What you need to know about Chicago’s elected school board

US

Chicago voters will finalize their picks this November for the city’s first elected school board. It’s a big change for Chicago, which has always had some form of an appointed board, including by the mayor for the last nearly 30 years. Chicago is the only school district in Illinois that does not have an elected board currently.

Here are answers to some key questions as you prepare to vote.

How is Chicago moving from an appointed board to an elected one?

This fall’s election marks the beginning of transition to a school board elected by citizens.

On Nov. 5, voters will elect 10 of 21 school board members. The rest of the board, including the president, will continue to be appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson, giving the mayor majority control of the board for nearly all of his four-year term. This will be a significant increase in the size of the current board, which has seven members. They will begin serving in January 2025. Sometimes people refer to this as a hybrid board.

In November 2026, the entire board will be elected. They will begin serving in January 2027. Twenty will be elected from 10 districts and the president will be elected citywide.

How do the 10 voting districts and subdistricts work?

The election map drafted by Illinois lawmakers includes 10 districts, each split into two subdistricts. District 1 is made up of subdistricts 1A and 1B, District 2 is made up of subdistricts 2A and 2B and so on.

In this first election, voters will pick one board member per district for a total of 10 elected members. If a voter lives in District 3, they’ll only pick between the candidates in District 3. Mayor Johnson will appoint a second member in each district, plus a board president to complete the 21-member hybrid school board.

If voters in District 6 pick a candidate who lives in subdistrict 6B, for example, Johnson’s appointment will have to come from subdistrict 6A. The board president can come from anywhere in the city. The mayor has to pick his appointees by Dec. 16, about six weeks after Election Day.

Every member, whether elected or appointed, will serve two-year terms beginning in January 2025.

Who is on the ballot?

A total of 47 candidates filed signatures in June to get on the ballot. By the end of August, the ballot was nearly finalized with 32 candidates.

The final ballot includes 31 candidates, plus slots for four write-in candidates in three of 10 voting districts (5,6 and 10). No printed names will appear as write-ins, but four individuals filed the paperwork required to be write-ins in those districts.

Candidates, who began circulating petitions in March, needed to file 1,000 valid signatures of registered voters living in their district to be eligible to run. A thousand signatures is more than what’s required for congressional campaigns. Advocates worried this number was too high and would shut out many grassroots candidates who aren’t backed by powerful groups.

How can I vote?

Early voting starts on Oct. 3 at the Chicago Board of Election Voting Supersite (191 N. Clark) and Chicago Board of Elections offices (69 W. Washington St., 6th Floor).

Early voting in all 50 Wards begins Oct. 21. The final day to vote is Election Day, Nov. 5.

What about elections in 2026?

All 21 seats will be up for election in November 2026 to create Chicago’s first fully elected school board.

In that election, voters will choose one member from each of the 20 subdistricts. But their terms will depend on whether that subdistrict had an elected or appointed incumbent.

If District 6B was represented by an elected member, the new member picked in District 6B will get a four-year term. If District 6A had an appointed board member, the new elected member in that subdistrict will get a two-year term.

Candidates in the 2026 elections will only need 500 to 1,500 valid signatures. Those running for school board president will have to submit at least 2,500.

From there on, elections will be staggered so half the seats are up for election every two years.

Why is Chicago moving to an elected board?

Advocates have been pushing for an elected board to oversee Chicago Public Schools for more than a decade, with the effort picking up momentum after Chicago’s mayoral-appointed board closed a record 50 schools in 2013.

Supporters of an elected board say it will inject democracy and community voice into CPS decision-making, to the benefit of students and communities. They have high hopes that a different governing structure will lead to better outcomes for kids and families.

But there are concerns — that the campaign structure and lack of pay will shut out working class and grassroots candidates, that the elected board is too large to be effective, that the voting districts don’t adequately represent CPS parents. Detractors also worry an elected board will be divisive, slow an already bureaucratic decision-making process and could be corrupted by financial contributions.

WBEZ and the Sun-Times are tracking campaign contributions for every candidate running for Chicago’s School Board on Nov. 5.

La estabilización general de la inscripción del sistema escolar representa un cambio sorprendente e inesperado después de más de una década de descenso.

No resignations had been handed in as of Monday afternoon, but conversations are ongoing about the makeup of the board for the next few months, a source confirms.

The overall stabilization of the school system’s enrollment represents a stunning and unexpected turnaround after more than a decade of decline.

Martinez’s opinion piece published Tuesday in the Chicago Tribune comes as the school district is expected to adopt a resolution at its monthly board meeting Thursday that prevents any district-run schools from closing through the 2026-27 school year.

Martínez no renunció de inmediato y parecía estar indeciso. El viernes por la noche, CPS emitió un comunicado en el que decía que Martínez estaba concentrado en “aprovechar lo positivo del impulso del nuevo año escolar e implementar el plan estratégico de cinco años del distrito”.

What are the concerns with the board’s structure?

Opponents and proponents of the elected board agree on a few potentially problematic issues. These include the influence of money and pay for board members.

The elected school board law has no campaign contribution limits, though many people have been pushing for them. They point to school boards, like in Los Angeles, where charter school operators and the teachers union donate to candidates and ultimately play a big role in who gets elected.

WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times have created a campaign contribution tracker where you can keep tabs on donations in real time to see how much is being raised and which races are getting the big bucks versus grassroots campaigns.

The law also offers no pay for school board members. There’s been an effort to compensate them to try to ensure that working class and middle class Chicagoans can devote time to the job. Los Angeles board members work full time and make $127,500 a year, while other school districts provide members a stipend or a smaller salary.

What are the issues around representation and the board’s size?

Advocates talk a lot about two issues: the rights of undocumented citizens and whether the voting districts adequately represent CPS parents.

Many advocates support allowing non-citizens to vote to give those communities representation. But lawmakers didn’t find a solution in the original 2021 legislation.

“It is important for a school district with a growing Latinx population and with community members that have been here for 20 or 30 years to have a say over their children’s education,” said state State Sen. Celina Villanueva, a Chicago Democrat, who introduced a bill to allow non-citizens to vote. But it never came up for a vote.

Illinois Senate President Don Harmon said he is sensitive to this issue, but there are constitutional concerns. Several other state legislatures have tried to allow non-citizens to vote but have faced lawsuits. And even before litigation, few non-citizens have registered to vote for fear their information would end up in the hands of federal authorities.

On the question of representation, the final voting map features seven districts where the majority of voting age adults are Black residents, six majority Latino districts and five white districts. Two remaining North Side districts have a white plurality, with one including a Latino population of nearly equal size.

But there are still concerns that Latino students, who make up nearly half of CPS’s enrollment, will be underrepresented. The group Kids First Chicago said focus groups with parents and a poll show that most people want the board to reflect the makeup of the student body — almost 90% kids of color — more than the city, which is about one-third white.

In a letter to the General Assembly, MALDEF, the nation’s leading Latino civil rights organization, argued that the citizen voting age population, rather than the population overall or the voting age, should have determined the majority in a district.

Finally, when the elected school board law was being passed, there were significant concerns about its 21-member size. The current board is just seven members. It’s one of the largest among the big cities. New York City, which has 1.1 million students, has 23 members. LA and Boston have seven members each. Philadelphia has nine members. Chicago has about 323,000 students.

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