
Statements
Please find our latest statements below.
Advance Illinois Statement on Status of the Minority Teachers of Illinois Scholarship
According to research, students do better in school when they have diverse teachers: When a student has a teacher who looks like them, they are more likely to score well on tests, consistently come to school, and graduate. Studies attribute this impact at least in part to the culturally responsive practices and mindsets that teachers of color often bring to the classroom – all of which have a positive impact on students generally, and on students of color in particular.
It was these research-based insights that drove the state to create the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship program more than 30 years ago. Going to college is expensive. Through MTI, Illinois has helped reduce this ‘cost to entry’ for students who aspire to a career in teaching but come from limited family wealth. Impressively, Illinois has awarded over 13,000 scholarships since the program’s start.
In response to a lawsuit challenging MTI, the General Assembly recently considered legislation that would create a new program, the Teachers of Illinois Scholarship. We were pleased to see that this new program would still be dedicated to growing the teacher pipeline and to making it easier for students with financial need and from high need districts to become classroom educators. And while that is heartening, there is little doubt that a change from MTI to this new program will reduce the diversity of Illinois’ teacher pipeline, despite research making plain how important it is to student learning. The measure passed the house, but did not move in the Senate, so while we have insight into what may happen in the future, for now MTI remains on the books in Illinois.
“We appreciate the state’s ongoing commitment to growing and strengthening the teacher pipeline. Well-prepared teachers are the single most important factor in student learning,” according to Robin Steans, President of Advance Illinois. “That said, it is sad that Illinois is being pushed to turn its back on a program that is research-based and designed to tackle persistent opportunity and achievement gaps.”
While diversity is a key goal in the educator pipeline, students are also harmed by shortages in particular areas such as special education and bilingual education, and in specific geographies and types of schools, particularly high-poverty schools. We appreciate the efforts to continue to prioritize these pipeline needs in the proposed legislation.
It must be emphasized – particularly in today’s broader political environment - that to pretend race and racial disparities do not exist is to consign ourselves to perpetuating longstanding inequities.
“We can all agree that discrimination on the basis of race is wrong, and understand that we have a responsibility to address ongoing disparities in our educational and economic systems that have been driven by historical race-based discrimination,” Steans said. “When the research tells us it matters that we have teachers of color in our classrooms, we should be ready to respond – exactly as Illinois has for the past thirty years.”
MTI is a perfect example of why this works. The affordability supports provided through MTI were working to address the harmful consequences of decades of disparities driven by economic and educational policies; policies which have presented Black and Latinx students with massive barriers in accessing higher education, including disproportionate challenges meeting high and rising costs.
Without MTI, we will not be able to make the same amount of progress towards closing the student and teacher diversity gap, which harms so many of our K-12 students. That is a great loss for students in our state and will impede our progress towards equitable student outcomes.
This will not be the last instance of tension between the goals and priorities of our state and those of the new federal administration. We look to state leaders to continue to do the best possible work with the resources and capabilities at hand—always keeping student needs as the north star—and we look forward to partnering with state policymakers in this work.
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About Advance Illinois
Advance Illinois is an independent bipartisan policy and advocacy nonprofit organization working toward a healthy public education system that enables all students to achieve success in college, career, and civic life.
Advance Illinois Statement Regarding the FY26 State Budget
Recent and pending federal policy actions are impacting education access and complicating Illinois’ fiscal decision-making for FY26. In the teeth of significant uncertainty, the Illinois General Assembly passed a budget filled with hard choices; one that takes efforts to protect important investments for Illinois children and students, even as it misses key opportunities to double down on progress the state has made to improve quality and access.
“We recognize and appreciate the efforts the Governor and lawmakers have made to protect public education, but hope we can and will find ways to further strengthen support for early childhood, K12, and higher education,” said Robin Steans, president of Advance Illinois.
Supporting Our Youngest Learners
Our state has long acknowledged the importance of a strong start for young children in Illinois, so we commend the General Assembly’s continued commitment to investing in early childhood education and care for FY26. Increases to the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) ($75M) and the Smart Start Workforce Grants ($90M) to replace expiring federal relief help support program affordability, workforce retention, and quality care – all of which are crucial to a strong system.
That said, there were some notable budget casualties. The Early Childhood Block Grant (ECBG) received insufficient funding to expand Preschool for All and Prevention Initiative programs, undermining the state’s goal to provide universal preschool to all 3- and 4-year-olds by 2027. At the same time, level funding for the Early Childhood Access Consortium for Equity (ECACE) scholarship program fails to meet growing workforce demands and provide the critical support needed to help future early childhood educators complete their degrees; Five million dollars is simply not enough to address shortages in providers and stave off the negative implications for children and families when well-prepared providers are unavailable.
As federal support wanes and the new Illinois Department of Early Childhood continues to take shape, sustained and increased state investments remain critical to ensuring all young children in Illinois have access to the care and education they need to thrive.
Funding Concerns for K-12 Schools
In what was anticipated to be a tough fiscal environment, we appreciate the difficult choices lawmakers confronted when considering support for Illinois’ public k-12 student and schools. First, we applaud the state for maintaining funding for critical systemic mental health supports in the form of the REACH pilot and SEL hubs. Every data point we have reminds us that students in every corner of the state are struggling, so while a larger investment is needed, this ongoing investment is as compassionate as it is critical.
As for the big picture, at $307M, the investment into the Evidence-Based Funding Formula (EBF) provides important and vital support to school districts, though it foregoes opportunities to reduce local property taxes and falls below the minimum funding called for in statute. When EBF was first signed into law in 2017, 169 school districts were funded at 60% or below full funding. Today, just 1 district is. But over 1.3 million students still attend schools in underfunded districts – districts that are disproportionately rural and urban and that serve students from low-income households, English language learners, and Black and Latinx students. Further, the fact that all Mandated Categoricals (except those statutorily required to be funded at 100%) will be held at level funding for FY26 means districts face increased proration and growing budget gaps. This in turn means EBF funds will likely be used to backfill mandates, rather than addressing critical gaps. Therefore, while we applaud efforts to maintain EBF increases, the hard truth is that we have work to do here.
Ensuring Quality by Supporting Our Educators
Given how fundamental a diverse, well-supported, and well-prepared teacher workforce is to driving student growth and achievement, we are pleased that several critical programs were included in the final budget. We are also pleased to see ongoing or increased support for key strategies that allow Illinois to grow and strengthen its educator pipeline. Investments in teacher coaching and mentoring ($5M) help support retention of early career educators and new school leaders and are the type of state-level investments Illinois should continue to prioritize. An increase of $4M in Grow Your Own helps expand and diversify the educator pipeline, especially for male candidates. Further, we are heartened to see maintained funding for programs such as Golden Apple, Teach for America, and Affinity Groups in FY26. These programs play an important role in the state’s strategy to recruit, prepare, and support excellent and diverse teachers for Illinois students. We hope these programs will be sustained and expanded in future budget cycles.
Finally, we appreciate the $8M investment in the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship program. Though the program remains the subject of an ongoing lawsuit and a bill creating an alternative Teachers of Illinois Scholarship was introduced and passed the House over the weekend, we appreciate the state's ongoing commitment to growing our pipeline and doing so in a way that clears a path for a wide range of candidates.
Supporting Our Colleges and Universities
Illinois’ long-term prosperity depends on making postsecondary opportunity more affordable for all. So while we commend the state for increasing investment in our community colleges and public universities, the respective 1.5% and 1% increases from last year fall significantly short of what our institutions need to operate and serve students to and through their college journey. Thanks to the work of the Commission on Equitable Public University Funding, Illinois now knows just how much investment each of our public universities needs to fulfill their unique missions and support their unique student bodies. This proposed budget falls far short of what is needed, nor did legislators take action this Spring to adopt a university funding formula that would ensure growth into the future. This is an area for further effort if and when the General Assembly reconvenes later this year.
We hope, too, that the General Assembly will work to further increase support for the Monetary Award Program (MAP), if and when it has an opportunity. The $10M increase approved this weekend is better than no increase in this tough budget year, but according to ISAC data, will not be enough to cover all anticipated qualified applicants. Moreover, recent federal actions changing financial aid requirements and terms for prospective borrowers means state efforts to ensure college access are more important than ever.
Final Thoughts
This session, the General Assembly had a challenging task in passing a budget that both recognized financial realities on the ground and anticipated significant fiscal changes ahead at the federal level. We commend our lawmakers and the governor for the steps they’ve taken to sustain critical areas of work and progress, and for remaining true to Illinois values and priorities. We commit ourselves to working with other advocates and officials to see what more can be done in the months ahead to further strengthen educational opportunities and outcomes for Illinois children, students, and families.
Advance Illinois Statement on Governor Pritzker’s FY26 Budget Proposal
In the face of a budget deficit and an environment of challenge and great uncertainty at the federal level, we recognize the difficult decisions that leaders are facing and appreciate the Governor’s focus on fiscal responsibility and stability, which help anchor progress over time. Today’s proposal by the Governor represents a restrained but ongoing commitment to Illinois’ education system and the children, students, and families it serves. That said, we are honor-bound to address important remaining needs and gaps.
"While we understand the complexities of this year’s environment and recognize the Governor's commitment to young children and students, we hope the General Assembly will build on this proposal to sustain the educational progress the state has made to ensure our students can thrive,” said Robin Steans, President of Advance Illinois.
It is good news that the Governor remains committed to the Evidence-Based Funding formula (EBF), and we are pleased to see some modest increased investments across the B-20 continuum. That said, the proposal leaves some important gaps and needs unaddressed. Were the proposed budget to pass unchanged, it would challenge Illinois’ ability to support every child and student and maintain the steady progress the state has made toward a system of equitable, high-quality education. We cannot let up on strong investments now.
On Proposals for Illinois’ Early Childhood System
We applaud the Governor’s recommendation of $160 million to meet the growing demand for the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP), the increase of $10 million in Early Intervention to support rate enhancements for providers (though more is needed), and his continued support for the new Illinois Department of Early Childhood (IDEC) with a $7 million increase. Unfortunately, the Governor’s recommendation pauses new investments in the Early Childhood Block Grant (ECBG), which would limit the state’s ability to expand and improve quality for Preschool for All programs and prevention initiative, programs necessary to ensure our youngest learners are prepared to be successful in kindergarten and beyond.
We are delighted that the Governor is recommending a $90 million increase in the Smart Start Workforce Grants to replace expired federal covid relief funding. Unfortunately, the Governor’s recommendation misses a critical opportunity to meet extremely high demand for the Early Childhood Access Consortium for Equity (ECACE ) scholarship program that helps grow the ECEC workforce. With the current $5 million appropriation, just 666 students received the scholarship this year, leaving out roughly 2,300 educators who applied, and limiting the state’s ability to grow the workforce fundamental to Illinois’ system of care and education for its youngest learners.
Needs for Our Educator Workforce
Over the last five years, the state has worked hard to invest in programs that build a stronger, more diverse teacher pipeline. While the Governor recommends level funding for key scholarship programs like ECACE, the budget fails to include essential teacher and principal mentoring programs. These programs, established with ESSER funds, cannot survive without state support, leaving new educators without crucial early career supports – supports that have been shown to increase effectiveness and retention. Worse still, if we cut these programs now to help balance this year’s budget, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to rebuild the program once we’ve lost the infrastructure. This pattern of stopping and starting key programs is neither good for educators nor the state.
K-12 Funding – Evidence Based Funding Formula
The Governor’s proposed $350 million increase in Evidence-Based Funding (EBF) for Illinois schools represents a continued commitment to more fully and equitably funding our K-12 system. We acknowledge and appreciate the significance, even as we know that our students need more. The 2024 Nation’s Report Card (NAEP) scores provide evidence for this need, with the gap between the lowest-performing and top-performing students in Illinois in reading and math persisting and even widening; more of our state’s attention is needed. EBF plays a critical role in Illinois’ ability to interrupt this trajectory by directing new resources to the school districts and students that need them most.
And while EBF investment is needed, its impact would be diminished by the increased proration of Mandated Categoricals proposed in this budget. These are key funding streams that reimburse districts for required expenses such as transportation, special education services, and school meals. Several of these programs have been underfunded for years – the Governor’s proposal would take the overall underfunding of these programs from approximately $380 million in FY25 to nearly $550 million in FY26. This means districts will have to use EBF dollars in order to continue funding these mandatory services – effectively reducing the impact of EBF increases.
Supporting the Needs of the Whole Child
Our schools will also be directly impacted by reductions to programs that foster healing-centered, trauma-informed practices in schools. While the budget proposes the same total state investments in REACH and SEL Hubs for FY26, these programs currently leverage both federal and state dollars, but will need to rely solely on state funds moving forward. REACH, in particular, supports schools across the entire state and simply cannot continue at scale without additional funding. Thanks to the smart investments we have made in REACH and SEL Hubs over the past several years, Illinois is on a path to more systemic mental health and well-being programs for students and families. Now is not the time to reduce these critical services for schools.
Proposed Investments for Higher Education
Although we applaud the administration's continued support of the Monetary Award Program (MAP), the proposed increase of $10M is not enough to ensure that all students have access to an affordable postsecondary pathway. College affordability remains the number one barrier to postsecondary enrollment and completion – and at the current rate it is unlikely that all eligible applicants will continue receiving a grant. This will further exacerbate financial burdens for students across the state, effectively pricing out more students at a time when postsecondary degrees are increasingly important in employment and earning a living wage. On the institutional side, the Govenor proposes a 3% increase for higher education, using the state’s status quo funding approach – a system that we know is inequitable in its distribution and inadequate in the funds needed. We now know our public universities are nearly $1.4B underfunded after nearly two decades of disinvestment by the state. Without a change in how we fund the state’s public universities, and the amount we invest on an annual basis, students face another year of attending institutions with dramatically disparate resources. This disparity plays out in differences in the services and supports students receive, and, by extension, their ability to persist and complete their degree.
But we can do better. The Adequate and Equitable Funding Formula for Public Universities, as proposed by Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford’s and Representative Carol Ammons’s SB13/HB1581, would transform higher education funding for the state, sending increased investments to our institutions, and prioritizing those universities and students furthest from adequacy. Grounded in recommendations by the Commission on Equitable Public University Funding, this student-centered formula is grounded in more than two years of research into evidence-based, impact-driven practices that work to support student persistence.
At a time when actions and communications from the new White House administration signal an adversarial posture toward research-based school and campus programs and practices used to level a playing field that has historically been structured to exclude and under-resource marginalized students, it is critical that our state stands firm on its commitment to promoting an inclusive economy by making the right decisions today. The choices that lie ahead, regardless of the budget environment, must be ones that prioritize removing systemic barriers so that every student can realize their potential and use their skills and talents to contribute to Illinois’ future health, vibrance, and vitality.
We appreciate the Governor’s historic and ongoing commitment to a strong education system for the state and the decisions he and our lawmakers must consider amid challenging circumstances. That said, more can and must be done for Illinois’ children and students. We now look to the General Assembly to respond to the needs left unaddressed or requiring more support than what is offered in today’s proposal. We encourage them to take advantage of key opportunities to sustain and grow Illinois students’ continued recovery from COVID disruptions, and to support their ability to excel and reach their full potential. Our students need this, and the future of the state depends on it.
Advance Illinois Applauds Filing of SB3965 as Next Key Step in a More Student-Centered Higher Education System
Advance Illinois is delighted to celebrate the filing of SB3965, creating a funding formula for the state’s public universities. This groundbreaking bill puts Illinois’ public universities on a path to adequacy, equity, and sustainability.
Grounded in the Commission on Equitable Public University Funding’s recommendations, released this March, the bill sets forth a blueprint to improve how the state funds its public universities, marking an important next step as Illinois works to build a stronger, healthier postsecondary landscape for students across the state who seek a college degree.
“For too long, earning a college degree at our state schools has been inaccessible for too many Illinois students,” said Robin Steans, President of Advance Illinois.
The recommendations released by the 33-member Commission outline a funding formula that would set Illinois apart from other states. By centering student-need, taking institutional mission and size into account, and considering what students can and should pay in tuition and fees, the formula puts earning a college degree within reach of all Illinois students.
“The research is clear, a college degree continues to be the surest path toward greater economic mobility, and importantly, to intergenerational wealth,” Steans said. “To ensure every Illinois student can access that path, every public university must have the resources they need to serve the students they enroll. If we do this right, not only will students thrive, but the state will benefit as well.”
Advance Illinois applauds bill co-sponsors, Illinois Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford and Representative Carol Ammons, for their continued leadership in holding our state accountable for how well and how justly it supports its public universities and in turn, their students. Advance Illinois joins college access and success organizations, civil rights groups and other advocates in the field in celebrating this critical step, and looks forward to the work ahead to see this through.
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Advance Illinois is an independent, bipartisan policy and advocacy organization working toward a healthy public education system that enables all students to achieve success in college, career, and civic life.
Advance Illinois Statement Regarding FY25 Budget
The Illinois General Assembly today passed a budget for FY25 that considers education but leaves gaps in key areas of need for children, students, and the systems designed to support them.
“If budgets reflect priorities, it is clear that the General Assembly understands the importance of investing in the next generation, even as it has left some important work undone,” said Robin Steans, President of Advance Illinois.
Taking Steps Forward in Improving Illinois’ Early Childhood System with Glaring Opportunities for More Strategic Investment
Learning begins at birth and sets the course for a child’s long-term growth and development, so we are pleased that the legislature continues to prioritize early childhood programs. The new budget provides increases for critical early childhood programs such as the Early Childhood Block Grant, home visiting, and Smart Start workforce grants. That said, still greater investment is needed for programs such as Early Intervention, which ensures families can access key services for young children who are at risk of or experiencing developmental delays.
As we celebrate the passage of SB1, which creates the Department of Early Childhood and the $14.2 million appropriated to fund its first year, we challenge legislators to do more to grow the pipeline into the early childhood profession in order to realize progress and impact. The state’s $5 million investment in ECACE, a scholarship program that helps working adults access higher education and complete early childhood education degrees and credentials, is simply not enough. Indeed, the investment – far short of the $28.6 million agencies requested – will leave roughly 2,400 early childhood educators without financial support to complete their programs. This, to say the least, is an incredible missed opportunity: Diminished funding for this scholarship runs counter to the state’s significant efforts to support a stronger, more equitable system that reaches more children and families!
Strengthening Opportunities and Outcomes in Higher Education
This spring, Illinois continued efforts to expand access to earning a college degree in-state, but they were decidedly more muted. The legislature’s measured 1% increase to MAP ($10M) and 2% increase to institutional general operating funding (nearly $40M) follow more significant increases in recent years. We hope and expect that greater increases are ahead, including when the state adopts a more adequate, equitable, and stable funding formula, as recommended by the Commission for Equitable Public University Funding.
Supporting K-12 School Districts
While we, together with many educators and advocates across the state, know a $550 million increase to the Evidence-Based Funding formula (EBF) will bring every school district to full funding faster, lawmakers approved a $350 million increase to the school funding formula for FY25. EBF continues to be instrumental in directing resources to schools, districts and students that need them most. Although data indicate that Illinois students are beginning to recover academically from the pandemic's disruptions, we are not yet to pre-pandemic academic proficiency, recovery is uneven, disparities persist, ESSER funds are nearly gone, and there is still a long way to go in supporting student well-being. The state must lean into EBF investments that go beyond the minimum funding level if it is to meet these challenges in earnest.
Investing in the Whole Child
As communities continue to recover from COVID disruptions, the need to understand and be responsive to student mental health has become even more urgent. We appreciate that the General Assembly appropriated modest funding for Resilience Education to Advance Community Healing (REACH) and SEL Hubs, programs designed to ensure all Illinois students and educators attend trauma-informed, resilient schools. These key investments are essential to supporting student well-being, which in turn helps students and schools thrive academically and beyond. That said, the funding provided in this budget falls far below the level of federal funding allocated to these projects in recent years. Indeed, these significant reductions will limit the number of schools that will benefit from these programs in FY25, if not sufficiently supplemented with extended ESSER funds. However, one important piece of good news is that the FY25 budget provides $250,000 for Illinois to develop a Children's Adversity Index that will give the state a first-ever window into trauma exposure at the local level—information that will help identify community and district needs and help direct resources, training, and support.
Strengthening Our Schools through Our Educator Pipeline, Key Early Career Supports Missing
As teacher and staff shortages continue to plague many schools and districts, the Illinois State Board of Education is to be commended for the strides it has taken to strengthen and diversify its educator workforce. But that effort depends on stable support from Springfield. We are pleased to see the legislature continue to a make strong investment ($8 million) in the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship program (MTI), which helps support candidates of color access the preparation needed to become teachers. Further, we applaud continued investments in the Teacher Loan Repayment program and principal recruitment, as well as uptake of previously ESSER-funded affinity groups as a state funded item. That said, resources for teacher and principal mentoring are nowhere in the budget, despite the important work these initiatives do preparing new educators for the demands of their roles and bolstering early career retention. These programs, currently supported through expiring ESSER dollars, must continue, especially as the state continues offering expanded routes into the classroom that require minimal to no preparation through provisional and short-term approvals, short-cuts that underscore the need to support new teachers.
Looking Forward, Difficult Choices Ahead
Amid a tough budget environment, we recognize the difficult decisions our legislators had to make to advance a budget, and we appreciate the important new investments in critical and foundational programs and budget lines. But with critical gaps in support for new teachers and principals, and insufficient funding to support student well-being and learning recovery, the impact of those decisions will now be passed to district leaders. Challenging choices lie ahead. So while we extend our gratitude to the General Assembly for the budget it has approved, we resolve to continue fighting. We will continue working alongside advocates and partners across the B-20 continuum to identify investments that sustain, strengthen, and accelerate our path to better opportunities and outcomes. Our choices as a state have real and lasting consequences for children, students and families.