promises made by an unpredictable and unreliable administration. Rejecting the Trump administration鈥檚 voucher program preserves state and local budget predictability and protects the future of public education for Illinois鈥檚 students, families, and communities.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Legislative update for June 1, 2026 /2026/06/01/legislative-update/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 21:53:20 +0000 /?p=63325

IEA Government Relations Director Sean Denney

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Notice to Remedy bill passes both chambers, heads to governor鈥檚 desk /2026/05/21/notice-to-remedy-bill-passes-both-chambers-heads-to-governors-desk/ Thu, 21 May 2026 13:12:31 +0000 /?p=63279 SPRINGFIELDThe 黑料视频鈥檚 legislation on Notice to Remedy,鈥疭enate Bill 2914,鈥痶oday passed out of the Illinois鈥疕ouse of Representatives. It passed the Illinois鈥疭enate鈥痠n鈥疉pril,鈥痑nd鈥痓oth chambers passed the bill with veto-proof majorities. It now awaits Gov. JB Pritzker鈥檚 signature to become law.

The following statement is attributable to IEA President Karl Goeke:

鈥淭he bill came about through a direct request from our鈥痬embership, and鈥痠s a huge win for educators all over Illinois. As soon as this bill becomes law,鈥痶eachers鈥痑nd school鈥痵taff鈥痺ho are wrongfully鈥痑ccused,鈥痺ill no longer have to worry about false accusations following them throughout their careers.鈥疧ur school workers will now be ensured a fair, due process when accused of any wrongdoing.鈥疻e are so grateful to the bill鈥檚 sponsors, Sen. Meg Loughran鈥疌appel and Rep. Anna Moeller, who have been working with us on this legislation for years.鈥疻e are looking鈥痜orward to Gov. JB Pritzker signing this bill into law.鈥

For more information and background on the bill,鈥click here.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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IEA calls out school management groups鈥 disinformation campaign, attempt to keep false accusations in educators鈥 permanent records /2026/05/12/iea-calls-out-school-management-groups-disinformation-campaign-attempt-to-keep-false-accusations-in-educators-permanent-records/ Tue, 12 May 2026 20:15:09 +0000 /?p=63255 SPRINGFIELD听鈥撎齌he听黑料视频听(IEA)听is working to pass Senate Bill 2914 this session, a bill that would put an end to a long-time practice of school administrators keeping accusations听that have been proven false听in an educator鈥檚 employment record.

IEA seeks safe public schools for every student and every school employee and supports accountability for misconduct. This bill includes a right to challenge issuance of the warning, or allegations in the warning, to the school board and allows the facts to be reviewed by a non-biased third party, if necessary.

School management associations, including the Illinois Association of School Boards, Illinois Association of School Administrators, Large Unit District Association, Illinois Principals Association and others have launched a disinformation campaign against the bill.

鈥淭hink about this: School management is fighting to keep false accusations against educators in their permanent employment record. No wonder we have a teacher shortage. No teacher deserves their career and reputation taken from them based on unsubstantiated, faulty claims,鈥 said IEA President Karl Goeke.

The bill does the following:

  • Seeks to ensure that when a Notice to Remedy is used, the allegations included in the warning are factual and substantiated. It does NOT change current practice in issuing a warning or limiting management鈥檚 decision-making authority on addressing misconduct.
  • Keeps students safe. These warnings are issued for behavior that is considered 鈥渞emedial,鈥 and are not intended as an avenue to address misconduct that impacts student safety. If misconduct rises to the level of student safety, it is NOT impacted by this bill.
  • Allows a non-biased third party to assess the allegation to prevent frivolous cases and hold everyone accountable. Arbitration is not the goal, but is necessary when a warning cannot be supported by fact. The cost of the arbitrator will be split between the union and the district and NOT on the district alone.

鈥淲e ask lawmakers to support this bill, which applies a reasonable application of due process,鈥 Goeke said. 鈥淓very school employee should be given a right to challenge the issuance of a warning or an allegation with their own school board. And, if necessary, to have an unbiased, trained third party review the claims. If deemed not credible, those false accusations should not follow a person for their career. That鈥檚 patently unfair.鈥

The bill passed out of a House committee last week on a 7-2 vote. It is awaiting听a vote听on the House floor.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Evanston educators opposed to cuts to childcare program /2026/05/04/evanston-educators-opposed-to-cuts-to-childcare-program/ Mon, 04 May 2026 14:52:54 +0000 /?p=63233 MEDIA ADVISORY: Evanston educators and staff to attend Evanston Community Consolidated School District 65听Board of Education meeting and deliver letter detailing staunch opposition to District 65 administrators鈥 plan to eliminate the School Aged Child Care (SACC) program for students.

WHO: Members of a coalition of five local unions: District 65 Educators鈥 Council (DEC), Evanston Teachers鈥 Assistant Association (ETAA), Evanston Association of Childcare Professionals (EACCP), District 65 Educational Secretarial and Clerical Association (DESCA) and Evanston Custodial Maintenance Association (ECMA)

WHEN:听Mon., May 4, 5 p.m.

WHERE: Board Room at Joseph E. Hill Education Center (1500 McDaniel Ave., Evanston)

NOTE:听 The SACC program is not just an auxiliary service. It is a vital, deeply integrated part of our school community. Its closure will directly impact more than 350 school-aged children, effectively displacing what amounts to an entire school population. Beyond the numbers, this decision disrupts families, undermines student support systems, and weakens the very fabric of our district.

Read the full letter from the coalition of unions here.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Rockford School District violates law by not adequately staffing Hispanic students鈥 classrooms /2026/04/15/rockford-school-district-violates-law-by-not-adequately-staffing-hispanic-students-classrooms/ Wed, 15 Apr 2026 16:40:32 +0000 /?p=63167 ROCKFORD听鈥撎齌his week,听the听Rockford Education Association (REA)听will听file an unfair labor practice (ULP) against the Rockford Public School听(RPS) District 205.听RPS is knowingly ignoring an Illinois law when it comes to class听sizes听for听mostly听Hispanic,听bilingual听students. In addition to overcrowding听Hispanic听student classrooms, the district is also failing to fairly compensate听educators听for听additional students.

The REA has two听pending听grievances against the district. The first听regarding classroom conditions听and overcrowding听for dual language learners. The second focuses on听compensation issues听for听educators听with听larger听class sizes.听The听REA is now filing a ULP听in regard to听the听first听grievance.听And,听Tuesday听night, the听REA executive committee voted to听send the听second听grievance to听arbitration.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 happening here is just wrong. Our students deserve better than this. There鈥檚 a law听in a place for a reason. It鈥檚 to make sure all our students, no matter the color of their skin or what language they speak, have equitable learning conditions and the same access to the high-quality education their peers are receiving,鈥 REA President Claudia Marshall said.

State听law requires districts听to听maintain听bilingual class听sizes that are no more than听90% of the average size of the monolingual class听sizes for each building grade level.

鈥淚t鈥檚听really crazy听that we听have to听go to these lengths to get the school district to support all our students, as they鈥檙e required to do by law.听On top of that, they鈥檙e violating our new contract they just agreed to a month ago. The ink isn鈥檛 even dry on this thing,听and they鈥檙e already blatantly ignoring it,鈥 Marshall said.听鈥淭hey鈥檙e telling the community they don鈥檛 care about听our Hispanic students;听they don鈥檛 care about our parents and community members;听and they certainly don鈥檛 care about our teachers.鈥

REA鈥檚 contract language states听bilingual classroom teachers should be paid based on the number of students assigned to their classrooms. However, the district is attempting to pay educators based on student attendance.

鈥淥ur teachers are preparing听their lessons for the number of students in their class, not the number of students that show up that day.听Regardless of how many students are sick, our educators are still doing the work to make sure all students are accounted for.听Their pay shouldn鈥檛 be docked because a student is sick.听In fact, it鈥檚 actually more work when a student is absent because the teacher then has to make sure that student gets caught up,鈥 Marshall said.

REA represents nearly 2,000 teachers, social workers, counselors, speech pathologists, nurses, psychologists and other licensed staff working and supporting nearly 28,000 students in听RPS.

The ULP will be filed with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board (IELRB) this week.听More details will be forthcoming.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Unemployment Equity Act Passes House Labor and Commerce Committee /2026/03/25/unemployment-equity-act-passes-house-labor-and-commerce-committee/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 23:21:03 +0000 /?p=63091 SPRINGFIELD 鈥 , the Unemployment Equity Act sponsored by Assistant Majority Leader Marcus C. Evans Jr. (D-33), passed the House Labor Committee. This is a critical step forward in ensuring frontline, public education workers are eligible to receive unemployment when school is not in session.

鈥淭he Unemployment Equity Act is about fairness and justice for all workers by ending the practice of treating one class of workers as less deserving,鈥 said听Pat Devaney, Secretary-Treasurer of the Illinois AFL-CIO.听鈥淭hese non-instructional workers are on the front lines every day鈥攇etting our kids to school, making sure they have a hot meal at lunch, and keeping classrooms clean and safe. Yet each summer, they are forced to scrape together pennies to get by because they don鈥檛 have the unemployment insurance safety net like other workers who are out of work through no fault of their own.鈥

Hundreds of members and leaders of the Illinois AFL-CIO, AFSCME Council 31, 黑料视频, Illinois Federation of Teachers, Chicago Teachers Union 1 and SEIU Local 73, rallied in support of the legislation earlier today.

鈥淥ur thanks to Representative Evans and Senator Villivilam for their leadership on this important legislation,鈥 said Dian Palmer, President of SEIU Local 73.听鈥淎s the union representing more than 15,000 school support staff workers in Chicago and throughout Illinois, this bill is critical to the wellbeing of our members and their families.鈥

Every summer, thousands of support staff in Illinois public schools and universities are left without a paycheck and access to unemployment insurance. Providing unemployment during the summer months to these employees creates parity with workers doing the exact same work in the private sector.

鈥淪upport staff are the backbones of our schools, often overlooked, but always providing stability. They are the first to arrive and the last to leave. It is time to treat them fairly and equitably by allowing them access to unemployment benefits in the summer months,鈥 said Karl Goeke, President of the 黑料视频. 鈥淵ear-round pay allows support staff to return to their same schools and students every year. Having a stable workforce in schools helps students perform better, preserves institutional knowledge, builds stronger relationships and better schools.鈥

Support staff eligible include school bus drivers, special education classroom assistants, paraprofessionals, lunchroom workers, security guards, janitors, crossing guards and all others in a supportive role in our public schools and universities.

“Our work is essential, and we deserve basic support. Yet while we are scraping together pennies to survive, billionaires in this state are using their untaxed wealth to buy influence and shape our elections,鈥 remarked Megan Accardo, a paraprofessional and member of Grayslake Federation of Paraprofessionals and School Personnel, IFT Local 504.听鈥淭hat is not just unfair, that is a system out of balance. We are the backbone of our schools, but we are treated like we are disposable. Summer is not a break for us, it’s a financial crisis. The system has decided that the people who hold our schools together don鈥檛 deserve stability.”

These predominantly Black, Latine, and women workers are among the lowest paid in Illinois鈥 public education system and, unlike almost any other worker in the state, are not covered under the Illinois Unemployment Insurance Act.

鈥淓ducational support staff make our schools and universities work, but for too long, they鈥檝e been expected to get by without income for the entire summer,鈥 said AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Roberta Lynch. 鈥淏y allowing support staff access to the same unemployment benefits that other seasonal workers receive, we can build stronger schools and universities, stabilize the education workforce, and show support staff that their dedication and hard work is valued.鈥

The legislation will now head to the House for a full vote.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Former IEA President Reginald 鈥淩eg鈥 Weaver, trailblazer for collective bargaining rights in Illinois, passes away at 86 /2026/03/25/former-iea-president-reginald-reg-weaver-trailblazer-for-collective-bargaining-rights-in-illinois-passes-away-at-86/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 13:48:56 +0000 /?p=63090 SPRINGFIELD 鈥 Reginald 鈥淩eg鈥 Weaver died Tuesday at age 86. Weaver was a lifelong educator and organizer who served as president of the 黑料视频 from 1981 to 1987 and led the battle to ensure collective bargaining rights for Illinois educators.

Weaver, who also spent 30 years as a teacher in the Harvey school system, was the first Black person to be elected president of the IEA. After his tenure at IEA, he went on to become the president of the National Education Association, from 2002 to 2008, and later went on to serve in the leadership of Education International, an organization representing 29 million teachers and education workers in 169 countries.

He was committed to the idea that every child deserves to go to a great public school. Weaver told the Chicago Tribune in 2002: 鈥淢y vision is that we work for schools where children are able to go free of harassment, intimidation and have an atmosphere conducive to good teaching and learning.鈥

鈥淩eg was a pioneer in many ways. He led the way for people of color to see themselves in leadership at the state and national level. He was a mentor to so many state and national leaders. He created pathways to leadership and made room for folx when they arrived. He was kind, generous, and humorous. He always had a story to tell with a light in his eyes. He made people feel welcome, supported and valued,鈥 said Karl Goeke, current president of the IEA.

He was born in Danville and graduated from Danville High School. He earned a degree in special education from Illinois State University in 1961 and a master鈥檚 degree from Roosevelt University in 1971. He has received honorary degrees from numerous universities across the country.

In 1973, Weaver first ran for president of IEA and lost. After that, he built a minority caucus in an effort to increase the number of people of color who attended the union鈥檚 Representative Assembly and whose decisions guided the path for the organization. He was able to organize that group and build coalitions between groups to help build power within the IEA.

In 1978, former Gov. Jim Thompson was elected head of the state. The IEA was the only union to back the Republican candidate. He credited IEA with pushing him to the win. As a result, he said, he would support the passage of collective bargaining for educators and did, signing the Illinois Education Labor Relations Act in 1984.

Weaver served as president of the Harvey Education Association from 1967-71, as an IEA board member from 1971-77, as IEA vice president from 1977-81, as IEA president 1981-1987, on the NEA executive committee 1989-95, NEA vice president 1996-2002 and as NEA president 2002-08.

He was the winner of the IEA-NEA Human Relations Award, which is now known as the Reg Weaver Human and Civil Rights Award.

When he completed his final term as the NEA president in 2008, NEA Vice President Dennis Van Roekel said the following, 鈥淭hank you, Reg, for being the right man, in the right job, at the right time.鈥

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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IEA president and IFT executive vice president denounce Governor Pritzker鈥檚 inaction and Comptroller Mendoza鈥檚 support for federal voucher scheme /2026/03/24/iea-president-and-ift-executive-vice-president-denounce-governor-pritzkers-inaction-and-comptroller-mendozas-support-for-federal-voucher-scheme/ Tue, 24 Mar 2026 14:21:37 +0000 /?p=63089 SPRINGFIELD 鈥撎A joint statement from Illinois Federation of Teachers Executive Vice President Cyndi Oberle-Dahm and 黑料视频 President Karl Goeke on Governor JB Pritzker鈥檚 inaction and Comptroller Susana Mendoza鈥檚 support for a federal private school tax credit scheme:

鈥淎t a moment when public education is under coordinated attack across this country, Illinois should be leading with clarity, not confusion.

Governors鈥搃ncluding Democrats like Andy Beshear in Kentucky鈥攈ave made it plain: public dollars belong in public schools. Here in Illinois, where more than 90 percent of our students attend public schools, that principle should not be up for debate.

And yet, instead of fighting forward for our state鈥檚 public schools and the students who attend them, we are seeing hesitation from Governor Pritzker and active support from Comptroller Susana Mendoza for a Trump-backed federal tax credit scheme that opens the door to privatization, taxpayer-funded discrimination, and a race to the bottom in educating our young people.鈥疻e call on Governor Pritzker to do the right thing here: Denounce this voucher scheme. Stand tall for public schools.

Let鈥檚 call this what it is: a resurrected school voucher program backed by and for the ultra-wealthy. It is unregulated, unaccountable, and designed to divert resources away from the schools that serve the overwhelming majority of Illinois students and into private institutions that are not required to serve every child.

At a time when our state should be strengthening its commitment to public education and working to fund the more than $5 billion our students are owed, Comptroller Mendoza鈥檚 position would align Illinois with the White House鈥檚 agenda that has consistently sought to dismantle it.

We do not have to guess what the consequences look like. Illinois educators, parents and voters have rejected vouchers before because we already witnessed how they siphon money out of public schools. We鈥檝e seen how vouchers subsidize unregulated and unaccountable private schools that don鈥檛 hold the same responsibilities to rural students who need bus routes, let alone students with disabilities or English language learners who need specific supports. We understand what is at stake. This scheme from Washington is no different. It is a threat to the stability, equity and future of our public education system.

That鈥檚 why educators, parents and community members across Illinois have been fighting for full funding for our public schools鈥攑laces where the needs of students and their families are met, and where parents and communities lead the way, not billionaires.

The path forward is not complicated: fully fund every level of our public schools, invest in the students we serve, and reject any policy鈥攕tate or federal鈥攖hat undermines the foundation of public education.鈥

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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IEA members elect president, vice president and secretary-treasurer /2026/03/19/iea-members-elect-president-vice-president-and-secretary-treasurer/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 21:46:58 +0000 /?p=63062
Karl Goeke
Gina Harris
Gladys Ma虂rquez

SPRINGFIELD 鈥 黑料视频 (IEA) members elected Karl Goeke president of the state鈥檚 largest union, Gina Harris vice president and Gladys M谩rquez the secretary treasurer on Sat., March 14, at the IEA鈥檚 172nd Representative Assembly in Rosemont.

About 1,200 IEA members gather each year to direct the union on bylaws, new business and other items. Every three years, there is an election of officers. In addition to the IEA officers, members also elected three members to the National Education Association (NEA) Board of Directors.

Goeke, who had been a classroom teacher until three years ago when he was elected vice president of IEA, had most recently been serving the remainder of the term of IEA President Al Llorens, who died in September.

Goeke taught Spanish for more than two decades in Illinois K-12 schools. He was raised in Dakota, Illinois, and graduated from Highland Community College, Western Illinois University and Illinois State University. He is married to Stacy, who is also a teacher, and the family lives in Bloomington with their two daughters.

鈥淏eing elected president by a delegation of educators is the honor of a lifetime.听Public schools represent the deep-felt trust of entire communities across the state. For the delegates from those schools to elect me to represent them means I have earned their trust, and I take that very seriously. I am thankful and will work with my amazing team of leaders to represent our members to the best of our abilities,鈥 Goeke said.

Harris graduated from Oak Park River Forest High School, Triton Community College, the University of Illinois at Chicago and Dominican University. She came to teaching as a second career after working in the business world for several years. She taught in Schiller Park, Maywood and Oak Park, as well as at the higher ed level.

She was first elected secretary-treasurer of the IEA three years ago and served as interim vice president of the IEA after Llorens鈥 passing, before being elected to the position last weekend.

“I am honored to serve on another historic team on behalf of our members and students across the state. I bring my skills, heart and passion to this work, and I am confident that together we will meet this moment鈥攕tanding strong for our members, our students and the future of public education,鈥 Harris said.

M谩rquez was a high school English Language Learner teacher at Eisenhower High School in Community High School District 218 in Blue Island. She was also serving in her second term on the National Education Association鈥檚 executive committee.

She is a veteran educator who holds multiple degrees, including bachelor鈥檚 degrees in elementary and secondary education; master鈥檚 degrees in educational administration and curriculum, instruction and evaluation; and a doctorate in education in interdisciplinary leadership.

鈥淚 am honored to be the first Latina elected in IEA鈥檚 172-year history. As educational trade unionists, we must ALL fight for the future our students and colleagues deserve. Everyone deserves to live in a just society where one job is enough, where everyone makes a living wage, where schools are well-resourced, and students are well-nourished and receive the wrap-around supports they need to thrive, not just survive.”

This slate of officers will serve in their positions until July of 2029. IEA members also elected three members to serve on the NEA Board of Directors. NEA Directors from District 4 鈥 Alison Rohrbach and Adriana Caballero were elected to represent District Four and Benjamin Baer was elected to represent District Two.

Rohrbach, of Cary, is a teacher at Sunny Hill Elementary School and a member of the Barrington Education Association. Caballero is a curriculum specialist in Schaumburg and lives in Berwyn. And, Baer is a classroom teacher at Coal City High School in Coal City where he resides.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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黑料视频 honors NEA Vice President Princess R. Moss, Congresswoman Delia Ramirez and Glen Ellyn District 41 school board president Bob Bruno /2026/03/13/illinois-education-association-honors-nea-vice-president-princess-r-moss-congresswoman-delia-ramirez-and-glen-ellyn-district-41-school-board-president-bob-bruno/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 18:52:40 +0000 /?p=63048 SPRINGFIELD听鈥撎齌oday,听the 黑料视频 (IEA) honored听three individuals for听their unwavering support for public education,听students听and educators. Both the IEA President鈥檚听Award and the IEA Friend of Education听Award are among the association鈥檚 highest honors.听

The awards were presented during the IEA Representative Assembly (RA). The RA is the legislative body of the IEA and听setsthe听agenda for the year for the听state鈥檚 largest union. There are 1,200 IEA delegates,听guests听and state dignitaries who attend the RA.

The 2026 award winners are:听

President鈥檚 Award听鈥 Princess R. Moss, NEA vice president

Princess R. Moss, an elementary school music teacher from Louisa County, Va., is vice president of the National Education Association. As the daughter of two school bus drivers who instilled within her the core beliefs of courage,听honesty听and the value of getting a good education, Moss is an unwavering champion of children and strong public schools. She is a staunch, outspoken ally of students, educators and families who听represent听communities that have been historically marginalized. These include Black,听Brown听and indigenous communities, LGBTQ+ communities, students with disabilities and those who move through the world听representing听the ways in which these communities intersect. Moss believes every child and every student 鈥攏o matter their parents鈥 incomes, where they live, the language they speak at home, their race, religion, ethnicity, gender identification, or physical capabilities鈥攄eserves to attend a great public school. She believes in using every available tool to protect the rights of students and educators and protect public education.

Friend of Education Award –听Delia Ramirez, U.S.听Representative for Illinois’s 3rd听Congressional听District

U.S. Rep.听Delia Ramirez is a dedicated public servant and lifelong advocate for working families,听education听and equity. Born and raised in Chicago to immigrant parents, she has devoted her career to uplifting underrepresented communities. Before being elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, Rep. Ramirez served in the Illinois General Assembly, where she championed affordable housing, healthcare听access听and education equity. As a state听representative听she led the passage of HB 2908 to听establish听an elected school board for Chicago Public Schools, responding to long-standing community demands. She also sponsored bills to increase funding for K-12 education, protect bilingual and immigrant students, and support educators’ voices in decision-making. As the first Latina elected to听represent听Illinois in Congress, she听maintains听her unwavering commitment to justice,听opportunity听and inclusive public policy. She has听convened听oversight hearings focused on the effects of federal policy cuts on students and teachers,听demonstrating听her ongoing dedication to public education. Ramirez is a fierce advocate for safety for all students and demanding ICE听get听out of our public schools. When one of her constituents, 14-year-old Steven, and his father were taken by ICE,听She听worked tirelessly with his family and the Hadley School community to help secure his release. Ramirez has been a true champion for the Latino community, as well as all students and educators. She is on the frontlines advocating for meaningful policies that ensure all communities are seen,听heard听and supported.

Friend of Education – Bob Bruno,听professor听and director of the labor education program at the University of Illinois, Glen Ellyn District 41 school board president

Bob Bruno is a fierce advocate and educator鈥搘ith a passion for unionism that is unmatched. As the director of the labor education program, professor of labor and employment and director of the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois, one might say Bruno is a labor expert. As a Glen Ellyn District 41 school board member and current president, he has supported countless initiatives, overseen two successful referendum and听building听projects, navigated the ousting of a beloved superintendent and has stood up to a toxic school board to help build an environment of collegiality,听collaboration听and compassion.听Perhaps most听notable is Bruno鈥檚 advocacy on behalf of a student and parent who were detained by ICE. The student, Steven, is autistic. The stress from being separated from his mother, his听home听and his school severely听impacted听his mental health and Steven became sick and stopped eating.听Bruno did not hesitate to take action.听He and his wife paid for two of Steven’s teachers to join him at the Dilley Detention Center in San Antonio so they could visit with Steven. One teacher shared how she believes the visit could have saved his life. Thanks to advocacy from Bruno, Steven鈥檚 teachers, the Hadley School community and Rep. Delia Ramirez, Steven and his father were released and reunited with their family on March 3. Bruno鈥檚 advocacy is rooted in the belief that no student should be forgotten, regardless of their status or the barriers placed in their way. He has made a profound impact in his school community; his contributions to the labor movement and commitment to safety for all students make him an outstanding candidate for this honor.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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黑料视频 honors educators from around the state鈥 /2026/03/12/illinois-education-association-honors-educators-from-around-the-state-5/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 00:27:35 +0000 /?p=63035 SPRINGFIELD听鈥撎齌he 黑料视频 (IEA) awarded听seven听educators from around the state for their outstanding commitment to their schools, students,听communities听and public education.听This year鈥檚 Reg Weaver Human and Civil Rights Award was posthumously awarded to the late IEA President Al Llorens, who passed away Sept. 25, 2025.

The awards were presented during the IEA Representative Assembly (RA). The RA is the legislative body of the IEA and helps the state鈥檚 largest union set its agenda for the year. There are 1,200 IEA delegates,听guests听and state dignitaries who attend the RA.

The IEA award recipients were nominated and chosen for their awards by their peers.

The 2026 IEA RA award winners are:

Bob Haisman Early Career Teacher of the Year Award听鈥 Gianna Miritello (special education听teacher,鈥 A.E.R.O.听Education Association, A.E.R.O. Special Education Cooperative, Region 28)听

While Gianna Miritello may be at the beginning of her career, she is already viewed as a leader. As the membership chair of her local, Miritello is one of the first union contacts for new employees. When new members arrive, she is someone who will go out of her way to give a tour or invite a member to observe one of her lessons. She is warm, welcoming and provides endless encouragement to her peers. As a junior high multi-needs teacher, Miritello鈥檚 knowledge of special-needs education is on display every day. Working with students with low-incidence disabilities, complex medical and physical needs and cognitive delays, she accommodates the unique needs of every student. Her relationships with students are based on care, understanding and high expectations. Miritello encourages her students to communicate with others through AAC devices, Big Mac switches and other forms of whole communication, which has led to more visibility and understanding of disabilities in her school community. This has helped build compassion and empathy, as well as led to more advocacy for students with disabilities. In her third year of teaching, Miritello received the inaugural A.E.R.O. Aviator of the Year Award for excellence in teaching. Staff frequently come to her for guidance due to her creative problem solving skills, passion and advocacy efforts. For example, she advocated for equity in classroom sizes in her program. In describing Miritello, one of her fellow union members shares, 鈥淕ianna Miritello is a teacher who provides the most amount of support, thought, and care into every aspect of her job… Her impact, even at this early stage in her career, has been monumental and will undoubtedly continue to grow.鈥

Bob Haisman Aspiring Educator Award听鈥 Anabella听Chlada听(Illinois State University Aspiring Educators, Illinois State University, Region 89)听

Bella Chlada possesses wonderful qualities of intelligence, hard work, compassion and inclusivity that set her apart from other students at ISU and around the state. Her dedication to the role of Aspiring Educators chairperson is evident in everything she does. Chlada has a natural ability to connect with others and she is always the first to greet people when they walk into a room. Her enthusiasm for leading, coupled with her ability to craft new ideas, inspires everyone around her. Many aspiring educators look to follow in Chlada鈥檚 footsteps and cause 鈥済ood trouble鈥 in public education. Because of her leadership, IEA Aspiring Educators is a force to be reckoned with. Perhaps most impressive is the work she has done to push for paid student teaching in Illinois. On top of her academic work and student teaching, she puts in extra hours to brainstorm ideas, draft plans, coordinate with her team and build the momentum needed to WIN! One of Chlada’s biggest points of pride is her teacher Instagram, @Bella.AspiringEd. She has posted her entire journey of being a member of the union and shares about the opportunities it has provided her. Many members have expressed that her Instagram is how they found out about Aspiring Ed or the reason why they became more involved. Chlada takes immense pride in enhancing and supporting the work of the union in whatever way she can. She was recently named the Bone Scholar for the Illinois State University College of Education, a top honor at ISU. Chlada is an integral member of the 黑料视频; we know she will make a fantastic special education teacher and future union leader.

Dr. Cheryl L. Thayer Higher Education Advocate Award 鈥撎鼵harmian Tashjian (adjunct, Harper College Adjunct Faculty Association, Harper College, Region 42)听

Charmian Tashjian began teaching at Harper College in 2003, when the Harper College Adjunct Faculty Association (HCAFA) was just being formed. Even before she was eligible to join, she attended meetings and assisted the negotiations team. By 2005, she was finally eligible to become an active member and eventually was elected vice president. In her various union leadership roles, she has consistently advocated on behalf of adjuncts and students鈥揻rom advocating for professional development centered on student success to developing a 鈥淟evel II鈥 program for adjuncts, a program Harper College uses to this day. During her three terms as president of HCAFA, Tashjian proposed to neighboring adjunct union presidents that they meet to discuss common issues. Her idea led to the formation of the Collar Counties Higher Education Presidents鈥 Group, which she has continued to coordinate for about 10 years. The benefits of these meetings have been invaluable, and their group discussions have helped build momentum for equity in SURS benefit calculations for adjuncts, a state-wide minimum salary for adjuncts, dual credit, remedial courses and more. As a member of the IEA Higher Education Council, she helped write legislation on some of those topics. When Thashjian sets a goal, she achieves it. Her passion and dedication have not only strengthened her local and Harper College, but also higher education contingent unions across the state and IEA as a whole. She is a powerful leader and absolutely deserving of this honor.

Education Support Professional of the Year 鈥撎齌eresa Boraas (credit recovery coordinator, Sherrard Education Association, Sherrard CUSD 200, Region 17)听

Teresa Boraas is the reason many Sherrard CUSD 200 at-risk students graduate. She runs the credit recovery program, but it is far more than a program鈥攊t is a lifesaver, a dream maker and a lifelong connection for the students she serves. Boraas gives students a path to get back on track by providing everything they may be missing: love, support, guidance, decision-making skills, clothing, food, positive affirmations and the redirection they need when they make poor choices. Through it all, she holds them to high academic standards. Boraas is always the first to sign up for anything, whether it鈥檚 food distribution, scholarship donations or supporting every new ESP who joins the district. She voluntarily trains new ESPs, providing them with a detailed instruction book, a shoulder to lean on and even a monthly dinner out to help them feel welcomed. Because of her dedication, the ESP turnover rate is lower than 2%. She is the welcoming committee, support system and guide all wrapped into one. Boraas is a champion for SEA, always encouraging new staff to join the union and explaining union benefits. After 25 years in the district, taking on a variety of different roles, she is retiring at the end of the year. She has touched the lives of so many educators and students. Because of her, our schools and our union are stronger.

Mary Lou and Keith Hauge Retiree of the Year Award 鈥撎齂elly Holland (IEA-Retired, Deep South IEA-Retired (Carterville))听

Kelly Holland taught 32 years at Marion Unit 2 schools, with more than 20 years spent as a fifth-grade teacher, before moving into her position as a reading specialist. Following her retirement from Marion, she worked part-time as a consultant and curriculum director in a smaller school district for three years. But with a history of union leadership, having served as union president and vice chair of Region 1, Holland knew she wanted to continue union work through the Deep South IEA-Retired chapter. Holland accepted the position of local secretary and quickly became an integral part of the executive committee. Early on, she took on the project of updating the local鈥檚 bylaws and constitution鈥搒omething she completed without assistance from the committee. When the chapter needed a volunteer to chair the membership committee, Holland stepped up to the plate. She worked with members of the team to come up with a new member recruitment plan and took the initiative to contact all local presidents to acquire lists of potential retirees. She contacted every member on the list, and the results were incredibly positive! Her work expands beyond her chapter, as Holland regularly contributes to the IEA-R Insider to share information with all IEA-Retired members. Her communication skills keep our members informed and engaged, and she has brought a positive new energy to Deep South IEA-Retired. Holland gives 100% to building power in her local and encouraging recently retired members to continue this important work of advocating for retirees, students and strong public schools. She is a unionist through and through and absolutely deserving of this award.

NEA Foundation Award for Teaching Excellence 鈥撎齋arah Henkel Gehant鈥(8th grade social studies teacher, Mendota Elementary Education Association, Mendota Community Consolidated District 289, Region 15)听

As a National Board Certified teacher with masters degrees in both history and natural science, it is clear that Sarah Henkel is an expert social studies teacher. But what makes her so remarkable goes beyond her lessons and assignments. It is her commitment to supporting her students鈥 social and emotional development, in addition to maintaining a rigorous social studies classroom, that makes her truly special. Some of Henkel鈥檚 practices include encouraging students to engage outside their social circles, promoting collaboration and always providing positive feedback on students鈥 work. In 2015, Henkel and a student were selected for the National History Day Silent Heroes program, through which her student received the opportunity to present her research at the grave of a local WWII fallen soldier buried in the Normandy American Cemetery in France. The experience inspired her student to enlist in the U.S. Army, where she served honorably for five years. Henkel has since incorporated this research project for fallen heroes into her classroom, which has led to wonderful experiences for students, including interviews with local veterans and public speaking opportunities to share their research. Henkel served as a grassroots political activist (GPA) and is a proud graduate of IEA鈥檚 Leaders for Just Schools program. She has received multiple SCORE grant awards to fund school and community initiatives, including a clothing closet and a 鈥渓unch and learn鈥 program focused on racial and social justice. Long before it was a district directive, Henkel translated her classroom materials to communicate with parents in their native languages. The result of this work has been greater trust and stronger relationships with students鈥 families. A former student describes Henkel as 鈥渙ne of the most caring and attentive students I have ever had.鈥 Her commitment to personal growth as an educator, advocacy for her school community and dedication to her students鈥 success at all levels make Henkel an outstanding candidate for this honor.

Reg Weaver Human and Civil Rights Award听鈥 Al Llorens, former IEA president, posthumously awarded听
Math teacher. Coach.听Family man. Advocate. Labor leader. Friend.鈥

It is only fitting that Al Llorens receive an honor named after the person who most inspired him to become president of the 黑料视频.听Llorens was deeply committed to lifting up the next generation of leaders.听He continued the work of his mentors (including Reg Weaver, Anne听Davis听and Pearl Mack) in breaking down barriers within our union, promoting听inclusion听and encouraging members of color to take on leadership roles. One of his proudest achievements was starting and leading the Ethnic Minority Emerging Leadership Training (EMELT). Supporting ethnic minority members on their pathway to union leadership will forever be a part of Llorens鈥 legacy. As a teacher and coach, Llorens reminded his students to never give up. As a Tai Chi instructor, he reminded us to breathe. As IEA president, he reminded us that even in this tumultuous period in the history of public education, we must be courageous and strong.听He believed the work our members do is the most important work there is.听From IEA member Karen Moore: 鈥淚鈥檒l听never forget the time when I was feeling weighed down by the challenges in front of me, questioning if I could really make a difference. Al leaned in, looked me straight in the eye, and said, 鈥榊ou are exactly where听you鈥檙e听supposed to be. Your voice matters, and your work matters鈥攄on鈥檛听ever doubt that.鈥 That encouragement still carries me on the hardest days.鈥澨齇ur union is better because of Llorens鈥 leadership, mentorship, kindness,听thoughtfulness听and courage. His legacy will live on in all of us.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Mercer County educators to attend school board meeting after Mercer County School District 404 recommends laying off 24 employees /2026/03/02/mercer-county-educators-to-attend-school-board-meeting-after-mercer-county-school-district-404-recommends-laying-off-24-employees/ Mon, 02 Mar 2026 21:46:27 +0000 /?p=62946 ALEDO 鈥 The unions that represent more than 140 employees is urging the community鈥檚 attendance at a special board of education meeting tomorrow night, March 3, in Aledo at 6:30 p.m. Mercer County School District 404 is recommending approximately 24 employees be听laid off for the 2026-27 school year.

The following statement is attributable to Mercer County Education Employees Association (MCEEA) President Pam Nelson and Mercer County Education Association (MCEA) President Amanda Heinrichs:

“While the unions acknowledge the worthwhile goal of reaching solvency in the education fund, we are deeply concerned about the students and remaining employees. The administration has provided the proper notice about the possibility of Reduction in Force (RIFs). Cutting these positions does not mean there is less work or less learning to be done in our schools. Our remaining staff are going to see a large increase in their workload, which means that our students will receive less one-to-one support and could also see increased class sizes, among other diminishments to the quality of their education. It will be devastating for morale in our community if the board votes 鈥測es鈥 for this recommendation. Instead, we are encouraging the board to seek other solutions and find cuts elsewhere in the budget. This financial problem didn’t just arise overnight. We want transparency. Has the board investigated why and how we ended up in this financial position and overspent line items? We expect board members to speak up at each meeting during that portion of their agenda, so their constituents know what鈥檚 on their minds and how they reach their decisions. Our students and our community deserve better.”

The school board will act on this recommendation tomorrow night, March 3, at 6:30 p.m. MCEA represents the certified educators, teachers and nurses, while MCEEA is comprised of the hourly school staff. In addition to being president of MCEEA, Nelson is also a custodian at New Boston Elementary School. Heinrichs is the MCEA president and a teacher at Mercer County Junior High School.

Tomorrow鈥檚 special meeting is set for 6:30 p.m. in the Mercer County Junior High Music Room (1002 SW 6th St., Aledo).

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Rockford teachers鈥 new contract values teachers, students and community /2026/02/25/rockford-teachers-new-contract-values-teachers-students-and-community/ Wed, 25 Feb 2026 15:10:43 +0000 /?p=62920 ROCKFORD 鈥撎齌he Rockford Education Association (REA) and the Rockford Public听School听District 205 Board of Education (BOE) have听officially reached a deal on a new contract. Both听the REA and BOE听voted to ratify听the听new contract for teachers in the district.

鈥淲e听believe this is absolutely a big step in the right direction.听This contract does what we wanted听it to do:听It听makes听Rockford听more听competitive with our neighboring districts, which means we will be able to attract talented,听new听teachers听and听retain听our experienced, dedicated educators.听That鈥檚听a big win for students and for our community,鈥澨齊EA President Claudia Marshall said.听鈥淭hat being said, we still have work to do. We know change is incremental, and we听will continue听working toward听even听more听progress听for our students,听staff听and community.鈥

REA听and the district had been bargaining for听nearly a听year when a tentative agreement was reached on Feb.听12.听The REA ratified the agreement on听Sunday听and the BOE ratified the contract at their meeting tonight.

Bargaining began听in February听2025. REA鈥檚 contract expired in July, which means educators have听worked most of the听school听year without a contract.

鈥淚t鈥檚听been a听really difficult听year for our teachers.听There鈥檚听been so much extra stress on top of the increasing demands of听their jobs. But听I think what听kept us all going was the community support听–听all of听the parents, neighbors, local businesses, lawmakers who reached out to tell us they are standing with us and听to keep听going.听That鈥檚听what got us here.听Rockford shows up. Rockford values their teachers, and that means the world.听We are so grateful,鈥澨齅arshall said.

The new REA contract:

  • Creates听one month听paid parental leave听for new parents;
  • Makes听Rockford听teachers鈥 wages more competitive听through听a听4%听salary increase in the first two years of the contract and a 4.5% increase in the final year;
  • Provides听either听retroactive听step and听lane movement to the start of the school year听or a bonus听(Step and lane movement听ensures teachers are compensated based on their听education听and years of experience);
  • Protects听the听working听conditions of Rockford鈥檚 special education听teachers by not increasing their听workload;
  • And creates a听committee to look at expanding teachers鈥 choice when it comes to retirement options,听potentially a large savings for the district.

鈥淭he听majority of our teachers live in Rockford. We send our children to school here. Many of us went to school听here听ourselves. We are Rockford. We love this town. This contract is not just an investment in听good quality听educators听and our students;听it鈥檚听an investment in the entire Rockford community,鈥 Marshall said.

The Rockford Education Association (REA)听represents听nearly 2,000听teachers, social workers, counselors, speech pathologists, nurses, psychologists and other licensed staff working and supporting听the nearly听28,000 students in District 205.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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Illinoisans strongly support public education, are against ICE near schools and federal funding cuts /2026/02/23/illinoisans-strongly-support-public-education-are-against-ice-near-schools-and-federal-funding-cuts/ Mon, 23 Feb 2026 16:30:01 +0000 /?p=62875 SPRINGFIELD 鈥 The 黑料视频 (IEA) released its eighth annual IEA State of Education report today, Mon., Feb. 23. It鈥檚 the only bipartisan poll monitoring Illinoisans鈥 views on all aspects of public schools. The findings were shared during a news conference at 10:30 a.m. today on Zoom.

The poll results show a majority of Illinoisans are opposed to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in their communities and are worried about ICE presence near schools. Illinoisans also stand in opposition to the cuts to United States Department of Education (USED) funding, Medicaid and SNAP benefits.

鈥淲e know that Illinoisans support public education, but this polling takes it a step further. It shows us our state cares deeply about our students, schools and our communities,鈥 IEA President Karl Goeke said. 鈥淚CE has no place in or near our schools. Students cannot learn when they are afraid and educators cannot effectively teach when students don鈥檛 feel safe. Schools should be a safe place for our students, their parents and our teachers and staff.鈥

The data also show Illinoisans know a strong school system leads to stronger communities. A large majority of Illinoisans said the quality of their public schools has an impact on the quality of their communities. They also believe their home鈥檚 value is directly tied to the quality of their local public school, even if they don鈥檛 have school-aged children.

鈥淭he people of Illinois get it. They understand high-quality public schools mean more than just a great education for all students, they can lift up an entire community,鈥 Goeke said. 鈥淲e know people look at the quality of the public schools when they鈥檙e choosing where to live because it means their homes are worth more. Investing in our public schools means we are investing in our entire community. We should absolutely be fully funding our schools. Everybody wins. It鈥檚 a no-brainer.鈥

When it comes to fully funding our schools and staff, Illinoisans believe teachers, paraprofessionals and adjuncts deserve better wages.

Key points from the IEA State of Education report include:

  • 85% of Illinoisans believe that students have a right to a public education;
  • 84% of the public say they are very worried about the teacher shortage;
  • 79% of Illinoisans are very worried about shortages for school support staff positions like paraprofessionals, bus drivers and librarians.
  • 63% of the public believe adjuncts should be paid the same as tenured professors when they are teaching the same courses;
  • 69% believe funding for public schools should increase;
  • 66% support pension reform to allow those in the Tier 2 pension system to retire before the age of 67;
  • 80% believe we should be teaching about slavery in public schools;
  • 72% believe we should be teaching about racism public schools;
  • 53% are opposed to ICE arresting and deporting immigrants in their communities;
  • 57% are worried about ICE arresting them, a child, another parent, or school employees on school property;
  • 64% are opposed to the federal government鈥檚 cuts to Medicaid and SNAP benefits;
  • 65% are opposed to the S. Department of Education funding cuts.

The poll, conducted by both Democrat polling firm, Normington, Petts and Associates, and Republican pollster, Mercury Consulting, surveyed 1,000 Illinoisans Jan. 26-29. It has a margin of error of +/- 3.1 percent with 95 percent confidence.

鈥淭his poll asks questions we haven鈥檛 seen asked in Illinois, including questions about ICE presence near schools. By basing it on U.S. Census data, it gives us an honest look at what Illinoisans think about all things public education,鈥 pollster Jill Normington of Normington, Petts and Associates said.

鈥淚llinoisans absolutely support public education in our state, even those residents without school-aged children see the benefit of living near good schools. They know their home values are tied to their neighborhood schools, and that sends a clear message about the importance of investing in the public school system,鈥 said Pat Brady, of Mercury Consulting.

View more information on this year鈥檚 results, as well as previous years.

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The 135,000 member 黑料视频 (IEA-NEA) is the state鈥檚 largest union. IEA represents Pre K-12 teachers outside the city of Chicago and education support staff, higher education faculty, retired education employees and students preparing to become teachers, statewide.

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