Wabash District #348 School Board Agenda

WABASH COMMUNITY UNIT SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION MEETING

MT. CARMEL GRADE SCHOOL CAFETORIUM

Monday, May 20, 2024 Regular Board Meeting-

7:00 P.M.

Agenda

1. Call to order / Roll call

2. Pledge of Allegiance

3. Consent Agenda

a. Board Minutes i. April 15, 2024 Regular Meeting

b. Monthly Bills

c. Financial Reports

d. Correspondence

e. Administrative Reports

f. Off Season Clinics and Camps

g. Press Plus Updates

4. Superintendent’s Comments

5. Reports-

Aaron Croft

a. SAT Scores

6. Visitors

a. CEO- Sarah McCorkle, Bella Andrews, and Madison Stevens

b. Science Fair - Ellie Couch, Miranda Kennard, and Wyatt Rooney

7. Public Comments

8. Executive Session pursuant to Section 2(c)(1) of the Open Meetings Act: “The appointment, employment, compensation, discipline, performance, or dismissal of specific employees”.

9. New Business

a. Amended 2023-2024 Budget

b. Dual Credit Agreement with IECC

c. Employment of Personnel

10. Adjournment

Illinois launches summer food assistance program

By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD – The state is launching a new program to provide food assistance during the summer for families with children who qualify for free or reduced-price meals at school.

Gov. JB Pritzker joined other state officials and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Thursday to announce that Illinois will take part in the federally funded Summer EBT program, which provides qualifying families with a one-time benefit of $120 per child that can be used to buy groceries during the summer months.

Speaking at a predominantly low-income elementary school in Springfield, Pritzker said it’s important all year long to ensure that children have enough food to eat.

“Food insecurity is absolutely detrimental to a child’s development,” he said. It impacts academic performance, social function, and mental and physical health.”

Pritzker noted the program began as a “stop-gap” measure to address the needs of low-income families with school-age children during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many school buildings were forced to close. 

The program proved so successful in helping alleviate child hunger that Congress acted in 2022 to make it permanent. This summer will mark the first under the new, permanent authority.

“Summer EBT is evidence-based, meaning we know it works,” said Stacy Dean, deputy undersecretary for food, nutrition, and consumer services at USDA, which funds the program. “It’s been tested, piloted, and gone through rigorous research to show that it reduces hunger and increases the intake of nutritious foods (for) the kids who participate.”

The program is open to children who are also eligible for free or reduced-price meals at school. That means they must come from households with incomes at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty level – $47,767 for a family of three, or $57,720 for a family of four. 

According to the most recent state report card from the Illinois State Board of Education, 49 percent of all students in Illinois public schools meet that criteria.

There is no citizenship requirement for the program and Summer EBT is not considered under the public charge rule of U.S. immigration law.

Children will be automatically enrolled if they have been enrolled on or after July 1, 2023, in either the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP; income-eligible Medicaid; Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF; or the state’s Youth in Care or foster care system.

Families who do not take part in those programs but who may qualify under the income guidelines can also apply through a school that takes part in the National School Lunch Program.

Qualifying families will receive the money in the form of an electronic benefits transfer, or EBT card, known in Illinois as a Link card. For families already enrolled in the SNAP or TANF programs, the $120 per-child benefit will be loaded onto their existing Link card. Others will receive a new card in the mail from the Illinois Department of Human Services.

According to the state’s Summer EBT website, the 2024 benefits will be distributed in late summer.

 

Lawmakers consider tax break for news publishers, state-sponsored journalism scholarships

By ALEX ABBEDUTO
& ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com 

SPRINGFIELD – A new measure being debated in the Illinois General Assembly would create a tax credit for certain news publishers based on the number of reporters they employ. 

The proposal from Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, is part of a package of policies that he has been working to pass since early this year – although some worry about potential conflicts that could arise from creating new financial relationships between the government and journalists who cover it. 

Under Stadelman’s proposal, contained in Senate Bill 3953, the state would offer a tax credit of up to $25,000 for each journalist on a media company’s payroll and up to $30,000 for journalists hired into newly created roles. The credit would only be available to “independently owned” media outlets – making subsidiaries of larger or publicly traded companies ineligible for the credit. 

Advocates say it's a way to prop up an industry that faces existential financial and logistical challenges. In 2022, the General Assembly created a task force to research the state of journalism in Illinois. Their report included research from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism that showed one-third of local outlets have closed since 2005, creating an 86 percent decline in newspaper jobs over that span.

The likelihood of the bill passing this spring is unclear, as lawmakers face the final sprint to the end of session. The bill was heard in a subject matter hearing, so no vote was taken, but it could be introduced as an amendment to a larger bill – a maneuver that lawmakers often employ in the lead-up to their May adjournment. 

Stadelman said on Thursday he hopes to include the tax credit in the General Assembly's broader budget package.   

The proposal for more state involvement in the media industry has made some of those who work in both fields uneasy. 

Dan Haley, a self-described “old newspaper guy” and the long-time publisher of several community newspapers in Chicago’s western suburbs, said he was initially surprised by the idea. Despite that, he supported the pitch Wednesday evening. 

“I believe that local news needs investment from state government if we are to fulfill our part of the American bargain – to report fairly with context, some empathy and some grit about what goes on in our towns,” Haley told lawmakers. 

On the state side of the equation, some share the concern about the government and media becoming too intertwined. Sen. Rob Martwick, D-Chicago, who said he sees the value of a “robust, independent Fourth Estate,” wondered if subsidizing the industry would weaken that independence. 

“What happens when we are giving tax credits to publications that both report on what's going on and publish opinions?” Martwick asked in Wednesday’s committee hearing. “We give it, we can taketh away. What if we don't like the opinions that are being published by the certain newspapers?”

Stadelman countered that the state was providing a “foundational tax break,” adding, “we’re not telling them what to report.”

Many news outlets currently receive federal funding through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, notably NPR, PBS and the two media giants’ many affiliate stations – but that usually makes up a small portion of these groups’ budgets.

At the state level, the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency, regularly gives grants to public broadcast stations like WSIU, WILL, WTTW and others – but they must meet Corporation for Public Broadcasting standards in order to qualify. Earlier this year, Stadelman proposed giving the Council $5 million specifically for public broadcasters.

A separate measure, also proposed by Stadelman, would direct funding toward future journalists by creating a state-sponsored scholarship program and require certain disclosures if local media is sold, with the intent to keep media ownership local. 

Senate Bill 3592, would allow the Illinois Student Assistance Commission to grant scholarships to journalism students planning to work in Illinois for at least two years after they graduate. The measure would be subject to appropriations, meaning if it passes, funding would have to be provided in the state budget for it to become effective. 

The measure would also require a news publisher, if it’s being bought, to disclose details of the sale to its employees, the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, its county government, and any Illinois nonprofit “in the business of buying local news organizations” 120 days’ notice of a potential sale. 

Read more: Panel of experts suggest legislative measures to reverse journalism decline

The state’s journalism task force specifically highlighted the experience of the Southern Illinoisan newspaper. After Lee Enterprises sold the paper to Paxton Media Group in 2023, PMG laid off the paper’s unionized staff. 

The House Labor and Commerce Committee advanced the measure after adding an amendment that would begin the scholarship program in 2025-2026 instead of 2024-2025. Although there was no debate, the bill passed along party lines 19-10. 

Because it has been amended since originally passing the Senate, it still needs approval from both chambers before it can head to the governor for a signature. 

Earlier this year, Stadelman introduced  Senate Bill 3591, which would require large online platforms to share advertising revenue with journalism outlets whose work is hosted on those platforms. 

Stadelman on Thursday said that he viewed that proposal as “more of a longer-term play,” although he hoped to possibly move it through a committee before the end of this legislative session. 

Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, is pictured in a file photo from 2023. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)

City Close To Putting River Camps Up For Bids

The city is getting closer to putting river camps they own up for auction. At Monday’s City Council meeting, Mayor Joe Judge said city engineer Dave Dallas was on River Road Monday surveying the lots. Two squatters had refused to leave the lots delaying the city putting the lots up for auction. But, Judge said one of the two had left and he believed the other was in the process of leaving. If the squatters don’t leave voluntarily, city attorney Derek McCullough said he has a June 12th court date set to force them off.

City Council Still Considering Solar Array For Sewer Plant

If a solar energy system is installed at Mt. Carmel’s sewer plant, it won’t be done by a Pennsylvania company. Last year, the city council approved a contract showing intent to move forward with Keystone Energy to place a solar array on the southern portion of the city property at the wastewater treatment plant. Keystone proposed to build and own the system and take advantage of state and federal credits. But city attorney Derek McCullough told the council that if those government credits go away, the city would be responsible for making up the difference. Brad Morton of Morton Solar and Electric has submitted an alternative proposal in which the city pays for the construction of the project and owns the system. That means the city would be able to use the state and federal credits. He told the council Monday that construction would take 9 to 12 months to complete. The council took the information under advisement and tabled making a decision.

Mt. Carmel Woman Gets 3 Years In Prison On Meth Charge

Kelli Storckman, Wabash County State’s Attorney, reports that Monyck O'Bryant, a 26-year-old Mt. Carmel, Illinois woman, was sentenced to 3 years in the Department of Corrections to be followed by 12 months mandatory supervised release by the Honorable Circuit Judge William C. Hudson in Wabash County Circuit Court.

State’s Attorney Storckman advises that the Defendant was charged on March 18, 2023, with Possession of Methamphetamine, greater than 5 grams but less than 15 grams, a Class 2 Felony.  While out on pretrial release Monyck O'Bryant failed to attend court on multiple occasions, violated the conditions of her pretrial release, and was charged in Lawrence County, Illinois with another felony offense.

Original Arrest Release From MCPD:

On 3/18/23, Mt. Carmel Police arrested Monyck S. O’Bryant, age 25, of Mt. Carmel, for Possession of Methamphetamine, Driving While License Suspended, and a Richland County Illinois Warrant for Failure to Appear. The arresting officer stopped O’Bryant after she began flashing her headlights at the officer in what the officer took as a request for assistance. Upon making contact, the officer recognized O’Bryant and knew her to have a suspended license. O’Bryant admitted she flashed the lights while attempting to turn them on in an unfamiliar vehicle. Furthermore, O’Bryant returned with the above warrant resulting in her arrest. In doing so, the officer located a plastic baggie containing suspected methamphetamine, which a field test result later confirmed. O’Bryant was transported to the Wabash County Jail where she was charged accordingly and held pending a bond setting by a judge.

California man arrested for Reckless Driving

On May 14, 2024, at 7:07 p.m. Gibson County Deputies Michael Owens and Chad Craney conducted a traffic stop on a Silver 2024 Mitsubishi Outlander after observing the vehicle traveling 98 mph in a 50 mph zone on US 41 through Fort Branch.  Upon stopping the vehicle north of Coal Mine Road Deputy Craney identified the driver as 22 year old Kevin Navarro Alvarez of Corona, California.  Deputy Craney conducted a roadside investigation before placing Mr. Alvarez into custody and transporting him to the Gibson County Jail where he was charged with Reckless Driving. 

 Assisting Deputy Craney in his investigation was Haubstadt Officer Bryan Munnier.

 All criminal defendants are to be presumed innocent until, and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.