Illinois
Our Chicago: Illinois’ 2nd-largest district to resume school with about 100 teacher vacancies
CHICAGO (WLS) — It is back-to-school time.
Lessons start Tuesday for college students in U-46, Illinois’ second-largest district. It covers all or a part of eleven communities within the northwest suburbs together with Bartlett, Elgin, St. Charles and Schaumburg.
There are 40 elementary colleges, eight center colleges and 5 excessive colleges. Greater than 37,000 college students will probably be beginning the fourth faculty 12 months to be impacted by the pandemic.
However Supt. Dr. Tony Sanders mentioned he feels extra optimistic this 12 months.
SEE ALSO | How colleges are attempting to deal with the nationwide trainer scarcity
“I believe the extra we have gotten into COVID and vaccinations are broadly obtainable, therapies can be found, and the persevering with easing of restrictions from the CDC and the state are making it simpler and simpler for colleges to really feel somewhat bit extra regular,” he mentioned.
U-46 and districts throughout the state are coping with a scarcity of lecturers and bus drivers.
“For U-46, the place we’re actually missing workers is bilingual lecturers and particular schooling lecturers. If now we have a basic schooling, elementary basic schooling opening now we have loads of folks to fill these vacancies,” he mentioned.
Sanders mentioned they’ve about 100 trainer vacancies proper now. He mentioned the district will proceed to search for lecturers as the varsity 12 months will get underway. As for bus drivers, they’ve sufficient, however are at all times on the lookout for extra.
Our Chicago: Half 2
Based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics, between February 2020 and Could 2022, roughly 300,000 public faculty lecturers and different workers left their jobs and the schooling occupation.
A survey by the Nationwide Schooling Affiliation in March discovered that 55% of lecturers intend to depart the occupation sooner than initially deliberate.
So, what’s behind this?
Nancy Latham, affiliate dean of the Faculty of Schooling and govt director of the Council on Instructor Schooling on the College of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, mentioned there are lots of causes for the departures.
“They don’t seem to be simply the pandemic. or simply current. I believe for 2 or three a long time now we have been de-professionalizing the sector of instructing. Each in how we take a look at lecturers, how we blame the tutorial, our colleges and our lecturers for every little thing that isn’t the way in which that we expect it must be,” Latham mentioned.
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Illinois
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Illinois
FDA announces recall of oysters sold in Illinois, other states due to norovirus concerns
CHICAGO (CBS) — The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday warned stores and restaurants around the country not to sell or serve oysters from British Columbia, Canada, that may be contaminated with the norovirus.
Illinois was among the states where the oysters were sold. They were also sold in Arizona, California, Colorado, D.C., Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.
The oysters were sold as Fanny Bay, Buckley Bay, and Royal Miyagi.
The oysters were harvested between Dec. 1 and Dec. 9 from growing areas BC 14-8, Landfiles (LF) # 1413888, 1409240, 1402294, 1409454, 1402193, 1402293, 1402060, and growing area BC 14-15, LF # 249854.
Symptoms of norovirus include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, and stomach cramps. A fever may also develop.
Restaurants and retailers that have the oysters should throw them away, or return them to their distributor to be destroyed. The FDA also advised that shellfish can be a source of pathogens more generally, and the risk of cross-contamination of food processing equipment and the food processing environment must be averted.
Illinois
Roger Stone urges Trump to sue Illinois governor for calling him a “rapist”
What’s New
President-elect Donald Trump has been urged by former adviser Roger Stone follow up on his settled defamation lawsuit against ABC News by suing Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker for calling him a “rapist.”
“I certainly hope the president will file this lawsuit and based on the precedent set by his lawsuit against ABC, I believe that he would get a judgment against JB Pritzker,” Stone said in a text message to Newsweek on Wednesday.
Newsweek reached out for comment to the offices of Trump and Pritzker via email on Wednesday.
Why It Matters
ABC News recently agreed to apologize and pay $15 million toward Trump’s future presidential library to settle a defamation lawsuit against the network and anchor George Stephanopoulos for incorrectly saying on air that a jury found Trump civilly liable for rape.
A jury found Trump civilly liable last year for sexually abusing former Elle columnist E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s and defaming her by denying that an assault took place, although the judge presiding over the trial later said that Trump’s actions met “the meaning of ‘rape’ in common modern parlance.”
What To Know
While sharing an article on former Democratic Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich calling for Trump to sue Pritzker, Stone wrote the following on X, formerly Twitter, earlier on Wednesday: “President Trump should sue billionaire Governor JD [sic] Pritzker who falsely called him a rapist.”
Pritzker referred to Trump as an “adjudicated rapist” on multiple occasions while acting as a surrogate for the Democratic presidential campaigns of President Joe Biden and later Vice President Kamala Harris over the summer.
“Donald Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and a congenital liar,” Pritzker said during a speech in June. “He’s a racist, sexist, misogynistic narcissist who wants to use the levers of power to enrich himself and punish anyone who dares speak a word against him.”
What People Are Saying
Blagojevich—an outspoken Trump supporter since being granted clemency by the then-president in 2020 after serving several years in federal prison on corruption charges—called for Trump to follow up his ABC suit by taking similar legal action against Pritzker in a post to X on Monday.
“Now that Trump successfully won his defamation case against ABC for calling him a ‘rapist,’ when will he sue Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker for repeatedly lying & calling him the same thing?” Blagojevich wrote.
What Happens Next
While it is unclear whether Trump intends to file a lawsuit against Pritzker, the former and future president has seemingly started a legal revenge campaign against critics and perceived political enemies before his inauguration on January 20.
Trump filed a lawsuit on Monday against retired pollster J. Ann Selzer, the Des Moines Register and its parent company Gannett for what he alleges was “brazen election interference” for publishing a poll that showed Harris with a narrow lead in The Hawkeye State shortly before the election.
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