Kristi Noem – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Wed, 22 Oct 2025 16:03:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Kristi Noem – 社区黑料 32 32 Lawmakers Demand Info on Students Detained by ICE, Including on Their Schooling /article/lawmakers-demand-info-on-students-detained-by-ice-including-on-their-schooling/ Wed, 22 Oct 2025 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1022245 New York Congressional Democrats have demanded that the departments of Education and Homeland Security provide information on the welfare of recently detained students 鈥 including whether they are receiving educational services.

Led by U.S. Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Dan Goldman and Adriano Espaillat, they expressed 鈥減rofound concern鈥 to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and Education Secretary Linda McMahon 鈥渁bout the pattern of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) targeting K-12 public school students throughout the country.鈥

They cited the cases of five young New Yorkers 鈥 including a 6-year-old Ecuadorian girl who was in August while her brother, , remained in adult Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention. Two other siblings, one a K-12 student, were left in New York without their mother.


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鈥淚CE鈥檚 targeting of not only adults without criminal convictions, but also children and families, negates the administration鈥檚 stated policy of going after the 鈥榳orst of the worst鈥 for deportation proceedings,鈥 they note in signed by eight other New York Democratic U.S. representatives, including Ritchie Torres and Jerrold Nadler.

They demanded to know the total number of students 鈥 from kindergarten to college-age 鈥 arrested by the Department of Homeland Security since President Donald Trump took office in January. They want to learn how many remain in ICE custody, their average length of stay and what percentage were or are being held alongside their families. 

They further asked how the U.S. government is meeting its legal obligation to educate these children and, more specifically, about the quality and language proficiency of the teaching staff. 

鈥淭he Department of Education has the responsibility under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution to ensure that all students have equal access to education,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淧lease provide copies of curricula, sample lesson plans, and rubrics currently in use at ICE detention facilities, processing sites, and Office of Refugee Resettlement shelters.鈥

An Education Department spokeswoman said Monday that it will respond to the letter when the government reopens. In a statement to 社区黑料, DHS did not answer any questions about the school-age children detained by its agents, but blamed the media for 鈥渁ttempting to create a climate of fear and smear law enforcement.鈥

U.S. Rep. Dan Goldman speaks with federal agents after observing a June 18 immigration court hearing at the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Ocasio-Cortez and Espaillat did not respond to 社区黑料鈥檚 requests for comment. A spokesperson for Goldman, whose district encompasses Lower Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn, said he 鈥渞emains extremely committed to holding ICE accountable for terrorizing our schools and communities.鈥  

The U.S. representatives鈥 worry about the fate of immigrant children echoes concerns being voiced nationally. Advocates say their communities are living in are targeted near school grounds, particularly in and where ICE tactics have been aggressive. 

Alarm over agents鈥 actions and their apparent lack of accountability was a central theme of the more than 2,700 attended by millions across the country this past weekend. 

Ranking Democratic members of two congressional subcommittees said Monday against ICE agents, citing that more than 170 U.S. citizens have been held 鈥 including nearly 20 children. 

Rebecca Brown, supervising attorney with Public Counsel鈥檚 Immigrants鈥 Rights Project (Rebecca Brown)

鈥淭here’s no boundaries in this dragnet,鈥 Rebecca Brown, a supervising attorney with Public Counsel鈥檚 Immigrants鈥 Rights Project, told 社区黑料 . 鈥淣ow there’s no 鈥榦ff limits.鈥 Everything is fair game.鈥

Not only are children and their parents being swept up near school grounds, Brown said the current federal government shutdown is making it increasingly difficult for families 鈥 and attorneys 鈥 to locate anyone who鈥檚 been detained.

鈥淲ith this administration and with this budget shutdown, it is really hard to get folks on the phone,鈥 she said.

Immigrant advocacy organizations are urging parents to make guardianship plans, including those specific to their child鈥檚 schooling. One such group, in response to the massive uptick in enforcement efforts, said for the first time it鈥檚 helped some 100 families this year make binding educational plans for their kids in case their parents or guardians are arrested or deported.

鈥淲e have not used this in prior years,鈥 said Julie Babayeva, supervising attorney at the New York Legal Assistance Group’s LegalHealth Unit. 鈥淲e are doing this much more now. This is becoming super urgent.鈥

More than were in government detention in late September, according to a clearinghouse that tracks federal data. More than 71% had no criminal convictions. More than unaccompanied minors were in government custody as of Oct. 20, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. The Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is under HHS, oversees their care at some and programs in 24 states and is charged with detainees鈥 schooling. ORR did not respond to requests for comment.

Undocumented immigrants over 18 are sent to adult holding sites. Dylan Lopez Contreras, 20 and a student at a New York City high school dedicated to older newcomers, is among them. The Bronx resident was arrested in May in a high-profile case and remains in detention as his lawyers denying him asylum and deporting him back to Venezuela.

Contreras鈥檚 case was also cited in the letter to Noem and McMahon, with the representatives noting he is being held hundreds of miles away from his family in Pennsylvania at the 鈥淢oshannon Valley Processing Center, from which there have been reports of insufficient medical care and use of solitary confinement.鈥

Conditions at both and have been widely criticized. In addition to concerns about young people鈥檚 overall health and safety, at these sites: substandard curriculum and untrained or underqualified staff are among many complaints. 

Just last week, immigrant from Everett, Massachusetts, was arrested after authorities fielded a 鈥渃redible tip鈥 in which the student was said to have made 鈥渁 violent threat against another boy within our public school.鈥 

Erika Richmond-Walton, litigation fellow at Lawyers for Civil Rights. (Erika Richmond-Walton)

His mother, who arrived at the local police station to pick him up, was instead told ICE had already taken him away. The family, from Brazil, has a pending asylum claim. The mother from two different immigration facilities, one in Massachusetts and the other in Virginia. 

鈥淗e cried a lot because he had never been away from home or his family,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e was desperate, saying ICE had taken him.鈥

Erika Richmond-Walton, a litigation fellow at Boston-based Lawyers for Civil Rights, said the detention and deportation of young kids 鈥渋s definitely not protecting or advancing their educational rights. Deporting children contradicts decades of settled law.鈥 

And even if the children themselves are not targeted, the removal of their parents is devastating. One California mother is bereft after her husband was detained in late September after dropping off their 8-year-old daughter at school. 

The woman, who asked not to be identified for fear of immigration enforcement, told 社区黑料 she talks with her husband every day through video chat and that she expects him to be deported to their country of origin. She said government officials told her husband they are 鈥渨aiting for the plane to fill up so they can send it to Colombia.鈥 

Protestors march with signs and flags in a late afternoon No Kings protest against the Trump Administration in Detroit, Michigan, USA, on Oct. 18. (Getty Images)

, said the well-documented damage to school-age children of aggressive deportation extends far beyond increased absenteeism, anxiety and plummeting grades. In a just society, he said, young people learn political norms through what they see.

鈥淲hen a child watches a federal agent drag a parent from a car line or hauls someone off in front of classmates, they absorb a lived lesson: Power may be exercised arbitrarily, and some lives can be violated in public without accountability,鈥 he said. 

Adaku Onyeka-Crawford, director of the Opportunity To Learn Program and a senior attorney at The Advancement Project, located in Washington, D.C., said immigrants at schools is dubious.  

鈥淚 think this administration is tricky when it鈥檚 saying we are not sending ICE to schools but are sending ICE after students who are on their way to school 鈥 and targeting communities and children no matter where they are or what their age.鈥

Prior administrations took such circumstances into account, at least to an extent, said Brown of the Public Counsel鈥檚 Immigrants鈥 Rights Project. But early on in his second term, Trump rescinded a longstanding restriction against immigration agents carrying out enforcement actions in so-called sensitive locations, including schools.

鈥淭here was some consideration for age and vulnerability,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e’ve seen an uptick in enforcement around schools. 鈥 This is by design: You punish the kids in order to get the parents to comply.鈥

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As Noem’s School Choice Bill Divides Educators, Some Districts Cooperate with Homeschool Families /article/as-noems-school-choice-bill-divides-educators-some-districts-cooperate-with-homeschool-families/ Sun, 19 Jan 2025 17:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=738463 This article was originally published in

Nearly 15% of school-age children in the Meade School District 鈥 504 students 鈥 are enrolled in alternative instruction instead of attending a state-accredited private or public school.

Because state funding is partially based on enrollment, those children would bring roughly $3.5 million in funding to the district if they attended a public school.

That鈥檚 money that could cover staff salaries and resources, maintenance and repair of school buildings or extracurriculars, said Heath Larson, executive director of Associated School Boards of South Dakota.


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Rising Alternatives

This is the fifth story in a about the growth of alternative instruction in South Dakota.

Further stories examine the , concerns about , growing alternatives for , and the .

Larson and other public education advocates are concerned that as more families remove their kids from traditional schools to pursue alternative instruction, school districts will continue to lose funding.

鈥淥ur state must continue to adequately fund public education,鈥 Larson said, 鈥渢o ensure that our schools are able to meet the needs of all students and provide school districts the resources and support they need.鈥

Alternative instruction nearly tripled in South Dakota over the last decade from 3,933 students in 2014 to 11,489 鈥 now making up about 7% of school-age children in the state. That includes online, hybrid and microschools that are unaccredited, or accredited by an entity other than the state.

The trend accelerated in 2021 when South Dakota lawmakers deregulated alternative instruction, making it easier for parents to remove their kids from public schools and harder for public school systems to monitor alternatively instructed students.

This winter, Republican Gov. Kristi Noem wants to create education savings accounts (ESAs). The $4 million program 鈥 part of a to make public funds available for private school and alternative instruction 鈥 would provide about in its first year to pay for a portion of private school tuition or curriculum for alternative instruction.

Ahead of the annual legislative session, which begins Tuesday, Noem鈥檚 ESA proposal is public school advocates against their counterparts from private education and alternative instruction.

鈥淚 will personally fight tooth and nail to make sure that public education stands forever, if I can have my way,鈥 said Rob Monson, executive director of the School Administrators of South Dakota. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to see an attack this year, I believe, on the public school institution bigger than we鈥檝e ever seen.鈥

Public school advocates worry the program will balloon and siphon money away from public schools, while primarily benefiting students who are already enrolled in private school or alternative instruction without state support.

Monson told South Dakota Searchlight that families should work with their local school boards to make the changes they hope to see.

Some school districts and alternative-instruction families have been doing that: experimenting with ways to cooperate. They鈥檝e created hybrid arrangements that allow students to participate in both alternative and public education, while school districts retain some of the state funding they would lose if the students had no involvement with a public school.

Students shift between public & alternative school, study says

The conversation surrounding homeschooling growth at the state Legislature has largely been framed as an exodus from public school systems. But that isn鈥檛 entirely accurate from a national perspective, said Angela Watson, director of the Homeschool Research Lab at in Maryland.

The vast majority of nontraditional students nationwide are 鈥渟witchers,鈥 Watson said: children who shift between public school, alternative instruction and back again. Between 36% and 43% of students surveyed for a were homeschooled for only one to two years.

Rebecca Lundgren started a hybrid school in Dell Rapids this school year. Lundgren removed her three children from the public school system in 2019 but allowed them to choose where they go to school.聽

Josie, Rebecca鈥檚 15-year-old youngest child, plans to continue alternative schooling through graduation but takes some classes at the hybrid and public school. While she likes the routine of public school and spending time with friends, homeschooling allows her to learn at her own pace. She is diagnosed with ADHD, dyslexia and auditory processing disorder.

鈥淚 struggle a bit sometimes with my learning. I like learning in a classroom setting, but sometimes the noise and people become too much,鈥 Josie said.

Rebecca added that it鈥檚 important to her that her family is active in Dell Rapids and supports all educational paths, not just investing in her own children鈥檚 education. That, she said, ensures the best education for everyone.

鈥淚 think homeschoolers need to support public school students and I think public school needs to support homeschool,鈥 she said.

Lundgren鈥檚 oldest child graduated from homeschooling in 2022. Her middle child returned to public school full-time the same year.

That 鈥渟witcher鈥 perspective 鈥渃ompletely changes the conversation,鈥 Watson said. It鈥檚 an important distinction for lawmakers, homeschool advocates and school administrators to understand for funding and policy decisions, including virtual schooling or re-enrollment requirements: the students who leave might return.

鈥淚f we understand those kids are going to probably end up in public schools, I think including them as much as possible is probably a good move for all concerned,鈥 Watson said.

Harrisburg finds success in nontraditional 鈥榩ersonalized learning鈥

Alternative instruction advocates say their growth can spur public schools to respond with changes that improve public education. The Harrisburg School District鈥檚 鈥減ersonalized learning鈥 model is an example. The district adopted the approach from a charter school in Maine.

The district uses personalized learning for most elementary students. They learn math and reading 鈥 and some other subjects 鈥 at their own pace. Students complete activities, assignments and 鈥渕astery checks鈥 individually before advancing. If they don鈥檛 master the unit, they keep working.

Teachers closely follow data from placement tests, mastery checks, assignments and activities to understand how to work best with each child, said Harrisburg Superintendent Tim Graf.聽

The switch benefits teachers as well, said McClain Botsford, a third grade teacher. Botsford taught in a traditional classroom in Nebraska before moving to the Harrisburg district three years ago. She said she鈥檇 鈥渘ever go back,鈥 because she feels less frustration and burnout working with students individually.

Teachers also become subject matter experts because they鈥檒l teach one topic, like fractions, through second and fifth grades, rather than learning the entirety of math standards at one grade level. Students move between four second-through-fifth grade teachers in a 鈥渃ohort鈥 as they focus on mastering a subject.

The children work on assignments and watch videos on their tablets when they aren鈥檛 working with teachers in small groups. Because of that, there can be less behavior issues during math and reading since children are focused and challenged, Botsford said.

Because the district is the fastest growing in the state, it has the funds to invest in different educational techniques, Graf said. Not all school districts have that luxury.

Just over 300 students, or 4.64% of the school-aged population in the Harrisburg School District, are enrolled in alternative instruction this year.

鈥楶ublic education is meant to serve all children鈥

Sheridan Keller鈥檚 children are homeschooled, but her son is enrolled in a business class at Florence High School near their town of Wallace in eastern South Dakota. Both of her sons play sports and band, one daughter participates in middle school music classes, and her youngest daughter attended kindergarten once a week last school year.

Her children are involved in the school because her superintendent clearly communicates with her about her children鈥檚 needs, she said. Florence Superintendent Mitchell Reed expressed a similar sentiment.

鈥淧ublic education is meant to serve all children in a district,鈥 Reed said, 鈥渘ot just full-time students.鈥

School districts are required to allow alternative instruction students to participate in sports and extracurriculars, and to enroll in classes. Those reforms were included in an alternative instruction .

When an alternative student participates in a public school class or sport, the school district claims that student鈥檚 鈥渃redit hour鈥 and receives state funding to support the child鈥檚 participation.

But the relationship between public schools and homeschool families can depend on the district, Keller said. Her daughter joined the Florence kindergarten class once per week to make friends. She attended field trips and class parties, as well as normal days in the classroom. She was also included in the kindergarten graduation program.

鈥淥ur school is very good to us,鈥 Keller said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just things like that that really make a difference.鈥

Meade experiments with online learning

Online education is growing in the alternative instruction world, said Lisa Nehring, the owner and founder of True North Home School Academy. The online school teaches roughly 600 children grades second through 12th nationwide on subjects including math, literature, science, foreign language and soft skills, such as career exploration.

Students typically enroll in a few courses at a time, with three classes being the most popular 鈥渂undle,鈥 said Nehring, who lives in Parker. Science, English and foreign language are the most popular courses because they鈥檙e harder to teach at home.

鈥淎nd then they鈥檒l do co-ops or dual enrollment or the parents will teach them themselves,鈥 Nehring said.

Thousands of students across the state use virtual learning each year through the state鈥檚 , whether the classes replace an unfilled teaching position within a school district, are used for student credit recovery to graduate, or make courses available that are not offered at the local school district.

Alternative instruction students can take courses, as long as they register through their public school district. The student鈥檚 request for online access can be denied, depending on the school district鈥檚 policy.

Jen Beving, a homeschooling organizer and deputy state director for Americans for Prosperity-South Dakota, advocated for mandatory online education access for alternative instruction students at the state level two years ago. Virtual schools would bridge the gap between public and alternative instruction, allowing the public school to retain some oversight of the students, she said. For example, schools can monitor students鈥 laptops and engagement through the program.

The Meade School District is piloting a program similar to Beving鈥檚 idea this school year.

The school district launched its Meade County Homeschool Connections program, which allows alternative instruction families to enroll their children in kindergarten through eighth grade online classes on a part-time or full-time basis.

A facilitator coordinates the program to connect with families who partially enroll their children for in-person classes. The district purchased an online teaching program, Acellus, to teach the courses. It mixes self-paced videos and interactive components.

鈥淚f a kid is struggling with a component, the program will recognize that and backfill with additional support and content,鈥 said Whitewood Elementary Principal Brit Porterfield, who鈥檚 closely involved with the Connections program. 鈥淚t identifies skills they鈥檙e struggling with and provides more material and targeted lessons as a way to improve mastery. It caters itself to students鈥 needs.鈥

The program 鈥 including the facilitator and technology 鈥 costs about $106,000 a year, said Superintendent Wayne Wormstadt. It鈥檚 capped at the equivalent of 30 fully enrolled students, and will not accept children outside of the Meade School District. Increasing the school鈥檚 student enrollment by 30 allows for about $200,000 in state funding, Wormstadt said.

As of the beginning of the school year, 20 students were enrolled. Most students are enrolled in reading and math classes.

The pilot program will run for two years before being reviewed.

鈥淲hether the student is in public all school years or homeschooling, these children are going to be the future leaders in our community,鈥 Wormstadt said, 鈥渟o I feel this pilot is an important part of what we should be doing not just inside our school building walls but inside the school district as a whole.鈥

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. South Dakota Searchlight maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Seth Tupper for questions: info@southdakotasearchlight.com.

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South Dakota Gov’s $4M School Choice Plan Faces Backlash /article/south-dakota-govs-4m-school-choice-plan-faces-backlash/ Sat, 07 Dec 2024 17:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=736493 This article was originally published in

PIERRE 鈥 A $4 million proposal by South Dakota Republican Gov. Kristi Noem to help students enroll in private school and other forms of alternative instruction would undermine public education by diverting state money to unaccountable entities, opponents say.

Supporters of the plan say it would allow the state to start educational reform that鈥檚 gained momentum nationwide while lowering education costs, forcing public education to innovate and offering South Dakota students tailored education to best meet their learning needs.

Noem pitched the creation of education savings accounts, or ESAs, to lawmakers at her annual Tuesday in Pierre as a way to continue to 鈥減rioritize education鈥 without cutting public education funds.


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鈥淕ood education starts in the home,鈥 Noem said. 鈥淎nd parents should have the tools to choose what educational path is best for their kids.鈥

The program would cover about $3,000 per student annually to pay for a portion of private school tuition or curriculum for alternative education, Noem said. She hopes to expand the program eventually, but she might not be around to act on that plan. President-elect Donald Trump has as his nominee to lead the federal Department of Homeland Security, which means she could resign as governor as soon as late January, elevating Lt. Gov. Larry Rhoden to serve the rest of her term.

The program would be for 鈥渇amilies who meet eligibility requirements,鈥 according to , and Noem鈥檚 spokesman said the requirements will include being low-income. Sixteen other states already allow families to use .

The proposal comes as South Dakota sees one of the highest rises in alternative instruction in the nation. Across the state, alternatively enrolled students account for about 6.5% of the school-age population, based on public, non-public and alternative enrollment data from the state Department of Education. Alternative instruction includes homeschooling and private schools that are unaccredited or accredited by an entity other than the state, such as online, hybrid and microschools.

Lawmakers and education lobbyists in Pierre are eager to learn the details about Noem鈥檚 proposed legislation 鈥 especially how the state will ensure oversight and accountability, how students are chosen for the program and how it鈥檒l fit into the state鈥檚 ongoing expenses.

鈥淲e have homework to do,鈥 said incoming Senate President Pro Tempore Chris Karr, R-Sioux Falls, a former member of the legislative budgeting committee who supports the school choice movement. 鈥淲e have to go look at this and figure out how to implement this responsibly.鈥

Sandra Waltman, director of public affairs for the South Dakota Education Association, said any entity that accepts public funding should be held to the same standards as public education, such as testing requirements and anti-discrimination policies. Alternative instruction students are currently not required to take standardized tests or present a portfolio to demonstrate educational progress. Private schools aren鈥檛 obligated to serve all students, so they can deny admission and educational services, Waltman added.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e taking those precious funds and diverting them from public schools, you鈥檙e undermining what public schools can do for students,鈥 Waltman said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no assurance the money they鈥檙e investing in education is actually making a difference.鈥

Noem didn鈥檛 propose cutting public education to fund the program, but proposed a state funding increase to public education of 1.25%. The inflation rate this year is 3.2%, according to the .

Lower-than-expected sales tax collections primarily drive the leaner $7.29 billion budget Noem , which also includes cuts to some state departments and programs.

That signals to Rob Monson, executive director of School Administrators of South Dakota, that lawmakers will challenge the feasibility of ESAs.

鈥淪ome legislators will look at public education serving over 80% of students in the state and think, 鈥業f we have extra money, maybe we should obligate that to a program we鈥檙e already obligated to fund instead of funding a new program with ongoing dollars,鈥欌 Monson said.

Efforts to failed twice in the Legislature in recent years, largely due to questions about financial feasibility, said Brookings Republican Rep. Mellissa Heermann, a member of the House Education Committee.

South Dakota must be intentional with the 鈥渟mall pot鈥 of tax revenue it has to work with, Heermann said. She added that there are already school programs in place to help address students鈥 mental health, behavioral and learning needs.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know that vouchers would be as impactful as other programs,鈥 Heermann said. 鈥淭he timing doesn鈥檛 feel right to me to embark on something like this when we鈥檙e already trying to reduce costs as much as possible.鈥

Incoming House Majority Leader Scott Odenbach, R-Spearfish, said the proposal focuses on educating students, rather than supporting a public education system that鈥檚 weighed down by overhead costs and top-heavy administrative costs. An ESA program could force local districts to decentralize, adapt and focus more on students鈥 education, he said.

鈥淣o entity evolves until it鈥檚 forced,鈥 Odenbach said.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. South Dakota Searchlight maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Seth Tupper for questions: info@southdakotasearchlight.com. Follow South Dakota Searchlight on and .

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