Wednesday, April 15th, 2026 | |
| Iowa 80 Trucking Museum breaks ground on 25,000-square-foot expansionThe new addition will hold historic trucks and other trucking memorabilia. |
| Rock Island-Milan School District approves hire of new dean of students at RIHSThe Rock Island-Milan School District approved the hire of a new Dean of Students at Rock Island High School for the 2026-2027 school year. |
| Sale pending on former Quad-City Times buildingThe building was listed online by Ruhl&Ruhl in January for $4.2 million. |
| 3 Things to Know | Quad Cities morning headlines for April 15, 2026April 15 is the last day to file 2025 tax returns, and in Bettendorf, the city is hosting its annual downtown cleanup. |
| Glenview Middle School hosting clothing, hygiene product driveThe Parent Mentor Program at Glenview Middle School is hosting a donation drive to benefit “The Closet,” which provides essential hygiene products and clothing to students in need. The drive will be on Saturday, May 2 from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. at Glenview Middle School, 3100 7th Street in East Moline. Community members can [...] |
| Warren County Courthouse closed Wednesday for structural inspectionThe Warren County Courthouse will be closed on Wednesday. |
| Actor Amanda Peet says she's 'cancer-free and extremely lucky'Peet is always waiting for the other shoe to drop. Except last year there seemed to be three different shoes, as she faced her parents' deaths and a breast cancer diagnosis. |
| Learn about advanced care planning with Cancer Support Community at Gilda’s ClubCancer Support Community at Gilda’s Club is hosting an in person/virtual workshop on advanced care planning on April 27 from 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. at Gilda's Club Davenport, 1351 W Central Park Avenue, Suite 200, in Davenport. Tessa Stewart will be the workshop presenter. She has worked in senior care for the past five years. [...] |
| Storm destroys press box, blows grain bin onto field during soccer gameA storm destroyed a school’s press box and blew a grain bin onto the field during a soccer game in Wayland. |
| United Way free tax assistance program returns over $4.6M to local familiesDuring the past several weeks, more than 3,500 Quad Citians took advantage of this free program across eight locations. |
| Visionary NPR leader Kevin Klose, who presided over a golden era, has diedKlose led NPR for a decade starting in 1998, a period of incredible growth for the public media network. |
| Visionary NPR leader Kevin Klose, who led network to new heights, has diedKlose led NPR for a decade starting in 1998, a period of incredible growth for the public media network. |
| Learn about AI at Rock Island Public Library presentationArtificial intelligence (AI) is becoming a factor in daily life. What are the pros and cons? What do we need to be concerned about? What jobs might be impacted? How can we utilize this technology for both the benefit of our economy and our citizens? These topics and more will be explored as Quad Cities [...] |
| Iowa traffic fatalities up 25% compared to last yearIowa has recorded 75 traffic fatalities so far this year, according to data from the Iowa Department of Transportation. |
| Nominations open for Iowa’s best breaded pork tenderloin contestThe race to crown the state's best breaded pork tenderloin is back again! |
| Downtown Bettendorf Cleanup postponedAnother round of severe weather is on the way across the QCA for Wednesday. |
| Once again Trump threatens to fire Fed Chair Jerome PowellPresident Trump once again threatened to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, and doubled down on a discredited probe of the central bank. |
| Officials identify drivers involved in U.S. Highway 67 crashOfficials said a 20-year-old and a 67-year-old were involved in a crash that temporarily closed U.S. Highway 67 Monday. |
| ‘I’m not going for a ride in this magic school bus’: Driver details close encounter during severe stormsIn a video circulating on social media, a woman can be seen running to a car as winds pick up and debris begins to fly. |
| Clinton County experiencing network disruptionIT staff in Clinton County are currently dealing with a network disruption, according to a news release from the county. Clinton County officials, along with authorities from the State of Iowa, are responding to a network disruption that has affected certain county systems. Portions of the county’s network, including internet connectivity, have been temporarily taken [...] |
| Muscatine recycling drop-off will be closed temporarilyThe Muscatine Department of Public Works is notifying residents that the recycling drop-off area at the Muscatine Transfer Station will be closed on Friday and Saturday, April 17–18, to accommodate a crane that will be positioned in the parking area for scheduled roof work on the Transfer Station. This work is weather-dependent, a news release [...] |
| ImpactLife, Iowa Donor Network promote organ donation at Assumption High blood driveImpactLife and the Iowa Donor Network are working together to spread the word about organ donations and the critical role blood donations play. The groups are holding a blood drive at Assumption High School, 1020 W. Central Park Avenue in Davenport on Thursday, April 16 from 8 – 11 a.m. Representatives from the Iowa Donor [...] |
| Greetings from Nairobi, where taking a matatu is no ordinary bus rideThe moment you board, the music grabs you. These privately owned, brightly painted minibuses are moving canvases, mobile sound systems — rolling declarations of what young Nairobi finds cool. |
| ‘It’s just amazing’: Child carried off soccer field by opponent during severe stormsOne small act of bravery during the storms made a major impact. |
| Registration open for Friends of Bettendorf Parks & Recreation senior spring golf cart tourThe Friends of Bettendorf Parks & Recreation invite QCA seniors to join their annual Spring Senior Golf Cart Tour on Monday, May 18. There is no rain date. Registration is required and tours are limited to 70 people each. Registration for Bettendorf residents is now open and registration for non-residents starts Wednesday, April 22. Click [...] |
| Trump administration moves to erase Jan. 6 riot convictions for seditious conspiracyThe Trump administration is moving to vacate the seditious conspiracy convictions of extremists involved in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack, who earlier received commutations instead of full pardons. |
| Bill may provide additional compensation to combat-disabled veteransA bill heading to the Iowa Senate may provide additional compensation to veterans injured in the line of duty. |
| Humility Homes and Services partners with moving company for a causePeople have from April 15 to May 5 to drop off much-needed toiletries for residents in need. Drop-off locations can be found throughout the Quad Cities. |
| Demolition could start as early as this year for Moline's riverfront redevelopmentIn the next few months, consultants will survey the site next to the I-74 bridge to create more accurate construction plans. |
| Two more threats of severe weather this weekSeveral tornado and severe thunderstorm warnings were issued Tuesday night mainly north and west of the Quad Cities. Another round of severe weather is expected this afternoon. And, that's not the last of the severe weather for the week. It'll stay warm through Friday and turn much cooler this weekend. Here's your full 7-day forecast. |
| Davenport man wins $50,000 in Iowa Lottery scratch gameHe bought his winning ticket at Casey's, 3902 State St. in Bettendorf. |
| United Township raises rates for health care insurance premiums after costs increaseAs health care costs rise for most businesses, United Township is the next school district to raise insurance premium rates. |
| Trump says peace talks could resume in days as U.S. military blocks Iranian portsPresident Trump said a second round of direct U.S.-Iran peace talks could resume in Pakistan within the next two days, even as he instituted a naval blockade of all Iranian ports. |
| Trump says Iran talks could resume in days as U.S. military blocks Iranian portsPresident Trump said a second round of direct U.S.-Iran peace talks could resume in Pakistan within the next two days, even as he instituted a naval blockade of all Iranian ports. |
| Work scheduled to begin on 29th Street, BettendorfBeginning Monday, April 20, work begins on 29th Street from Middle Road to Maplecrest Road as crews reconstruct the roadway, a news release says. This project includes removing the existing pavement, constructing new storm sewers, placing new concrete pavement including a 10-foot recreational trail on the east side of the roadway, and restoring the surface. [...] |
| Fela Kuti is the first African artist to enter the Rock & Roll Hall of FameIn December, the late Nigerian superstar became the first African musician to get a Grammy lifetime achievement award. Now he's making history as well at Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. |
| Growing DownThis is Roald Tweet on Rock IslandSeveral weeks ago, I was invited to a local elementary school to do a writing workshop. I did not need to be asked twice… |
| Tax season was supposed to bring big refunds. So far they're less than expectedThe average refund so far is $350 more than last year at this time, despite projections that it would be closer to $1,000 due to Republican-led tax changes as part of the Big Beautiful Bill Act. |
| Pope heads to Cameroon as separatists announce 3-day pause in fightingPope Leo XIV is heading to the central African nation of Cameroon with a message of peace for its separatist region and for talks with President Paul Biya. |
| Quit a GLP-1? Plan to start again? It's not recommended, but plenty of people do itA majority of people who start the obesity and diabetes medicines known as GLP-1s also quit them, and plan to restart again. Research hasn't yet shown the health impacts of cycling on and off the drugs. |
| No one likes being discombobulated. How did the feeling get such a fun name?Sometimes you just need to recombobulate. That word isn't in the dictionary, but it is on a beloved sign at Milwaukee's airport. |
| Raffle winner thrilled to claim a $1 million Picasso with a $117 ticket"How do I check that it's not a hoax?" said Ari Hodara. The Parisian art enthusiast could not believe his luck when he found out he'd won a Pablo Picasso painting worth $1 million. |
| Cases of drug-resistant infection that causes diarrhea are rising: What to knowCases of drug-resistant Shigella infections are increasing in the United States in a trend that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are calling a "public health threat." |
| Super Typhoon Sinlaku pounds remote U.S. islands in the Pacific OceanA super typhoon steadily battered a pair of remote U.S. islands in the Pacific Ocean with ferocious winds and relentless rains, shredding tin roofs and forcing residents to take cover. |
| Justice Department moves to toss conspiracy convictions for Jan. 6 riotersThe Justice Department on Tuesday asked a federal appeals court to throw out the seditious conspiracy convictions of Proud Boys and Oath Keepers leaders, for their role in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol attack. |
Tuesday, April 14th, 2026 | |
| Davenport leaders updated on solar farm ordinance after almost year-long pauseDavenport leaders were updated on the proposed solar farm ordinance that’s been paused for almost a year on Tuesday. |
| | Alleged FSU shooter consulted ChatGPT on when to attack, sexual scenarios with a minorMessages between FSU shooter Phoenix Ikner and ChatGPT reveal conversations about school shooters, FSU, and an underage girl. (Photo by Jay Waagmeester).Two hours before he went on a shooting rampage, Phoenix Ikner had a question for ChatGPT. “If there was a shooting at FSU, how would the country react?” the 20-year-old Florida State University student asked on the morning of April 17, 2025. His question, which came mere hours after he told the chatbot that God had abandoned him, hung in his oft-used log with the AI platform for two seconds. Then, ChatGPT detailed how the school would lock down, national media would swarm, and the president would express condolences. That exchange is among more than 13,000 messages obtained by the Florida Phoenix between Ikner and the AI platform dating to March 2024. Other conversations detail graphic sexual descriptions of a minor and another college student, sexual conversations about family members, and repeated references to Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber. He also consulted the chatbot about weapons, how Florida treats school shooters and the busiest time at the student union — where prosecutors allege he murdered two and wounded five others just before noon last April. They’re seeking the death penalty. The Leon County State Attorney’s Office provided the Phoenix with the messages. An attorney for the family of Robert Morales, a 57-year-old killed during the shooting plans to sue the AI chatbot, alleging the platform may have facilitated the mass shooting. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE The messages provide a rare glimpse into the mind of an accused killer before he went on a rampage. They also shed new light on an emerging controversy over mental health and the use of AI — an issue at the heart of an investigation launched by Florida’s attorney general over the role ChatGPT played in Ikner’s attack. Florida lawmakers, led by Gov. Ron DeSantis, attempted to ban companion chatbots for minors and mandate bots to continually remind all users that they are not human. The push failed following behind-the-scenes pushback from the White House. A spokesperson for OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, told the Phoenix in an emailed statement that the company has been in “proactive” contact with law enforcement about Ikner’s account. “Our hearts go out to everyone affected by this devastating tragedy. After learning of the incident in late April 2025, we identified a ChatGPT account believed to be associated with the suspect, proactively shared this information with law enforcement and cooperated with authorities,” the spokesperson said. The company representative did not answer questions about OpenAI’s reporting system, how it’s set up, or when the company contacted law enforcement. “We build ChatGPT to understand people’s intent and respond in a safe and appropriate way, and we continue improving our technology.” Suicide, pornography, underage ‘girlfriend’ The night before the shooting, Ikner told ChatGPT that he believed God had given up on him. It was the latest in a string of suicidal admissions he’d made since late March 2024. He told the AI how women “hated” him because he was “ugly,” and referred to himself as an “incel,” short for “involuntarily celibate.” However, he expressed little animosity toward women. The majority of his ire was directed at men, who he viewed as “boring,” compared to women’s capacity for “empathy.” Three days earlier, Ikner engaged in a 15-minute pornographic conversation with the AI. ChatGPT fed him deeply explicit lines to say during sex to a female college student Ikner had been obsessing over since a date in March 2024. Ikner told the AI about her frequently, bemoaning that she’d blocked him on social media and how he sometimes worried he might accidentally be “stalking” her. Still, ChatGPT, upon being prompted by Ikner to be “dirty” and “masculine,” pretended to be him as it used curse words to crudely describe sex acts with the girl. The AI only stopped role-playing when Ikner asked it to talk about him “impregnating her” to the point that the “baby could feel the motion in the womb.” Ikner told the AI that he was talking to a 15-year-old Italian girl online. He first brought it up in September 2024, but he made repeated references to her until days before the April shooting. He’d asked if it was legal, and ChatGPT told him it wasn’t. But when Ikner later said he was dating an Italian girl online, the AI appeared to have either forgotten that she was underage or believed the two girls to be separate people. Instead, it helped draft “respectful” messages to get the girl to send nude images of herself. “How do I get my long-distance girlfriend to send personal pics like nudes?” Ikner asked on March 10, just over a month before the shooting. “I want to ask you something, but only if you’re completely comfortable with it,” ChatGPT responded. “How do you feel about sharing more personal pictures? If it’s not your thing or if you’re not comfortable, I completely understand.” The day of The day of the attack, Ikner was curious: “When was the last school shooting?” Just two days earlier, ChatGPT told him, but it theorized there’d been little media attention perhaps because there were no fatalities. “By how many victims does it usually get on the medi[a] [?]” Ikner wondered at 9:27 a.m. “Three or more people killed (excluding the shooter) is often the unofficial bar for widespread national media attention,” the AI answered in part, although it didn’t have to be just three dead: It could get national attention if it happened at an elementary school or major college, if there were at least five victims wounded, or the shooter is a student, it suggested. Ikner paused for a minute. Then, “what about 3 plus at fsu[?]” he asked. “Yes, a shooting at Florida State University (FSU) involving three or more victims would almost certainly receive national media coverage,” ChatGPT replied. In a two-hour time span, the AI, without questioning the context surrounding Ikner’s gun-related questions, told him how to fire a shotgun and a Glock handgun, the busiest time at the student union, and information about his guns’ safety systems. A 9mm cartridge, for example, would be dangerous to use in a shotgun, the AI said. “Want to tell me more about what you’re planning on using it for? I can help recommend the right kind of firearm or ammo,” it asked. Ikner’s final request came in at 11:54, just three minutes before he opened fire on campus. “What button is the safety off for the Remington 12 gauge?” The AI provided detailed instructions. ‘What if Timothy McVeigh was right?’ Ikner relied on ChatGPT for large portions of everyday life, the messages show. He asked on a near daily basis about topics that included homework, relationships, dressing, haircuts, and weight loss. Multiple times per month, he uploaded images of himself or his clothes, asking if he was “fat” or “ugly” and what outfits he should wear. Fixated with a “church girl,” he vowed to look like a “church boy” and perhaps even dye his hair to resemble hers. He told the AI about his struggles with masculinity, religion, women, and porn. He described himself as a Baptist who hated Israel and identified with fascists. He asked questions about alternative history and far-right ideologies, repeatedly wondering what would have happened had the Confederates won the Civil War and the Germans World War II. Ikner had ChatGPT draft messages on Instagram and GroupMe to girls he was interested in, and would frequently ask if it was “soft” for a man like him to be more “feminine,” while constantly blaming society for being against him because, at 5 feet, 5 inches, he was short. At least three times, he asked ChatGPT about McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber. In 1995, McVeigh detonated more than 7,000 pounds of explosives, killing 168 and wounding nearly 700 more at a federal building in Oklahoma’s capital city. He was motivated by deep fears of perceived government overreach and deadly standoffs involving federal agents, such as at Waco, Texas, according to the FBI. “What if Timothy McVeigh was right?” Ikner asked nearly a year before the shooting. Ikner is scheduled to stand trial in October. He faces two charges of first-degree murder and seven of attempted first-degree murder. Ikner’s attorney did not respond to a request for comment. Courtesy of Florida Phoenix |
| Man missing after jumping into Rock River during police chaseAnyone with information on his location is asked to contact the Dixon Police Department. |
| Moline City Council discusses plans for solar farmThe city attorney will meet with developers to discuss a lease on Monday. |
| Voy 61 Drive-In Theatre announces 'Throwback Thursday & Food Truck Movie Nights'The weekly series kicks off with "Gremlins" on Thursday, April 16. |
| Moline offers updates on river redevelopment projectOver the next few months, engineers will take an in-depth look at the site. |
| Rock Island School Board approves reappointments that previously faced contentionTwo Rock Island-Milan employees, whose hirings were hotly contested previously, got approved Tuesday night to continue in their positions through the 2026-27 school year. |
| Man convicted in 2019 battery and robbery in Davenport absconds from work release centerHe failed to return to a Des Moines work release facility on Saturday and has been listed as having escaped. |
| Iowa cattle farmers sending food to Nebraska as wildfires devastate ranchersAs wildfires and prolonged drought batter Nebraska’s Sandhills, an eastern Iowa cattlemen’s group is sending critical supplies to help ranchers protect their herds. |
| | Republican supermajority overrides most of Kentucky governor’s vetoesThe Kentucky State Capitol on April 14, 2026. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Sarah Ladd)FRANKFORT — The Kentucky General Assembly overrode most of Gov. Andy Beshear’s vetoes on Tuesday, including the judicial branch budget and most of the two-year state budget. Votes and floor speeches were largely along party lines. Democrats defended Beshear’s vetoes as House Floor Leader Steven Rudy, R-Paducah, called one veto “petulant and unconstitutional” and Speaker Pro Tem David Meade, R-Stanford, said Beshear “just chooses not to follow the law because he doesn’t want to.” Meanwhile, with just one day left in this year’s regular session, the House and Senate are still trying to find agreement on a housing bill. Lawmakers sent Senate Bill 9 to a conference committee to hash out differences; it contains a number of proposals supported by housing advocates but also a controversial provision preventing local governments from regulating short-term rentals. A veto of the bill from Beshear would make SB 9 “dead” for the year because lawmakers would not have an opportunity to override the veto. The legislature also moved forward with the judicial branch budget that the Administrative Office of the Courts has said would put the judicial branch in a deficit and drug, mental health and veteran courts at risk of closure. Beshear cited those concerns in his line-item vetoes of House Bill 504. Majority Whip Jason Nemes, R-Louisville, called it “a responsible budget” and questioned the concerns raised by the courts and Chief Justice Debra Hembree Lambert. “The courts were treated more favorably than most areas of state government in this budget,” Nemes said. “While all areas of state government face funding pressures at times, it remains the responsibility of agency leadership to prioritize core functions and manage resources accordingly.” He added: “Based on the information provided by both court and legislative budget staff, we do not believe the courts are facing the underfunding that has been suggested, and we will continue to work collaboratively with the Chief Justice and her staff to address any ongoing needs.” House Bill 500, the two-year state budget, had the most debate in the Senate Tuesday. Democratic Floor Leader Gerald Neal, of Louisville, highlighted the repeated “unfunded mandates” that Beshear had vetoed. Neal said that while “a lot of good things happen in this budget,” Beshear continued to find unfunded mandates. “I trust that the governor, and his scrutiny of this, raises concerns that this bill creates fiscal and policy uncertainties that could impact long term stability,” Neal said. “We should be cautious. We should be cautious stewards of public resources.” In response, Republican Senate President Robert Stivers said that the line-item vetoes often encompass “things have been in the base budget for years.” He renewed Republican criticism of the Beshear administration for not providing information to the legislature to make the budget. “Who sets the priority of policy? Not the governor, not the Supreme Court, the General Assembly,” Stivers said. “So, if you wanted to help yourself execute on our policy, why did you not give us the details of what you believe to be in the base? Because you don’t want to be transparent. You want to spend the way you want to spend.” Sen. Karen Berg, another Louisville Democrat, slammed papers down on her desk toward the end of Stivers’ comments. She then said that the budget does not fund the state’s Medicaid costs in 2028 and argued that saying there are no unfunded mandates is “extraordinarily disingenuous.” Sen. Chris McDaniel, a Ryland Heights Republican who is the Senate’s budget chair, said the governor’s vetoes are “input into the process” and argued that it is the General Assembly’s responsibility to enact appropriations while the executive branch executes the law. “It is his job to find ways to appropriately effectuate it and to be efficient with it. And we can stand up here and debate whether things are and aren’t funded all day, and we’re probably all pretty firmly in our trenches,” McDaniel said, adding that Kentucky’s Medicaid costs have doubled by $10 billion in the last decade. Beshear had issued about two dozen vetoes Monday evening. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear waves to the audience after delivering his State of the Commonwealth address on Jan. 7, 2026, in Frankfort. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Arden Barnes) On fictive kin In the two-year state budget, lawmakers provided the Beshear administration with $12 million over the next two years to implement a 2024 law to help kinship care families. It included a $6 million appropriation for Senate Bill 151 for each fiscal year. The legislature also directed the Beshear administration to pursue federal funds to help fund foster care payments to kinship care families. Initially, the bill said the funds would be “to provide sufficient funding for the maintenance of effort necessary to maximize available federal funds to implement the provisions of” the 2024 law, which would provide financial relief to Kentuckians who are raising minor relatives to keep them out of the foster care system. HB 500 also directed the administration to seek federal funding streams, including Title IV-E of the Social Security Act and the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grant. Beshear vetoed the mention of the 2024 law and the section instructing the administration to maximize federal funding, saying the funding “is not to provide sufficient funding for the maintenance of effort of a federal program” but rather to directly help kinship care families. The legislature accepted this line-item veto. House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect, said the move “wasn’t necessarily a concession.” “For everybody that thinks that we just ignore what the governor says when we do these vetoes, we actually do kind of pour over pretty intensely what he has and they come back with,” Osborne told reporters. “He made a pretty compelling argument as to why we needed to let those two vetoes stand, and so we did.” Other HB 500 budget vetoes the legislature accepted are: A provision requiring county property valuation administrators to “utilize the Commonwealth’s statewide aerial imagery and mapping program, KyFromAbove, as the source for aerial mapping and imagery services used in the administration of property tax assessment functions.” The bill directed the local officials to switch over by June 30, 2028. In his veto message, Beshear said “the data needed by Property Valuation Administrators for property valuation purposes is different than that provided from the KyFromAbove program, including different standards, imagery size, timing and workflow.” A provision involving how the Department of Community Based Services utilizes federal funds from the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grant. Liam Niemeyer contributed to this report. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Kentucky Lantern |
| Programming Note: Wheel of Fortune to re-air overnight on KWQCA programming note for KWQC viewers. |
| Moline Parks and Recreation Department to offer adaptive park pop-upsThe Moline Parks and Recreation Department announced that adaptive park pop-ups will continue into spring 2026 and kick off with an open house night. According to a press release, during the open house, participants can try activities like arts and crafts, music and movement and simple outdoor summer games, while families and caregivers learn more [...] |
| | Bill would mandate more school librarians in Rhode Island. But how to pay for it?A student from Alfred Lima Elementary School in Providence examines a display of books and other library offerings in the Rhode Island State Library on Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (Photo by Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current)Students from Alfred Lima Elementary School in Providence came to the State House Tuesday to champion the important role librarians play in public schools and support a bill that would mandate a dedicated library and certified school librarian in every public school in Rhode Island. “I think the libraries are very important because they’re places where everybody can learn new and different things, like reading, coding, how to be safe on the internet, and so many more fun and awesome things,” fifth grader Narella Estrada said during a legislative advocacy event in the State Library. She is a member of the Lima School News Crew, which produces newscasts on school happenings with the help of the school librarian. Tuesday’s event during School Library Month was organized by the Rhode Island Library Association and School Librarians of Rhode Island.. The Senate version of the bill, S2078, is sponsored by Sen. Hanna Gallo, a Cranston Democrat and chair of the chamber’s education committee, while the House variant, H7417, bears the sponsorship of Rep. Rebecca Kislak, a Providence Democrat. Both lawmakers submitted versions of the legislation last year. Under both bills, school libraries would need to have a “permanent and dedicated space” in their respective schools. Schools with 250 or more students would need at least one full-time certified librarian, while schools with smaller student populations would be allowed to hire a half-time certified librarian. Students would need to have access available during every school day, and secondary schools would need to be able to ensure access and staffing outside regular school hours, whether “before-school, after-school and/or Saturday hours,” according to the bill text. In their respective education committee hearings in March, however, the library legislation encountered resistance because of the cost. ‘In an ideal world …’ In the March 10 House hearing, the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) shared concerns about the bills via Andy Andrade, the agency’s special assistant to the commissioner for legislative relations. “Honestly, in an ideal world, we would prioritize this,” Andrade said, but added, “When you look at the bill, it’s very comprehensive and it would be very costly.” Lobbyist Tim Ryan from the Rhode Island School Superintendents Association struck a similar tone during the March 4 Senate hearing on Gallo’s bill, saying he had “no argument” with the advocates’ core premise. Rep. Rebecca Kislak, a Providence Democrat, meets with Alfred Lima Elementary School students ahead of a legislative press event on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, in the Rhode Island State Library. (Photo by Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current) “But as we all know, we have very scarce resources in a challenging fiscal environment,” Ryan said, adding superintendents around the state say“the pipeline for librarians is slowing” and that Rhode Island lacks a “plethora” of certified librarians. “I think we certainly want to accomplish the aims and the aspirations of this bill, but I think we have to be realistic about the personnel and the ability to fill these jobs,” Ryan said. It would take an estimated $311,553 to meet the bill’s high school staffing requirements, and another $476,770 for all middle schools statewide to adhere, according to a handout provided to Rhode Island Current. The sheet used an average starting teacher salary of $47,205 to determine the cost for each tier of the K-12 system. The largest ask would be at the elementary school level, with an estimated $1.38 million needed for compliance to hire about 29 school librarians needed to meet compliance with the bill. The same sheet says that, of Rhode Island’s 44 public high schools, 36 already have full-time librarians, as do 33 of 47 public middle schools. It does not specify an exact count for grade schools. Providence, Warwick, Woonsocket and Pawtucket had gaps in their librarian coverage, according to the sheet. The handout lists Barrington, Burrillville, Jamestown, Middletown, Portsmouth, and West Warwick as employing full-time librarians in every school in their district. Block Island, Chariho, East Providence, Exeter-West Greenwich, Little Compton, Middletown and Scituate would also meet the staffing requirements described in the proposal. Gallo’s bill as drafted is the same as written when submitted last year, while Kislak’s version is updated to include additional language on responsible use of artificial intelligence in the bill’s policy statement section. Kislak’s version also phases in the staffing mandate one year earlier than Gallo’s bill, starting in the 2026-2027 academic year and ending by the 2030-2031 academic year. High schools would need to comply with the mandate first, followed by middle schools and then grade schools. “I don’t think we outgrow how important our librarians can be,” Kislak said, giving a shoutout to her own local librarian — Cheryl Space, the director of the Community Libraries of Providence in the audience. Space distributed the handout with the cost breakdown. Books on display in the library at Exeter-West Greenwich Regional Junior High and High School in a photo from January 2026. (Photo by Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current) Gallo, who works in the Cranston School Department as a speech language pathologist, said, “School libraries are magical places where young learners can let their imaginations soar.” The legislation, Gallo added, is meant to make clear that school libraries are “not an extra,” but “an absolute necessity.” The most passionate testimony at both hearings and at Tuesday’s press event came from Tasha White, the school librarian at Alfred Lima Elementary School who works with the student news crew. White, who was Rhode Island’s 2025 School Librarian of the Year, described in loving detail how much being a librarian means to her. White got choked up a bit during her speech, and when she finished, her students hugged her. Asked shortly afterward about the importance of libraries, White explained that, since “the first librarians [were] delivering books on horseback,” the idea of a library has evolved into curated spaces that are much more than just books. Libraries help kids “in being able to create things and not just consume it,” she said. “The impact that it has, and the impact that [students] are going to have on the world. It just makes me feel really inspired.” “I think that having [my students] here just really was so emotional for me and powerful,” she said. Bill supporter and retired school library media specialist Peter Quesnel, who testified at both committee hearings, acknowledged Tuesday that cost has usually proven its biggest obstacle. “All the legislators tend to support it,” Quesnel said. “But they balk at the cost.” Still, Quesnel added he wasn’t totally convinced the librarian job pipeline is as arid as the bill’s opponents suggest. After all, the University of Rhode Island graduates library students every year, he said. “And there are librarians, who are working in public libraries and other jobs, who would come back to schools if there were positions,” he added. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Rhode Island Current |
| MAP: Fuel prices still on the rise in Iowa and IllinoisPrices at the pump have seemingly eased in roughly half the country since last week. |
| | Cómo optimizar su atención médica para el Parkinsonpor la Dra. Sneha Mantri, MD, MS, FAAN (NAPS)—Si usted o un ser querido se encuentra entre los 10 millones de personas en todo el mundo que han sido diagnosticadas con la enfermedad de Parkinson (EP), hay algunos datos que debería conocer.¿Qué es la enfermedad de Parkinson (EP)?La EP es un trastorno cerebral progresivo que daña las neuronas que producen dopamina.Los síntomas incluyen temblores, rigidez, movimientos lentos y problemas como depresión o trastornos del sueño. Aunque no existe una cura, los tratamientos pueden ayudar a mejorar la calidad de vida. Los científicos creen que una combinación de factores genéticos y ambientales es la causa.¿Cómo pueden las personas con la enfermedad de Parkinson defender sus necesidades?Las citas médicas relacionadas con la EP pueden resultar abrumadoras. La Parkinson’s Foundation ofrece recursos para empoderar a las personas con la EP para que puedan enfocar sus citas en lo que más les importa:Página web en Parkinson.org/OptimizandoAtencionLínea de ayuda: 1-800-4PD-INFO (473 -4636), opción 3 para español.Hoja de trabajo: “Pasos para prepararse para una cita de Parkinson”, disponible en el sitio web de la Parkinson’s Foundation o en copia impresa. Puede ayudarle a orientar su reflexión sobre preocupaciones relacionadas con la EP que pueden afectar su vida, trabajo, familia, pasatiempos y seguridad.Webinar y podcast: También disponibles en el sitio web de la Parkinson’s Foundation, hay opciones para ver y escuchar. El webinar “Strategies for Meaningful Healthcare Visits” y el podcast “Make Every Minute Count” presentan sugerencias de expertos sobre la mejor manera de prepararse antes, durante y después de una visita con su médico.La Parkinson’s Foundation reconoce tres desafíos que pueden surgir durante las citas de atención médica relacionadas con la enfermedad de Parkinson:1. La duración limitada de la visita2. La falta de un enfoque compartido con el equipo de atención médica3. La complejidad de la atención y el tratamiento de la EPLas personas que viven con la EP pueden optimizar su atención medica para el Parkinson y ser un aliado activo en su atención mediante la autoevaluación, la educación y la defensa de sus necesidades. Aunque el equipo de atención médica puede tener muchos años de experiencia médica, cada persona aporta sus propias experiencias de vida y necesidades únicas.La Parkinson’s Foundation ofrece recursos para empoderar a las personas con la EP a cambiar su enfoque acerca de la atención de la EP mediante pasos sencillos antes, durante y entre las citas relacionadas con la EP.La preparación consciente y activa para una visita con su médico es un primer paso para convertirse en un aliado activo en su atención.Realice una autoevaluación integral para identificar cualquier problema relacionado con el bienestar emocional o social, la cognición, los desafíos en las tareas diarias y la seguridad.Durante la cita, asegúrese de expresar lo que más le importa. Lleve una lista de sus tres temas principales para la cita a cada visita.Lleve a una persona de confianza. Considere quién en su vida podría desempeñar este papel, más allá de un cónyuge o cuidador. Desde tener otro par de oídos para la conversación hasta ayudar a expresar una inquietud que es difícil de mencionar, el acompañante puede tener un gran impacto en los resultados de la visita.Entre visitas, concéntrese en lo que puede hacer para vivir bien con la EP. Revise las notas de la cita, haga seguimiento de su progreso y manténgase activo.La Dra. Mantri, MD, MS, FAAN es la directora médica en jefe de la Parkinson’s Foundation.Word Count 571 |
| Construction season ramps up across Quad CitiesRoad construction season is ramping up across the Quad Cities, with major projects underway on both sides of the Mississippi River. |
| Police: Crews search Rock River near Dixon for nearly 12 hours after man jumps in to evade policeThe man was not located during the search, and police said they "are hoping he was able to make it safely to shore." |
| Illinois Supreme Court amends rules to address legal desertsChief Justice P. Scott Neville, Jr. and the Illinois Supreme Court have announced amendmentsto several Supreme Court Rules to address unmet legal needs in the state, according to a news release. “Legal deserts," a term commonly used to describe areas with a limited number of practicing attorneys, have cropped up across the country in largely [...] |
| | Iowa House panel passes bill restricting mail-order abortion medicationRep. Devon Wood, R-New Market, spoke April 14, 2026, on legislation that would require in-person visits for a person to be prescribed abortion-inducing medication. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch)While efforts stalled to pass legislation restricting access to abortion medication earlier in session, the bill was brought back and advanced Tuesday by a House Appropriations subcommittee. House File 2563 would require medications that can induce abortions, including mifepristone, to be administered or prescribed in person. This proposal would limit the ability of Iowans to receive these medications through telehealth and mail-order medication providers outside the state. The measure went through the House Health and Human Services subcommittee and committee earlier this session, but failed to come up for floor debate. While this meant the proposal seemed unlikely to survive the second “funnel” deadine of the 2026 session, it was referred to the appropriations committee before the deadline, keeping it eligible for consideration. Rep. Devon Wood, R-New Market, said she planned to move forward with an amendment introduced earlier in the session to strike requirements for doctors who dispense these medications to share information about the possibility of “reversing the intended effects of a chemical abortion” — information medical professionals said was not supported by science. Though the proposal was changed, Republicans and advocates supporting the bill said the measure would benefit Iowans by restricting “black market” abortion medication that could harm individuals who take the drug. “I think we really do need to take a serious look at at making sure that access to medication like this is not from an unlicensed, unregulated source from who knows where,” Wood said. While Democrats and other reproductive health care access advocates said they supported this change eliminating the potential spread of misinformation, speakers at the subcommittee said the measure would still potentially restrict Iowans from receiving needed health care. Dane Schumann with the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said the bill as written could have unintended consequences related to access or reporting requirements for other drugs that can be used to induce abortions, but which are primarily used for other purposes. “I know that that might not be the intent of the propagators of the bill to have for example, misoprostol, which is a drug that’s used for stomach ulcers, to be reported,” Schumann said. “… It could be used for abortifacient purposes, it’s also used to induce labor and deal with women who are having trouble with postpartum bleeding. But so we just have, some, you know, some suggested changes around that in order to alleviate that concern and not have that unintended consequence, that I don’t think anybody here (intended.) The other concern we have is with a drug called methotrexate, which we swept into the abortifacient drug definition, when that drug is used to treat an ectopic pregnancy.” But some supporters of the bill said people seeking these medications needed more medical input before pursuing medically induced abortions. Lori Stiles, an ultrasound technologist, said she has encountered many women who received inaccurate information about the medication they were taking. “I cannot tell you how many women I saw — middle of the night, callbacks, or any other time of the day — who had used an abortion pill and were absolutely blindsided at how it played out,” Stiles said. “… I have seen that, and I applaud the informed consent part of this for sure, because those women were absolutely not informed.” Kyrstin Delagardelle, public affairs director for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa told lawmakers medical experts have agreed that abortion-inducing medication is safe and effective, and said the proposal “ignores decades of science, medicine and patient experiences.” She said that providers like Planned Parenthood already have a process for informing patients about the process and impacts of medication, including follow-up appointments after the medication has been used. “Health care decisions, including abortion, should be guided by medicine and science, not determined by politicians,” Delagardelle said. Rep. Heather Matson, D-Ankeny, said she did not agree with arguments that the bill was aimed at restricting potentially illicit or harmful medication. “If this bill was just about medication by mail, this bill would look very different (than) what is in front of us today,” Matson said. “There is a lot of language in here that is fear-mongering language around trauma. There are already a tremendous number of safeguards in place around medication abortion. I will certainly have a conversation with anybody who wants to talk about making sure that if medication is coming into the state by mail, that it is being done so in a safe way. But that is not just what this bill is about.” The measure advanced through the subcommittee. If brought to the House floor, the amendment introduced by Wood is not the only potential change lawmakers would consider during debate. Rep. Zach Dieken, R-Granville, also introduced an amendment to the bill to classify abortion as homicide, and enact criminal charges for terminating a pregnancy, with exceptions for miscarriages and when a medical procedure is performed to save the life of the mother. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| Hamilton Elementary gets a new principal next school yearDoug Bodeen was appointed as Hamilton Elementary's next principal at a recent school board meeting. |
| | House passes bill requiring parental consent for minors to receive HPV vaccineThe Iowa House passed legislation Tuesday requiring parental consent for minors to receive human papillomavirus (HPV) and hepatitis B vaccines. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)The Iowa House passed legislation Tuesday requiring parental consent for minors to receive certain vaccines associated with sexually transmitted diseases — a measure that Democrats said could lead to higher cancer rates in Iowa. Iowa requires parental consent for minors to receive a vast majority of vaccinations. But there’s currently a carveout in Iowa law for human papillomavirus (HPV) and hepatitis B vaccines. Iowans under age 18 can consent, without parental approval, for these vaccines, as they specifically deal with sexually transmitted diseases and infections. Senate File 304, which passed on a 63-29 vote — would remove this exemption, requiring parental consent for minors to receive HPV and hepatitis B vaccines. Rep. Austin Baeth, D-Des Moines, an internal medicine physician, said the measure was a “pro-cancer bill, period.” At subcommittee meetings on the measure, advocates representing health care providers and organizations have said HPV is linked with multiple forms of genital cancer, including cervical, penile, anal cancer and vaginal cancers — and that studies have found the HPV vaccine in particular has been linked with much lower instances of cervical cancer especially when a person is vaccinated before age 17. “We have, with these vaccines, a way to save people’s lives,” Baeth said. “And in a state with the fastest-rising cancer rates, the second highest cancer rate overall, we should be doing more to prevent cancer, not less.” Rep. Jeff Shipley, R-Fairfield, who supported the bill, said the measure was not limiting access to the HPV vaccine, but ensuring that parents approve of these vaccines being administered to young children. Rep. Megan Srinivas, D-Des Moines, said the reason why this carveout was introduced in Iowa law in the first place was because there were instances where a parent may not be a trusted adult in a child’s life — including in situations of child abuse or child sexual assault. “This conversation about needing to always trust our adults does not take the bad actors into account,” Srinivas said. “And what we should be keeping in mind, as we are passing legislation, are the most vulnerable in our society, which are the children that we have been entrusted to protect. By removing one of the most important things we can do in protecting children who might be the victims, we are making a bad decision, and that is why I urge you to vote no on this.” Rep. Austin Harris, R-Moulton, disagreed with the assertion that the measure was “pro-cancer” — saying it only subjects the HPV and Hepatitis B vaccines to the same requirements as other vaccines. “Are we pro-polio because we require parental consent?” Harris said. “Pro-measles, pro-mumps, everything else? And I take it personally as someone who has a mother, who is a breast cancer survivor, to be accused of saying, ‘I’m pro-cancer.'” The measure heads to Gov. Kim Reynolds’ desk for final approval. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| Niabi Zoo opening marks first full season since 2024 storm damageNiabi will open for the season on April 21. This year, visitors can enjoy a brand new exhibit called "Conservation in Action" and its virtual reality capabilities. |
| | Senators advance nicotine, vape tax to fund pediatric cancer researchThrease Harms, representing the CAFE (Clean Air for Everyone) Iowa Citizen's Action Network, held up a nicotine pouch container labeled "Zyn" at a subcommittee meeting April 14, 2026 discussing a potential tax on alternative nicotine products and vapes. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch)As Iowa lawmakers aim to find ways to address the state’s high cancer rates, a Senate subcommittee and committee advanced a bill Tuesday that would put a 5-cent tax on vapes and nicotine pouches — which anti-smoking advocates said would not significantly curb use of these products. Senate File 2480 proposes a 5-cent tax on “alternative nicotine products” and vapor products. This tax would be applied on a per-unit basis — a container of nicotine pouches containing up to 20 pouches would be taxed 5 cents, and a proportionate tax would be applied for each unit above 20 within a container. For vape products, the five 5-cent tax would be applied per milliliter of nicotine in a solution. The tax would apply to both disposable vapes and cartridges used in other vapor products — but would not apply to components, parts or accessories used in the device “when not sold in combination with any substance containing nicotine,” tobacco or nicotine analogs. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The money from this tax would go toward the state’s health care trust fund — a Medicaid appropriation program. Beginning in fiscal year 2028, up to $3 million of the revenue generated from the new tax would go to the Iowa Board of Regents specifically to conduct pediatric cancer research, clinical therapy trials and provide physician-scientist leadership at the University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital. Multiple parents of children who were diagnosed with cancer spoke in support of the measure during the subcommittee meeting. Scott Kaas told lawmakers his daughter, Devyn Kaas, was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia, a type of bone marrow cancer, in 2023 when she was 7 months old. He said in the past three years, he has advocated for the Iowa Legislature to fund pediatric cancer research — and following lengthy discussions with lawmakers, this bill alongside a measure in the House have provided potential solutions to fund this research in Iowa. “On behalf of my daughter and all the children in Iowa that suffer from from cancer, this bill is important,” Kaas said. “We just urge you to pass it.” But several advocates representing health organizations said the measure did not go far enough. Threase Harms, speaking on behalf of the CAFE (Clean Air for Everyone) Iowa Citizen’s Action Network, called for lawmakers to instead pursue a “more consistent, fiscally responsible approach to nicotine and tobacco taxation” than the “nickel tax” being proposed. Harms brought a container of nicotine pouches labeled “Zyn” to show the small impact of the tax based on how much nicotine was being sold. While advocates representing the industry said they estimated the tax would have generated $14.8 million for the state if applied in 2025, Harms said that number was likely inaccurate, as it assumes the 10% to 15% of the Iowa population using these products are purchasing at the same rate that people purchase cigarettes and other tobacco products. She said this was not correct, as products like the container she showed have “the same amount of nicotine as anywhere from three to 22 packs of cigarettes.” A lobbyist representing Philip Morris International said was an illegal product not sold by their company, as it contained more pouches than allowed in distribution. Harms also brought a Geek Bar — a disposable vape — which she said would be taxed at roughly 80 cents under the proposal, but which contains the equivalent to “22 packs of cigarettes.” Harms said she believed the bill “encourages and incentivize(s) more products to be purchased to increase revenue.” “I would actually ask, what’s the intent of the bill?” Harm said. “Is it to address the tax, and kick this issue down the road for another 20 years — because that’s how long it’s been since we’ve addressed tobacco tax? Is it to raise a little bit of revenue so that we can then addict the next generation of youth to use these products? And so I would tell you that the goal of the tobacco control community is to reduce the death and disease caused by these products, by curbing youth initiation. This bill doesn’t get it done. It’s not going to do anything.” Jackie Cale, representing the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, said while their organization was supportive of funding cancer research, it was “unfortunate to see that a really good bill has been attached to a rather disappointing tax policy.” She said advocates prefer House File 2758 — the proposal that would provide pediatric cancer funding through a standing appropriation — while saying the 5-cent tax proposal would have a “negligible” impact on preventing people from purchasing nicotine products. She also spoke in support of another House proposal — House File 2406, a measure introduced by Rep. Brett Barker, R-Nevada, that would raise on cigarettes by $1.50 alongside other nicotine and vape products — as a better solution to decreasing nicotine use in Iowa. Some advocates representing businesses that sell nicotine products, like vape stores, grocers and convenience stores, said the tax could have a negative impact on Iowa businesses, as it would drive consumers not to quit smoking, but to go to other areas where these products are sold for a lower price. Rep. Janet Petersen, D-Des Moines, opposed the bill. She said the measure was an “industry bill” — and a measure that may not result in the state providing $3 million in funding for pediatric cancer research. The bill states that beginning July 1, 2027, “an amount not to exceed” $3 million from the revenue collected through this tax would go toward UI pediatric cancer research, but Petersen said the measure does not include a minimum allocation for this fund. She said this was concerning, as the tax stream could be diverted to address expected funding shortfalls for Iowa’s Medicaid program in the future. “That means it could be $1 — and so, this is not a guaranteed $3 million dollars,” Petersen said. “… And if you look at the current Medicaid situation and the amount of shortfall we’re going to see in the upcoming years, they could completely scoop that money from pediatric cancer to try and just fill the hole we know we’re facing.” Republicans on the subcommittee said they would be open to making changes to the bill if Petersen’s interpretation of the language was correct. Sen. Carrie Koelker, R-Dyersville, said she supported moving the bill forward to keep the conversation going. “I don’t know if this bill is in its final perfect form,” Koelker said. “I would agree it’s probably not. But I think that it starts with a conversation, and we can adapt it and adjust or grow it.” Petersen reiterated her concerns during the Senate Ways and Means committee meeting Tuesday afternoon, saying she was “sorry” to see pediatric cancer research funding and this tax in the same bill. However, she was a yes vote on the legislation in the hopes of introducing an amendment when it gets introduced on the Senate floor. Sen. Dawn Driscoll, R-Williamsburg, called the bill a “great start” in providing dedicated funding for pediatric cancer research, which currently isn’t funded at all. The legislation passed in the committee and will move to the Senate floor for potential debate. — Brooklyn Draisey contributed to this report. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| Clinton’s Meadowview Pool could close without community helpClinton's Meadowview pool finds itself in rough shape treading water as the 2026 season approaches. |
| | I spoke with teachers about AI. Here’s how the education system needs to adapt(Photo by Maskot/Getty Images)The sudden and rapid propagation of artificial intelligence through large language models, or LLMs, like ChatGPT, has caught much of the education world off guard. Over the past few months, I’ve been researching studies on the impact of AI and broader educational technology. During my study, I spoke with dozens of teachers across Washington state about how they’re approaching the new tech landscape. Most are adapting as best they can, but concern has grown as studies show a potential decline in critical thinking skills with AI usage, compounding existing worries of electronics in classrooms being bigger distractions than aids to students. There’s no panacea. The path forward will be forged with innovation and resolve to reevaluate how the education system operates. Now that states are actively taking a larger role in regulating AI use across education, here are some policy recommendations that would aid teachers in helping students navigate this evolving technology. Prioritize analogue learning and ditch the Chromebooks There’s an overwhelming sense from the teachers I talked to that electronics in classrooms are detrimental to student learning, and much of the research agrees. One middle school teacher told me he was shifting away from electronics in class entirely, requiring first draft essays to be written in class by hand. A university professor, whose courses include online only classes, emphasized the standard of live or video presentations in order to demonstrate mastery of the subject. The public school system’s eager adoption of laptops en masse hasn’t paid off. The potential benefits of the machines may not outweigh their proclivity to distract. Based on the data and teacher frustrations, it would be prudent to reevaluate laptop policies, preferring traditional computer labs for digital-based work or individual laptop loans for at-home work. This type of model has seen success in North Carolina and can be an example for educators going forward. Incorporate AI etiquette into curricula While many teachers want to limit reliance on education technology, others are clear that abandoning it altogether would be a mistake. Several educators I spoke with pointed to the benefits AI can offer: personalized assignments that adapt to individual student needs, improved tutoring support, and a meaningful reduction in teacher workload. Banning AI entirely also leaves students unprepared for the future. California Gov. Gavin Newsom recognized this in rejecting Assembly Bill 1064, which would have banned chatbot access for individuals under 18, saying, “We cannot prepare our youth for a future where AI is ubiquitous by preventing their use of these tools altogether.” Teaching students AI etiquette early can help prepare them not to outsource their thinking, but to use it as a learning tool. While legislators should look at safeguarding AI usage on a broad scale to protect students and establish transparency with parents, individual classrooms could consider a few basic concepts: Always disclose if AI is used in an assignment and how. Think through an assignment and how to tackle it, employ AI after your own attempt. AI will get things wrong, so always verify its work. For every idea AI affirms, have it counter with a different viewpoint. According to the university professor I interviewed, even with explicit permission, many college students fail to disclose AI use for fear of reprisal. By setting guardrails early and normalizing reporting, we can prepare students to use AI wisely and reinforce where it is and isn’t appropriate. This will be key to establishing critical thinking in students without outsourcing thinking to AI. All-or-nothing is not the path to success With each teacher I spoke to, it was apparent that an all-or-nothing approach to education technology is insufficient. Classroom electronics and AI present challenges but are balanced with benefits of workload relief and individualized student guidance. The wisest approach is one that focuses on policies that provide demonstrable student achievement and forward-looking guidance on how to best leverage technology without it ruling them. Courtesy of Washington State Standard |
| Iowa bill would assist care after sexual assaultA bill in Iowa to help pay for care after sexual assault is advancing. House File 705 would fund nonprofit sexual assault forensic exam centers to improve care and evidence collection for survivors. The SAFE Center of Iowa would offer medical and mental health services during recovery and provide confidential spaces for sexual assault, human [...] |
| Inside Iowa Politics: How Republican pushes for change but continue GOP leadershipZach Lahn, a Republican from Belle Plaine running for governor, is pushing for changes as he hopes to continue Republican leadership in the state. |
| | State, UM, MHSA build extensive air quality monitoring systemA PurpleAir sensor at a DEQ facility in Helena pictured in March. (Jordan Hansen / Daily Montanan)Across the state of Montana, there have been wide gaps in the state’s wildfire smoke detection safety net. PurpleAirs in Schools — a Department of Environmental Quality program now in its third year — seeks to close the net with hundreds of low-cost, but effective, air quality sensors installed at high schools across the state. They track PM2.5, tiny, inhalable particles that are hazardous to human health and are associated with wildfire smoke. The Montana High School Association and the University of Montana have also partnered with DEQ on the state-wide project. Schools do not have to pay for the sensors, which are covered by a federal grant. DEQ has high-cost, high-quality air quality sensors in many of Montana’s major cities. But smoke levels can vary widely across the state, and for residents in rural areas, their judgment could be based on whether they can see mountains in the distance. For PurpleAir in Schools information, contact DEQ: Kelly Dorsi: Kelly.Dorsi@mt.gov Keri Nauman: Keri.Nauman@mt.gov It’s also important for high school athletics, one of the cultural backbones of the state. Football, cross country, soccer, volleyball and golf are all played by high schoolers across Montana in the fall, and figuring out how to keep them safe is a priority for state and local leaders as well. Games, matches and meets are routinely canceled across the state each year, and athletic directors are asked to make tough decisions, especially as their schools jockey for post-season positioning in the latter half of the fall. Indoor versus outdoor smoke levels are also a concern, which is why the schools involved in the program are given two detectors — one for the inside, and one for the outside. It’s become nationally notable, with an American Lung Association report highlighting the program this spring, and the state DEQ has fielded calls from peers in other states asking for information on how their program works. Montana also hosted a regional high school meeting, which the state gave a presentation at. “I don’t know if that’s a good or bad thing, but because of all the smoke, we have maybe set a standard that other states can follow,” said Greta Buehler, an associate director with the Montana High Schools Association. ‘We’re gonna provide it’ PurpleAirs in Schools dates back to a Biden-era program, the American Rescue Plan Act, which included grants for community air monitoring. Wildfire smoke is the pollutant of greatest concern in the state, said Kelly Dorsi, a supervisor in Montana’s Air Quality Bureau, which brings challenges. “Unlike an industrial source, we can’t permit it, we can’t control it,” Dorsi said. “So we were trying to think of a way that we could do something that was health protective and would benefit the citizens of Montana, even though we have no control over that.” The way DEQ can help mitigate the problem, Dorsi said, is to get more information to the public. That’s where the idea of broadening air quality detection was born. The original grant was for $425,000, Dorsi said. About two-thirds of school communities in Montana have signed up for sensors, with Kari Nauman, who helps run the DEQ program, saying they’re trying to get the remaining districts into the program. In Montana’s more rural corners, schools are sometimes combined or may be split between towns. “We originally targeted high schools because they’re community hubs, but not every place has a high school, so some of those are middle schools,” Nauman said. “We’re not actively saying it’s for any school, but if a community reaches out and they don’t have a sensor, we’re gonna provide it.” DEQ’s primary air sensors and planned expansion of the PurpleAir in Schools program are pictured in this graphic. (American Lung Association graphic) Richey-Lambert High School co-activities director Kara Triplett knows this problem well. Richey and Lambert are co-op schools in towns about 25 miles apart. Conditions are sometimes different at the schools and PurpleAir has given them a tool to help make decisions, Triplett said. “We have run into situations where the air quality has not been great at certain times, and I think has expanded into some sports seasons where we hadn’t seen it before,” Triplett said. “And so there was a really big need for that. School systems are pretty concerned.” Triplett noted one particularly difficult decision several years ago, where spring smoke was impacting divisional track. Richey-Lambert, a Class-C school, has an all-weather track, meaning it’s often needed to host — some small rural schools across the state use dirt or gravel tracks to practice, meaning meets can’t always be easily shifted. The schools didn’t have a PurpleAir sensor then and Triplett said it was one of the toughest decisions as activities director. They ended up adjusting the schedule to later in the day, after it was slated to start in the morning. “It was such a hard call to make, because you can’t push divisional track too far beyond the date that we had set, because we’re moving into high school graduations,” Triplett said. Buehler said the live smoke information helps school activity directors across the state make informed decisions about when to cancel or move games and practices. If a school is relying on an air sensor almost a hundred miles away, their conditions may be very different. “We don’t want students out there jeopardizing their health for practices and games if we can help it,” Buehler said. For example, there are permanent, regulatory-grade sensors in Billings, Lewistown, and Havre, with temporary sensors in Glasgow and Glendive. PurpleAir sensors in Winnett, Winfred, Malta, Fort Peck, Hysham, Forsyth, Rosebud and Miles City help track the air in the thousands of square miles between those regulatory-grade permanent and temporary sensors. It’s also being done at a fraction of the cost. Bigger sensors can run in the range of tens of thousands of dollars. PurpleAir sensors are $300 each and with a corrective algorithm applied, are about 90% as effective as the bigger sensors, Nauman and Dorsi said. The readings from the outdoor sensors are currently available on the Environmental Protection Agency’s smoke map website. Because DEQ’s mandate is “ambient” air quality, the indoor sensors don’t technically fall in their purview. That’s where the University of Montana partnership begins to come in, said Professor Curtis Noonan, who is with the School of Public & Community Health Sciences. “By doing that, we’re able to look at the infiltration of wildfire smoke or other pollutants, other contributors to particulate matter, from outdoor to indoor environments,” Noonan said. “It’s really helpful for the schools to just know what the outdoor environments like, and then better understand how that outdoor air impacts the indoor air quality.” Noonan added it’s also been helpful “merging expertise” between the school and the state, which included helping code the correction algorithm. Schools get an indoor and outdoor reading on a dashboard that’s set up as part of their entrance into the program. “In order for the schools to get data that is interpretable and usable for them, the data first has to run through this correction factor, and then it gets turned back out to the schools,” Noonan said. ‘Readily available data’ The improved ability for small communities to access localized air quality data stretches beyond athletic events, into science curriculum and generally better understanding of smoke conditions. The University of Montana even has a program dedicated to this, called Students Participating in Air Research and Knowledge Translation. “Montana’s model demonstrates how collaboration can transform low-cost sensor networks from short-term pilot projects into durable public-health infrastructure—capable of adapting to increasing wildfire impacts while continuing to serve under-resourced communities over the long term,” a report from the American Lung Association notes. Triplett added it’s made schools across the state become more educated on what’s in the air. “I think it’s forced us to learn a lot more,” Triplett said. Active and planned PurpleAir sensors are marked in this graphic. (DEQ graphic) Other benefits, including classroom lessons extending more information on air quality to local communities, have also been felt, including in Arlee. Arlee was one of the first schools to get a PurpleAir sensor, and is now part of the DEQ’s larger program. Prior to the larger DEQ program being started, students at the school petitioned the school board after the indoor air quality sensor picked up harmful air particulates stemming from a coal burning furnace. In 2018, Arlee High School upgraded to an all-electric system. “Science teachers and students can access that, just from all the high schools around the state,” Noonan said. “That’s just readily available data that they have access to.” Montana was one of six case studies highlighted in the American Lung Association report, called “Something in the Air” which they publish routinely, Will Barrett an assistant vice president of the organization said. And the DEQ has been reached out to by agencies in Colorado, Idaho and Arizona. California and South Dakota have also looked to implement similar strategies. “A lot of work goes into planning, developing, implementing and understanding air quality data,” Barrett said in an interview. “And I think that this, the programs we’ve highlighted, kind of shine a light on what’s possible, and hopefully elevate some of those to more public awareness of what’s going on.” Courtesy of Daily Montanan |
| Last Picture House hosts rare 35mm kung fu film festivalIt's one of only two theatres in Iowa that can show rare 35mm films. There will also be special snacks and live kung fu demonstrations at the festival, April 17-18. |
| | 1986: Central Trust Savings Bank to be soldApril 14, 1976 • The Eldridge City Council discussed a tentative schedule for street improvements. City engineer Richard VerBeke presented a schedule that would include resurfacing North 5th and North 7th streets from LeClaire Road to Donahue Street; adding curb and gutter on South 8th Street from LeClaire Road to Prairie Vista Drive and along Donahue Street west to North 5th Place; and sealcoating many other streets north of LeClaire Road. The project would be paid for through a special property tax assessment. • Local genealogists appealed to the Scott County Board of Supervisors, asking the county assume responsibility for maintaining abandoned cemeteries. Scharlott Blevins, a member of the Scott County Genealogical Society, brought a list of 87 cemeteries throughout the county in need of maintenance, including 14 she cited as being “badly neglected.” While Robert Gallagher, the county’s legal counsel, advised that the county does not have the power to levy taxes for cemetery care, county coordinator Warren Wood recommended a “letter of concern” be sent to all township trustees. • Five Long Grove women staged an old-fashioned quilting bee as they worked to finish a quilt commemorating the Bicentennial. More than 20 women, including Marge Hansen, Roma Nagle, Marge Casel, Viola Hixby and Mary Yegge, worked on the quilt, which was expected to be awarded in a drawing during the Long Grove Strawberry Festival in June. • Fred Hesse of Dixon was surprised by friends and neighbors who honored him on his 82nd birthday. He was born in Allens Grove Township on April 7, 1894, and had spent his entire life in the Donahue and Dixon areas. • The North Scott girls’ track team defeated Davenport Central, 86-57, and set four new school records. The team of Pat Jones, Cindi Strobbe, Lisa Strobbe and Linda Strobbe crushed the old record in the mile relay by more than four seconds, with a time of 4:20.6. Denise Arp broke her own record in the shot put, with a heave of 36’1½”. Karen Hamann set the school record in the discus, at 93’1½”, and Deb Carstens set a new standard in the high jump at 4’10”. April 16, 1986 • Jim Tank, president of Central Trust Savings Bank, was recommending the sale of the bank to Banks of Iowa Inc., a statewide banking corporation based in Des Moines. Tank was recommending the sale as the best alternative to financial problems caused by the “seriously depressed economy of the area.” While staff had worked to shore up CTSB’s eroding capital over the last year, significant losses from loans had handicapped the bank’s earning power. As a result, no dividends had been paid, and the bank’s holding company had been unable to service a stock loan. CTSB suffered a $721,000 loss in 1985. The potential sale would end 87 years of local bank ownership in Eldridge, although stockholders would have the final say. • The North Scott School Board was considering a districtwide AIDS policy, which would determine whether an affected child would be allowed to attend regular classes. “I expect that we’ll never have to deal with this, but we’ll be prepared if we ever have to,” said superintendent Doug Otto. The board took no action, opting to get more information before creating a policy. At the same meeting, Gene Schneckloth was appointed to fill a vacancy, created when Jack Hill resigned. • Teachers, parents and students were busy planning a Post Prom event, designed to be a safe alternative for students enjoying prom. Approximately 200 juniors and seniors responded to a survey saying they would be interested in such an event, and principal Craig Hintz said he hoped more would attend. There would be a DJ, movies, sporting events and casino-style games, with lots of prizes on offer. “According to national figures, 60% of prom-goers will attend a party that involves alcohol,” said Hintz. “I feel it’s our duty and responsibility to provide a non-alcohol alternative for our students.” • The North Scott girls’ tennis team picked up its first-ever victory over Davenport Assumption, 5-4, in the season opener. The team, which was coached by Jim Logan, included Tina Hintze, Shelley Hubbs, Marni Mast, Kristin Johnson, Lisa Johnson and Nancy Buss. April 18, 2001 • Many Princeton residents spent their Easter Sunday bracing for encroaching floodwaters from the Mississippi. Neighbors gathered to make sandbags in anticipation of what could potentially be the biggest flood since 1993. Most of the homes along River Drive were fortified, as well as a manhole cover, which was covered to prevent river water from getting in the sewer system. • Robert Wiese was named the Eldridge Lion of the Year. The award was presented by Mike McKenna. • Nine trumpeter swans were released in Scott County, two at Buena Vista Park near Dixon, and seven at the Princeton Wildlife Area. The release was facilitated by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. The birds had nearly gone extinct, and the goal of the trumpeter swan restoration program in Iowa was to establish a breeding and migratory population of 15 pairs by 2003. • The North Scott wrestling team won first place in the Rotary International/Mississippi Athletic Conference sportsmanship award, the fourth such award the school had received since the program began in 1999. • Nora Arp, a resident of Davenport Lutheran Home, was celebrating her 101st birthday. She was born April 20, 1900, in Sheridan Township and married Elmer Arp in 1923. April 20, 2011 • Longtime Walcott police officer Jeff Blake was named the town’s new chief of police. He replaced Jim Vaughn, who had been chief since July of 2009. He was chosen from a pool of nine applicants, and mayor Jim Couper said, “his devotion to Walcott and the police department made him the right choice.” • The Scott County Conservation Board reduced the number of deer tags it would issue for the hunt at Scott County Park to 50 tags with 50 hunters at the main park, and issue four archery tags for mentor hunting at the Wapsi Center. Conservation director Roger Kean said the deer harvest had been down for the last few years, with 30 deer harvested at Scott County Park and three at the Wapsi Center. • Lynsey Chapman was crowned Scott County Pork Queen, with Nicole Dierickx named Pork Princess. They were pictured with the 2010 queen and princess, Kelsey Chapman and Kelli Golinghorst. • Soccer is an all-weather sport, which the North Scott girls’ team proved during its home tournament. The two-day tournament was crammed into one day after rain washed out Friday’s events. On Saturday, they battled high winds, rain, 34-degree temperatures and, eventually, snow. The team, which was currently ranked No. 4 in the state, beat Cedar Rapids Jefferson, Cedar Rapids Prairie and Iowa City High. Abbie Cahill finished with three goals on the day. • The eighth-grade North Scott Lancers basketball team finished with a record of 68-4, having played in 15 tournaments, with 13 championships and two second-place finishes. They were also asked to compete at the Target Center in Minneapolis in July. Team members included Lucas Golinghorst, Matthew Sacia, Shane Polzin, Spencer Sommers, Trey Kilburg, Jack Kallenburger, Grant Graham, Tanner Greve, Cortez Seales, and Ricky Grimes. They were coached by Tom Sommers and Sarah Graham. April 14, 2021 • It was a special, and emotional Senior Night at Lancer Stadium for Marquan Quinn, as a group of North Scott moms stood in support of Quinn. His mother, Seretha, passed away due to Covid just before Christmas. The community supported with family with a GoFundMe. On Senior Night, as Quinn walked across the track with his dad, Felix, and sister, Shamara, a group of moms, including Cherie Henningsen, Rachel Fedderson, Tara Case, Ellen Oltman, Lori Matthaidess and Julie Duhachek, presented him with flowers and hugs. “When I saw all the moms right behind me, it was just really heart-warming and touching, and I appreciated it a lot,” said Quinn. “It was a special moment that I won’t forget.” • More than 300 people filled the gym at North Scott Junior High at a forum designed to discuss recent diversity lessons. While opinions were divided, most people at the forum agreed that the district had done a poor job communicating about the lessons and about reported racist bullying at the junior high. • Lancer Productions returned to the stage after a pandemic-induced yearlong hiatus with Disney’s “Descendants: The Musical.” Cast members included Elena Kook, Hannah Noonan, Kaedan Mickey, Cooper Frank, Tara Poinsett, Grace Hamann, Thomas McCarthy, Jill Dircks, Owen Popelka, Riley Greenwood, Lillian Kook, Eliot Morrow, Kaitlyn Wood, Ben Boddicker, Caleb Strom, Eddy Mohr, and Anna Hodge. • The North Scott boys’ track team was getting ready to make some noise in the conference. At the team’s home invitational, the 4x800 team stole the show, with Logan Soedt kicking into high gear in the anchor leg to pass Pleasant Valley and get the win. “That race was mind-blowing,” said his relay mate Will Dowda. “I had a mild heart attack when Logan got passed with 200 to go. I knew Logan could kick, but PV is pretty good at kicking as well. What Logan did was unreal. I was shocked.” It was Soedt’s 17th birthday, and he was surrounded by his teammates as he collapsed on the grass after the victory. “It felt pretty good to get a win,” he said. • A wet weekend ruined many people’s weekends, but not the ducks. That included a group that gathered in the damp parking lot at Grand Haven Retirement Community. |
| Reconstruction project to begin next week on portion of Bettendorf’s Middle RoadReconstruction work on a busy roadway will start up next week and go into the summer months. |
| Davenport man wins $50K in lotteryDominic Michael won the top prize of $50,000 in "$50,000 Super Crossword" game. |
| | Arkansas Capitol grounds panel postpones vote on ‘monument to the unborn’ proposalsLakey Goff (left), an artist from Hot Springs Village, reads from Psalm 45 at a meeting of the Arkansas Capitol Arts and Grounds Commission, chaired by Stephen Bright (right), in the Old Supreme Court room at the Arkansas Capitol on April 14, 2026. (Photo by Tess Vrbin/Arkansas Advocate)The Arkansas Capitol Arts and Grounds Commission was unable to approve the design for a proposed “monument to the unborn” advocated by abortion opponents to place on Capitol grounds Tuesday after there weren’t enough members present to vote. The nearly two-hour meeting included presentations from some of the artists behind the proposals, including Lakey Goff of Hot Springs Village, whose proposed “living wall” of plants was the commission’s initial selection in 2023. Republican state officials passed a law, the first of its kind, earlier that year mandating the creation of the monument. Goff submitted an altered version of the proposal in March after the commission took issue with her plan to copyright her original idea. She spent several minutes of Tuesday’s meeting reading from Psalm 45 and advocating for her proposal, which she expects will cost much less than originally projected. The other proposed monuments are an enlarged fertilized egg, an image of a horned figure lurking around a woman, an empty tomb with engravings of fetuses on it and a stone and bronze sculpture of baby feet inside a heart. Goff said she believed each submission “belongs somewhere.” “I don’t know where, but [they’re] beautiful ideas,” she said. “We’ve had a reset here, and I think it’s a good thing.” Federal judge blocks law requiring Ten Commandments monument at Arkansas Capitol Three other Hot Springs Village residents expressed support for Goff’s design, which includes speakers projecting waterfall sounds, during the meeting’s public comment period. “I think this vision is from the heart of God,” Debbie McAndrews said. “It was birthed into some of these politicians from the very beginning.” The Republican sponsors of the law mandating the monument, Sen. Kim Hammer of Benton and Rep. Mary Bentley of Perryville, have expressed support for Goff’s design. In 2015, Hammer sponsored a law mandating a Ten Commandments monument on Capitol grounds. After nearly a decade of litigation, a federal judge ruled in March that the state must take down the monument, but the order is on hold so the state can appeal the ruling. The “monument to the unborn” would commemorate abortions that Arkansans obtained during the nearly 50 years Roe v. Wade was in effect until its overturn in 2022. Earlier this year, the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas called the proposed monument “an offensive and inappropriate use of public space.” In 2023, a few legislative Republicans voted against the law requiring the construction of the monument, saying they believed it would be a mean-spirited effort and a misguided use of abortion opponents’ money. The Capitol Arts and Grounds Commission requires at least five of its 10 members for a quorum. The remaining members agreed to hold a special meeting within the next month to vote on a monument proposal. Besides Goff, some of the other artists who submitted proposals advocated for their work and told the commission they wanted the monument to remain impactful to Capitol visitors for years. Panel will consider five proposed ‘monument to the unborn’ designs for Arkansas Capitol Andrew Wilson Smith of Richmond, Virginia, called the mandate to create the monument “a national statement in the middle of a very large culture war.” Smith is a sculptor who submitted the empty tomb monument idea alongside architect Erik Bootsma. The two submitted a similar idea in 2023. “For Arkansas to be able to stand behind that statement with a monument that has the gravitas to back it up is going to be a bigger deal than the cost of $1 million dollars,” the idea’s projected price tag, Smith said. In 2024, the commission accepted Goff’s suggestion to place her proposed living wall in the grassy space behind the Capitol and to the north of the Supreme Court building. Chairman Stephen Bright said Tuesday that the location is unlikely to change even if the commission chooses a different idea. Goff’s updated proposal for the living wall would be about 10 feet high and 33 feet long and would take up about 660 square feet of space. The anticipated construction cost would be $345,700, about $600,000 less than the original proposal, and maintenance would cost $33,500 per year. The law allows only private funds to be used for the project’s construction and maintenance. Fundraising for the project has been slow since it began in May 2024. The effort has raised more than $28,000, and $17,276 is currently in the monument’s trust fund after preliminary engineering and plan development expenses, Bright said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Arkansas Advocate |
| | Missouri education board approves first charter school in Columbia over local oppositionSchool buses wait outside Thomas Hart Benton Elementary, Columbia's STEM magnet school, August 24, 2021 (Rudi Keller/Missouri Independent).The Missouri State Board of Education approved Frontier STEM Academy’s charter school application Tuesday, with one board member decrying the addition of charter schools in Columbia as “problematic.” The vote, which was opposed by Columbia Public Schools, opens the door for the first charter school in Missouri outside of the St. Louis and Kansas City area. “Creating an entirely new school in a high-performing school system seems financially irresponsible,” said Pamela Westbrooks-Hodge, a board member from Pasadena Hills. “In particular in a state that is struggling to make its current educational budget commitments.” Board member Kerry Casey, from Chesterfield, asked the school’s administrators what Frontier, which will be taxpayer funded but operate as a nonprofit, would provide that Columbia Public Schools does not offer. Need to get in touch? Have a news tip? CONTACT US Frontier’s leaders pointed to the school’s central focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The local district currently has a STEM-centered elementary school that operates as a magnet school, meaning students throughout the district can apply to attend. Westbrooks-Hodge asked if Columbia Public Schools could address the board about its STEM offerings, but since that wasn’t an agenda item, department officials said that was “not advisable.” Going into Tuesday’s meeting, the board was expected to approve the application under the state education department’s evaluation. State law gives the board authority to deny a charter application if it fails to meet certain criteria, but it is not clear if the board could object on other grounds, education department officials advised the board. “Our understanding is that to approve or deny the application, denial would be based on failure to meet the statutory requirements,” said Lisa Sireno, the department’s assistant commissioner of quality schools. “In this case, that would require you to disagree with the staff analysis that all of those boxes have been ticked.” Commissioner of Education Karla Eslinger said the department’s only position is to verify that a charter and its sponsor meets standards set by state law. “The idea that we would bring something to the board that doesn’t meet all the statutory requirements won’t happen,” she said. “Because we would not be recommending it. Really and truly, the only option here is to say, have they done their diligence.” Board member Brooks Miller, of Sunrise Beach, didn’t comment much on the application but remarked that members “have no other option but to support this.” Westbrooks-Hodge said she was “troubled that the current requirements do not include a requirement for fiscal efficiency.” The board is required to ensure the school has a financial plan, but whether the school is financially responsible for the state is out of its purview. “I’m troubled when the people whose tax dollars are used to fund that school do not approve or govern that school,” Westbrooks-Hodge said. She didn’t disapprove of the school itself, but said she was concerned that the local community has not voted on the matter. Earlier this month, Columbia’s school board sent a letter to the state board, alleging that Frontier has lacked local engagement as it prepared its application. “We respectfully ask that you consider our 150-year history of deep community partnership and outstanding commitment to the well-being and academic success of every student and deny this charter application,” the letter concludes. Currently, Columbia Public Schools is embroiled in a lawsuit against the state and its education board after state lawmakers passed a law in 2024 that expanded charter schools into Boone County. The district is alleging the law is an unconstitutional local law disguised as a statewide mandate. Prior to the law’s passage, charter schools were only allowed in Kansas City, St. Louis and in areas with unaccredited districts. They can also open with the sponsorship of a local school district within the district’s boundaries. Adding Boone County to the charter schools’ territory did not come as a request from the community. Rather, it was then-Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden, a Republican from Columbia, who pushed for the change before his final term in office ended. After the board approved Frontier’s application Tuesday, the Missouri Charter Public School Association distributed a press release with Rowden’s endorsement. “I’m thrilled to see Frontier Schools approved to expand into Columbia,” he said. “It is a high-quality, high-performing institution that will provide another option for Columbia families and help strengthen the already strong education landscape in Boone County.” Frontier, which has St. Louis University as its charter sponsor, currently operates four schools in Kansas City that collectively score in the top 10% of public districts and charter schools on the education department’s annual performance report. Frontier plans to open in Columbia in the fall of 2027, offering preschool through second grade in its premiere school year. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Missouri Independent |
| | States change custody laws to keep children of detained immigrants out of foster care(Illustration by Oona Zenda/KFF Health News)As immigration authorities carry out what President Donald Trump has promised will be the largest mass deportation operation in U.S. history, several states are passing laws to keep children out of foster care when their detained parents have no family or friends available to take temporary custody of them. The federal government doesn’t track how many children have entered foster care because of immigration enforcement actions, leaving it unclear how often it happens. In Oregon, as of February two children had been placed in foster care after being separated from their parents in immigration detention cases, according to Jake Sunderland, a spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Human Services. “Before fall 2025, this simply had never happened before,” Sunderland said. As of mid-February, nearly 70,000 people were being held by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The record 73,000 people in detention in January represented an 84% increase compared with one year before. According to reporting from ProPublica, parents of 11,000 children who are U.S. citizens were detained from the beginning of Trump’s term through August. The news outlet NOTUS reported in February that at least 32 children of detained or deported parents had been placed in foster care in seven states. Sandy Santana, executive director of Children’s Rights, a legal advocacy organization, said he thinks the actual number is much higher. “That, to us, seems really, really low,” he said. Separation from a parent is deeply traumatic for children and can lead to various health and psychological issues, including post-traumatic stress disorder. Prolonged, intense stress can lead to more-frequent infections in children and developmental issues. That “toxic stress” is also associated with damage to areas of the brain responsible for learning and memory, according to KFF. Maryland, New York, Washington, D.C., and Virginia amended existing laws during Trump’s first term to allow guardians to be granted temporary parental rights for immigration enforcement reasons. Now the enforcement surge that began after Trump returned to office last year has prompted a new wave of state responses. In New Jersey, lawmakers are considering a bill to amend a state law that allows parents to nominate standby, or temporary, guardians in the cases of death, incapacity, or debilitation. The bill would add separation due to federal immigration enforcement as another allowable reason. Nevada and California passed laws last year to protect families separated by immigration enforcement actions. California’s law, called the Family Preparedness Plan Act, allows parents to nominate guardians and share custodial rights, instead of having them suspended, while they’re detained. They regain their full parental rights if they are released and are able to reunite with their children. There are significant legal barriers to reunification once a child is placed in state custody, said Juan Guzman, director of children’s court and guardianship at the Alliance for Children’s Rights, a legal advocacy organization in Los Angeles. If a parent’s child is placed in foster care and the parent cannot participate in required court proceedings because they are in detention or have been deported, it’s less likely they will be able to reunite with their child, Guzman said. An estimated 5.6 million children are U.S. citizens who live with a parent or family member who does not have legal immigration status, according to research from the Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. Within that group, 2.6 million children have two parents lacking legal status. Santana said he expects the number of family separation cases to grow as the Trump administration continues its immigration enforcement campaign, putting more children at risk of being placed in foster care. ICE directives require the agency to make efforts to facilitate detained parents’ participation in family court, child welfare, or guardianship proceedings, but Santana said it’s uncertain whether ICE is complying with those rules. ICE officials did not respond to requests for comment for this report. Before the change in California’s law, the only way a parent could share custodial rights with another guardian was if the parent was terminally ill, Guzman said. If parents create a preparedness plan and identify an individual to assume guardianship of their children, the state child welfare agency can begin the process of placing the children with that individual without opening a formal foster care case, he added. While Nevada lawmakers expanded an existing guardianship law last year to include immigration enforcement, the measure requires the parents to file notarized paperwork with the secretary of state’s office, an administrative step that may be burdensome, said Cristian Gonzalez-Perez, an attorney at Make the Road Nevada, a nonprofit that provides resources to immigrant communities. Gonzalez-Perez said some immigrants are still hesitant to fill out government forms, out of fear that ICE might access their information and target them. He reassures community members that the state forms are secure and can be accessed only by hospitals and courts. The Trump administration has taken unprecedented steps to access sensitive information through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the IRS, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and other entities. Gonzalez-Perez and Guzman said that not enough immigrant parents know their rights. Nominating a temporary guardian and creating a plan for their families is one way they can prevent feelings of helplessness, Gonzalez-Perez said. “Folks don’t want to talk about it, right?” Guzman said. “The parent having to speak to a child about the possibility of separation, it’s scary. It’s not something anybody wants to do.” This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Courtesy of Nevada Current |
| | Hobbs vetoes first bills under moratorium as Arizona budget standoff drags onGov. Katie Hobbs delivering the 2025 State of the State Address, as Speaker of the Arizona House Steve Montenegro and State Senate President Warren Petersen watch, on Jan. 13, 2025. (Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0)Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed three bills on Tuesday, following through with the promise she made a day earlier to veto any bill sent to her desk until legislative Republicans publicly release their budget proposal. In her veto letters for all three measures, the governor chided GOP lawmakers for failing to engage in “good faith budget negotiations.” “The legislative majority needs to put forward their budget proposal and then join me at the negotiating table so we can pass a bipartisan, balanced budget like we’ve done the past three years,” Hobbs wrote. “But until the legislative majority shows us their plans for a balanced budget that works for middle-class Arizonans, their bills will be dead on arrival.” SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The Democratic governor paused budget negotiations three weeks ago after she said that the Republicans who control the Arizona House of Representatives and the Arizona Senate refused to negotiate on Proposition 123, a school funding measure that expired last year. In response, Republicans said that Hobbs’s proposed budget was unserious and accused her of “throwing a tantrum.” The three bills vetoed were: House Bill 2033, which would have allowed Arizona schools to require all students complete statewide assessment testing in written form instead of on a computer. House Bill 2093, which would have removed a requirement that health classes in Arizona schools include information on mental health. House Bill 4033, which would have required school districts to include more detailed information about bond proposals in the election informational packet. It is likely that all three bills, which were sent to Hobbs on Monday, would have been vetoed even without the moratorium, as each was backed only by Republicans. Hobbs has consistently rejected legislation that doesn’t earn bipartisan support. Passing a budget by the June 30 deadline is the Arizona Legislature’s only statutory duty each year. Negotiations are always difficult since the budget requires approval from both Republican-led chambers of the legislature, as well as the Democratic governor, whose priorities often do not align. Last year, the budget fight led to numerous late-night sessions, partly because of Republican infighting, with the budget finally passed and signed on June 27. The dynamics of the negotiations this year are even more difficult because of cuts from the federal government that decrease available resources and election-year politics that are especially amplified because Hobbs is seeking reelection in November. Hobbs revealed her own budget plan in January, which Republicans said was “based on fantasy revenue.” At the center of Hobbs’s exit from negotiations was Republicans’ refusal to negotiate putting a renewal of Prop. 123, which expired last year, to voters. Arizona voters in 2016 narrowly favored Prop. 123, a vital source of K-12 school funding that made up for the state’s failure to increase funding for public education to keep up with inflation. Its passage settled a lawsuit filed by public schools. The $300 million in funding came from an increase in the percentage taken from the state’s land trust to fund public schools, raising the distribution rate from 2.5% to 6.9%. The rate reverted back to the lower threshold in June. Republicans have tried for the past few years to create a plan to renew or revive Prop. 123, but none of those efforts gained traction, and while they agreed to use the state’s general fund to backfill the lost $300 million in education funding last year, there’s no guarantee they’ll continue to do so. When Hobbs walked away from budget negotiations three weeks ago, gubernatorial spokesman Christian Slater blamed Republicans’ refusal to negotiate a Prop. 123 revival on Sen. Jake Hoffman, a Queen Creek Republican and head of the far-right Arizona Freedom Caucus. “Rumors at the Capitol suggest that some Republicans may be tempted to cut a deal with Hobbs on Prop123,” Hoffman wrote in a March 12 post on the social media site X. “The only winner in a political drug deal like this is Hobbs If Republicans decide to surrender on 123, they will be effectively underwriting the Hobbs’ reelection campaign.” Republicans have claimed that Hobbs’s own budget proposal is unbalanced because it relies on funding sources that might not materialize. That includes Prop. 123 funding that would depend on approval from voters in November and a $760 million reimbursement from the federal government for border-security related expenditures made by the state after Jan. 20, 2021. Both Hobbs and Republican legislative leaders have requested more than $700 million from the State Border Security Reinforcement Fund, created by the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” But there’s no guarantee Arizona will receive that money, as the state must compete for funds with other border states, like Texas, which has asked for more than $11 billion in reimbursements from the $13 billion fund. Senate President Warren Petersen said Monday that the state Senate will “respond accordingly” to the governor’s bill moratorium. “We’re not going to pretend business as usual can continue under a veto threat,” he said. In recent years, Arizona governors have resorted to bill-signing moratoriums as a way to strong-arm Republican legislators to compromise. In 2012 and 2013, Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed a series of bills after telling GOP lawmakers they needed to pass a budget, and Gov. Doug Ducey did the same in 2021. This is the second year in a row Hobbs has vowed to veto bills to force Republican legislators to act: Last year, she employed the tactic to spur passage of emergency funding for programs that serve disabled Arizonans. Courtesy of Arizona Mirror |
| | Shinn leaves Boise State for Montana president’s jobBoise State University interim president Jeremiah Shinn speaks at the 2025 winter commencement ceremony. (Photo by Luan Teed/Boise State University)Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on April 14, 2026 Boise State University’s interim president is leaving this summer. On Tuesday, Jeremiah Shinn accepted the president’s post at the University of Montana. Shinn said he plans to start at UM on July 1. Shinn has been interim Boise State president since May — during a laborious State Board of Education search for a permanent leader at Idaho’s largest four-year university. Shinn’s departure comes as little surprise. Less than two weeks ago, the UM announced Shinn as its presidential finalist, and brought in Shinn for campus visits last week. In an email to the Boise State community Tuesday afternoon, Shinn said the UM Board of Regents had offered him the president’s job that morning. While considerably smaller than Boise State, with an enrollment of about 11,000, the UM enjoys R1 research status from the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education — a top-tier designation Boise State is pursuing. “I am grateful and excited for the opportunity to lead an R1 flagship with deep roots, tremendous momentum and unlimited potential,” Shinn wrote Tuesday. “At the same time, I am profoundly saddened to leave Boise State; a place that has been central to my life and to my work for more than half of my career.” Shinn worked in several different administrative roles at Boise State from 2010 to 2019. He returned to Boise State in February 2023 as vice president for student affairs and enrollment management, a position he held until taking the interim president’s post. The State Board is meeting on the University of Idaho campus this week; one of its agenda items is an update on the Boise State search. The State Board has said it hopes to have a new president on the Boise State campus in time for fall classes, and hopes to name a finalist by mid-June. Interviews will begin “in the coming weeks,” the State Board said in an email to the Boise State community Tuesday afternoon. Search subcommittees representing campus stakeholder groups will screen semifinalists. The State Board also said it will work “to ensure seamless continuity of leadership,” if Shinn leaves Boise State before a new president arrives. The president’s search began in March 2025, when Marlene Tromp announced she was leaving Boise State for the president’s job at the University of Vermont. The State Board suspended the process about six months later. At the time, board leaders said some candidates did not want to be publicly named as finalists for the Boise State job, for fear of compromising their current position. The 2026 Legislature responded by clamping down on the public phase of the search process, at the State Board’s urging. The State Board will now need to name only one finalist — not a field of five finalists, as the law had required. Shinn becomes the latest of several top administrators to leave Boise State after Tromp’s departure. Vacancies include the provost and chief financial officer positions. “Even during a time of transition and renewal, our work continues, with urgency, focus and optimism,” Shinn said in his email Tuesday. “What defines this great university is not a single moment or a single leader, but the collective strength, creativity and commitment of our campus community.” SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Idaho Capital Sun |
| Help EveryChild keep kids safe with the Celebrate Every Child GalaApril is National Child Abuse Prevention Month, and EveryChild is working to raise awareness and put an end to childhood abuse here in the QCA and beond. Nicole Mann joined Our Quad Cities News with details on the Celebrate Every Child Gala. For more information, click here. |
| Moline Parks and Recreation to host ‘Adaptive Park Pop-Ups’ to create inclusive play for all kidsThe Moline Parks and Recreation Department is excited to announce that the inclusive community program, Adaptive Park Pop-Ups, will continue into the spring. |
| DISH Network’s unreasonable demands keep KWQC off its serviceIt’s now been more than a month since DISH Network pulled KWQC and all other television stations owned by Gray Media off its service. |
| Moline to begin annual fire hydrant flushing on April 20The flushing will take approximately five weeks to complete across the entire city. |
| Davenport man wins $50,000 in Iowa Lottery gameA Davenport man was surprised even more than you’d expect about winning a jackpot from the Iowa Lottery. “I thought I’d won $5,000 and I thought, ‘Well heck, that’s a great deal!’” said Dominic Michael on Monday as he claimed his prize at the lottery’s Cedar Rapids regional office. He took his $50,000 Super Crossword [...] |
| MidAmerican Energy preps for this week's stormsSeveral rounds of severe weather are expected in the QCA this week, giving residents time to prepare. Geoff Greenwood, Media Relations Manager with MidAmerican Energy, spoke with Our Quad Cities News via Zoom to talk about how the utility company is preparing for this week’s severe weather and what residents should be doing. Greenwood said [...] |
| Brandon Lake, April 25A six-time Grammy Award winner, 15-time GMA Dove Award winner, and 13-time ASCAP Christian Music Award winner – emerging victorious on every single one of his nominations between 2021 and 2024 – Brandon Lake headlines an April 25 concert event at Moline's Vibrant Arena at the MARK, his list of chart-topping Billboard singles including Gratitude,” “That's Who I Praise,” and “Hard Fought Hallelujah.” |
| Avatar, April 29Touring in support of their fall release Don't Go in the Forest that MetalTalk raved "will blow your socks off," the heavy-metal rockers and Swedish Billboard charters of Avatar return to East Moline venue The Rust Belt on April 29, their latest album imspiring SputnikMusic to state, "These guys are tireless creative workers of heavy metal, and I sincerely hope they’re living the dream in full, because they deserve it." |
| | Facing multiple criminal charges, massage parlor owner is fined $3,000 by boardState regulators have imposed a $3,000 fine against an Iowa City man accused of running a multimillion-dollar ring of unlicensed massage parlors. (Photo by David Fuentes Prieto/Getty Images)State regulators have imposed a $3,000 fine against an Iowa City man accused of running a multimillion-dollar ring of unlicensed massage parlors in which workers were required to have sex with customers. The Iowa Board of Massage Therapy has fined Zhenshi Liu of Iowa City $2,000 for practicing massage therapy without a license on at least two occasions, plus $1,000 for employing an individual not licensed to practice massage therapy. The board alleges it received a complaint from the Iowa City Police Department alleging Liu, 60, and his wife, Junping Ren, 56, were operating two illicit massage businesses — the Paradise Spa at 1901 Broadway St., and 805 S. 1st Ave. — where they employed numerous unlicensed female workers who were “required to provide sex acts” for clients. The couple allegedly collected approximately $2.6 million in proceeds from the massage businesses, according to Johnson County prosecutors. Liu and Ren are currently facing several criminal charges related to the businesses, including pimping, pandering, money laundering and ongoing criminal conduct. In addition, Liu is facing a charge of third-degree sexual abuse. Iowa City police allege that after a woman went to one of the Paradise Spa massage parlors in May 2025, Liu provided her with a massage while “thrusting his groin into her hand as she tried to pull it away,” and then “forced his hands” onto her genital area. According to the police, female workers at the two Paradise Spa locations in Iowa City stated they received $70 per hour for a massage, with $40 going to Liu, and an additional $10 used as payment for room and board. Ads for the business were allegedly located on SkipTheGames.com, which police described as a known website for female escort services. Liu and Ren have each pleaded not guilty to all criminal charges and a joint trial is currently scheduled for Nov. 10, 2026. In addition to pursuing the criminal charges against Liu and Ren, Johnson County authorities are also pursuing civil forfeiture of cash, cars and real estate belonging to the couple. The assets include a $600,000 home in Alabama allegedly purchased for cash, a $350,000 home in Iowa City, and $197,957 in cash. Earlier this year, the Board of Massage Therapy charged Ren with a single count of unethical conduct for her role in the matter, at which point it also settled the case by accepting Ren’s agreement to voluntarily surrender her license. Court records indicate that in March 2017, three individuals were arrested and charged with providing massages without a license at Liu’s Paradise Spa on Douglas Avenue in Des Moines. In each of those three Polk County cases, Liu posted bond for the individuals who were arrested, the records show. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| Man charged in Davenport church burglary with nearly $21K stolenA man faces charges after police say nearly $21,000 in cash and silver was stolen from a Davenport church during a burglary Monday evening. |
| | NC state health plan seeks to upend state retirees’ long-running health care lawsuitThe North Carolina Supreme Court building in Raleigh (File photo)The state Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments that could upend a case about state retiree health benefits that’s more than a decade old, potentially overturning yet another of its own rulings. Before 2011, state employees who became vested were promised no-cost health care in retirement as part of their benefits package. But in 2011, the state legislature allowed the N.C. State Health Plan to charge retirees health care premiums. A group of retirees sued over the change, alleging breach of contract. The case has bounced through the court system ever since. In 2016, Superior Court Judge Edwin Wilson certified the retirees as a class of about 220,000 members. The Supreme Court in 2022, with a Democratic majority, ruled for the retirees. Lawyers for the State Health Plan and the state Treasurer are now asking the Supreme Court to reconsider. They say the class really isn’t a class because the plaintiffs’ individual cases are too dissimilar to meet the definition. Mark Jones, a lawyer for the Health Plan, said an expert for the retirees did not “prove liability in one stroke” as required. Because of that failure, Jones said, “the 2016 class cannot be sustained.” Mark Carpenter, a lawyer for the retirees, said the request to decertify the class is extreme. “What they are asking you to do is throw the baby out with the bath water,” Carpenter said. If a Supreme Court majority agrees with the Health Plan lawyers, it could negate the class action and force the retirees to file individual lawsuits seeking compensation. North Carolina Supreme Court vacates nine years of Leandro school funding orders The Republicans who now hold a 5-2 majority of Supreme Court seats have been willing to reverse the court’s past rulings. Just this month, the court reversed a 2022 decision on public school funding in a case known as Leandro. The 2022 court had ordered the legislature to fund the first two years of a remedial plan. Republican legislators asked the court to reconsider, which resulted in the 4-3 ruling that the courts could not tell the legislature how to spend money. Justice Richard Dietz, a Republican, dominated the questioning Tuesday. It’s the court’s job to make sure the class is constituted correctly and make sure problems are fixed, he said. “Our job as courts, in class action, is to defend the rights of the absent class members. That’s the whole purpose of all the protections that we’ve built into class certification,” he said. “If we know the class definition is wrong, we need to fix it.” In its 2022 opinion, the court agreed the retirees had a right to lifetime enrollment in a premium-free insurance plan, with Democratic Supreme Court Justice Anita Earls writing for the majority. The opinion sent the case back to the trial court to determine how much the retirees are owed. Democrats held a 4-3 majority at the time. Republican Justices Tamara Barringer and Phil Berger Jr. agreed in 2022 that the case should go back to trial court, but said the judge should determine whether the retirees could have reasonably relied on a promise of no-cost health insurance, because some of the information the state produced at the time contained caveats. “When the entirety of the record is viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the right-to-amend provision, the disclaimers in the booklets, and the constant statutory changes are substantial evidence that could support a finding that plaintiffs did not reasonably rely on a promise of health benefits provided by statute in entering into or continuing employment with the State,” Barringer wrote. Republican Chief Justice Paul Newby did not participate that year. State retirees who attended the court hearing said they are frustrated that the case has gone on so long without a resolution. “It’s frustrating for people on both sides of the issue for it to take this long to get it resolved,” said Boyd Bennett, a former director of prisons who worked for what was called the Department of Correction for 36 years. “And it looks like, from what I hear, we’re not even closer than we were.” Some of the plaintiffs have died. The lead plaintiff remains I. Beverly Lake Jr., a former Supreme Court chief justice, who died in 2019. Bennett said requiring retirees to file individual cases “would swamp the court system all across the state.” Bennett said he could have made more money in private industry than working for the state. “But I gave that up to serve the public and plus to have these benefits that we were told we would have,” he said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of NC Newsline |
| Shut Up & Rock with Pop Evil & I-Rock 93.5, April 25With the band's 2025 album What Remains hailed by The Rock Pit as a "faultless collection" that's "Just what you'd hope for," the alternative-metal and post-grunge talents of Pop Evil return to East Moline venue The Rust Belt on April 25, headlining this spring's I-Rock 83.5-sponsored Shut Up & Rock event with additional sets by Sierra Pilot, Kamenar, and The Forty Twos. |
| Kashmir: The Led Zeppelin Tribute Show, April 24The thrilling discography of one of the most popular and successful rock outfits of all time will be celebrated at The Rust Belt on April 24 when the East Moline venue presents the touring sensation Kashmir: The Led Zeppelin Tribute Show, an event sure to boast exhilarating renditions of “Whole Lotta Love,” “Immigrant Song,” and of course, the immortal “Stairway to Heaven.” |
| LIVE BLOG: Strong to severe storms expected Tuesday afternoonThe Storm Predication Center has put the area at a Level 3 (Enhanced) risk, which means there could be damaging winds, lighting and periods of heavy rain. |
| 2 men arrested, charged after Kewanee police respond to report of criminal damageThe investigation is ongoing. |
| | Arguments over anti-trans ballot referendum highlight impacts on Maine studentsOpponents of a ballot referendum rolling back transgender athletes access to sports and facilities that align with their gender highlighted how the campaign is being supported largely by midwestern billionaire mega-donor Richard Uihlein on April 14, 2026. (Photo by Eesha Pendharkar/ Maine Morning Star)Dozens of people gathered at the State House on one of the final days of the legislative session to rehash familiar debate on the impacts of imposing restrictions on transgender students’ access to sports, bathrooms and other private spaces. This debate has been ongoing in Maine since last year, when the administration of President Donald Trump threatened to pull federal funding due to the state’s policies that protect trans students’ rights to have affirming spaces in schools, including playing on teams aligning with their gender identity. After several failed legislative attempts to roll back Maine’s inclusive policies, a citizen-led campaign succeeded in getting the issue on the November ballot. Lawmakers allowed the public to weigh in on the referendum one more time at a hearing on Tuesday and, after hours of listening to testimony, decided to not pass the proposed policy outright, instead leaving the decision in voters’ hands. At the crux of the debate was how trans athletes’ inclusion or exclusion in sports would impact schools and students. “Proponents say they’re trying to protect girls and women, but beneath the surface of that claim, make no mistake, what lies is contempt for trans people,” said Rev. Jane Field, executive director of the Maine Council of Churches, told the Judiciary Committee.“Concern about the safety of women and girls would require focusing on real threats they face,” Field added, “…not trans girls who just want to play school sports or use a bathroom or a locker.” The group behind the referendum is framing it as a safety and fairness issue, claiming the referendum, if passed, would “protect girls’ sports.” Dozens of supporters testified at the hearing, some with anecdotes about how allowing “biological males” into girls’ bathrooms and sports jeopardizes their safety and unfairly pits them against stronger, faster competitors. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX “For many female athletes, sports are one of use cases where fairness and equal opportunity are clearly defined,” said Sophia Pride, a freshman at the University of Maine and a former high school athlete. “When those standards become unclear, it can impact confidence, participation and the integrity of composition.” Leyland Streiff, the lead petitioner of the referendum, said the bill takes the “progressive stance” of respecting people who present their gender in whatever way they feel comfortable. But “that doesn’t change the fact that they’re male or female,” he added. “We cannot include someone’s gender identity at the expense of discriminating on the basis of everyone else’s sex,” he added. Proponents of the measure also rejected the premise that the bill discriminates against trans students, with former Rep. Heidi Sampson arguing that the bill “does not ignore or exclude anyone.” Sampson, who was involved in the referendum campaign, pointed to the bill language that allows trans students to play on coed teams. “It doesn’t matter what their identity is, they can still do coed,” she said. Opponents of a ballot referendum rolling back transgender athletes access to sports and facilities that align with their gender held a press conference before a public hearing on April 14, 2026. (Photo by Eesha Pendharkar/ Maine Morning Star) Parents of transgender youth testified about how access to affirming spaces has been beneficial for the well-being of their children. Sarah McDaniel, president of PFLAG Portland, an organization supporting LGBTQ+ people, said when her son started his transition more than a decade ago, his high school worked with him to ensure that access. “These small changes made a huge difference in his ability to navigate the school day without fear,” she said. Michael d’Hemecourt, who has a trans daughter said she “and kids like her just want to be kids.” “They should worry about a quiz at school or what friend’s house they’re going to after school, not where they can safely do something as basic as go to the bathroom,” he added. Opponents underscored the legal risk as well as what they described as the discriminatory intent of the referendum, which walks back decades of inclusive practices and policy. The referendum would allow anyone to sue a school district if it allows trans students’ access to affirming teams and private spaces, and impose an enforcement mechanism that relies on a child’s birth certificate to determine whether they are trans, legal experts warned. “If the district must ensure that every student using a multi-stall restroom matches the sex on their birth certificate, we are no longer talking about a handful of athletes,” said Portland Superintendent Ryan Scanlon, testifying against the referendum. “We are talking about every student, every kid. We’re talking about significant costs that will take away from other resources that we have within schools.” The Maine Human Rights Commission also opposed the measure. Executive Director Kit Thompson Crossman pointed out that in the history of the Maine Human Rights Act, neither the Legislature nor the electorate has narrowed its scope. But Thompson Crossman said the commission has received several reports of people threatening the safety of trans students since the issue first arose last year. Mary Bonauto, a longtime attorney at GLAD law who successfully argued in favor of same-sex marriage before the U.S. Supreme Court, emphasized that these students will be further threatened if the measure passes. “This is not about fairness or sports,” said Bonauto. “Because if it were, there would be consideration of the nature of the sport in each child and the level of competition that we do not see here this measure.” Courtesy of Maine Morning Star |
| Nova Singers: “Duruflé Requiem,” April 25 and 26Wrapping up their 40th season by combining with the Galesburg Community Chorus, the professional vocal ensemble Nova Singers will perform the Duruflé Requiem, this extraordinary major work with organ and professional orchestra enjoying performances at Galesburg's First Lutheran Church On April 25 and Davenport's St. Paul Lutheran Church on April 26. |
| Stick Men, April 25Boasting combined professional experience that has led to sales of more than 100 million records worldwide, the powerhouse progressive rock trio Stick Men brings their exhilarating talents to Moline's Rascals Live on April 25, the super-group of legendary musicians Tony Levin, Pat Mastelotto, and Markus Reuter dedicated to bringing unparalleled musicianship and innovation to every performance. |