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		Pritzker signs bills aimed at easing teacher shortage amid data 
		suggesting progress
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		[April 28, 2022] By 
		PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed a 
		package of bills Wednesday aimed at easing the state’s shortage of 
		teachers and other education professionals, even as a new report shows 
		Illinois just added a record number of new teachers to its ranks. 
 Speaking in the library of Springfield High School just blocks from the 
		Capitol, Pritzker said that while the education workforce picture is 
		improving, more work still needs to be done.
 
 “In Illinois, schools still have more than 2,100 unfilled teaching 
		positions statewide,” he said. “That includes 15 unfilled teaching slots 
		here in Springfield and 64 in Decatur, with similar need for 
		paraprofessional positions. With new tools though, and new funding at 
		their disposal, districts all across the state are working to find new 
		ways to bring people into this profession and to encourage them to stay 
		there.”
 
 Pritzker signed four bills Wednesday, including House Bill 4246, which 
		lowers the cost of renewing a lapsed educator license to $50 instead of 
		$500; House Bill 4798, allowing currently enrolled teaching students 
		with at least 90 credit hours to be licensed as substitute teachers; 
		Senate Bill 3988, lowering the minimum age to become a paraprofessional 
		in grades eight or below to 18 instead of 19; and Senate Bill 3907, 
		allowing short-term substitute teachers to teach up to 15 consecutive 
		days in a classroom instead of just five.
 
		
		 
		Those bills come on top of numerous other measures the state has taken 
		in recent years to lure more people into the teaching profession.
 Pritzker noted that the budget bill he signed into law April 19 
		increases funding for minority teacher scholarships to $4.2 million. And 
		starting next year, the minimum annual salary for first-year teachers 
		will increase to $40,000 due to a bill he signed in 2019.
 
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			Gov. JB Pritzker signs a package of bills aiming to 
			alleviate the state’s teacher shortage Wednesday at an event at 
			Springfield High School. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry 
			Nowicki) 
            
			 “That law, combined with proper 
			funding and all the work to remove barriers for qualified people to 
			enter this profession, is increasing the ranks of teachers across 
			our state even now,” Pritzker said. According to a new report from the Illinois State 
			Board of Education, those efforts appear to be having an impact.
 ISBE’s most recent Unfilled Positions Survey, released April 21, 
			shows Illinois schools hired a record 5,676 new teachers in the fall 
			of 2021, the most ever recorded in a single year and more than in 
			the past five years combined. That was enough to lower the statewide 
			vacancy rate to just 1.5 percent.
 
 But the survey also showed schools in Illinois still have more than 
			2,100 unfilled teaching positions, mostly concentrated in 
			chronically struggling schools, underfunded schools and those 
			serving low-income communities.
 
 “Our low-income, bilingual and special education students have the 
			least access to the teachers they need to grow and thrive,” State 
			Superintendent Carmen Ayala said at the news conference. “We also 
			have a severe shortage of substitute teachers, as was noted, and 
			need an additional 2,400 paraprofessionals to fully meet our 
			students’ needs in the classrooms.”
 
 A survey conducted in 2021 by the Illinois Association of Regional 
			Superintendents of Schools found 88 percent of local school 
			districts believed they had a teacher shortage problem while 96 
			percent reported problems finding enough substitute teachers.
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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