Latest News and Comment from Education

Monday, June 22, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 22, 2026

 

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 22, 2026


U.S. NEWS

  • LAUSD Superintendent Alberto Carvalho resigns amid ongoing challenges in the Los Angeles school district.
  • Severe weather threats, including dangerous floods across the South and Plains, plus wildfires impacting roads in Florida.
  • Local incidents: LAPD bodycam footage after a family dog was shot; a Tesla on autopilot allegedly crashed into a home; various shootings and crimes reported in cities like Philadelphia and Chicago.
  • Close call at Boston airport with jets coming within 300 feet.'
  • '
  • U.S. Army Marks 250th Anniversary: Thousands gathered in Washington, D.C. over the weekend for a massive military parade featuring both historic and cutting-edge tanks and aircraft to celebrate the Army's 250th year.

  • Los Angeles Homeless Funding Suspended: The Trump administration officially paused federal funding for a major Los Angeles homeless agency, citing allegations of "obvious fraud" and mismanagement.

  • Potomac Small Plane Crash Investigation: Recovery teams and federal investigators returned to the Potomac River following a fatal small aircraft crash over the weekend in Prince George's County that left three people dead.

  • Wildfire and Wind Warnings in Southern California: Fire-scarred regions of Los Angeles are facing another critical wildfire threat as rare, high-velocity summer winds trigger fresh weather alerts across the basin.

POLITICS

  • U.S.-Iran peace talks in Switzerland (led by VP JD Vance) progress toward a 60-day roadmap after initial drama, with Trump issuing warnings and differing views on the Strait of Hormuz.
  • UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigns as Labour seeks a reboot.
  • Ongoing U.S. domestic political maneuvering, including House GOP efforts and reactions to Iran developments.'
  • U.S.-Iran High-Level Negotiations: Vice President JD Vance and Iranian Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf wrapped up a tense first round of direct diplomatic talks in Switzerland, establishing a preliminary 60-day roadmap.

  • Kash Patel Facing Bureaucracy Allegations: Internal friction surfaces within the FBI as critics accuse Director Kash Patel of bypassing standard protocols to award performance bonuses to agency loyalists.

  • Tensions Over D.C. Vandalism Response: Following recent vandalism at the National Mall Reflecting Pool, President Trump announced that the landmark will undergo a complete drainage for "necessary structural and security repairs."

  • Bipartisan Scrutiny of Foreign Tech Monitoring: A bipartisan coalition of U.S. senators is pushing a new legislative effort to place foreign health-monitoring devices and networks onto the FCC's official banned equipment list.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S.-Iran diplomatic breakthrough on a potential deal, amid tensions with Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire fragility and regional strikes.
  • Russia intensifies attacks on Ukraine’s Donbas region, with civilian evacuations.
  • Colombia’s presidential runoff (outsider vs. progressive); other global notes like UK politics spillover and Middle East updates.'
  • Breakthrough Swiss Mediation Efforts: Mediators from Pakistan and Qatar reported "encouraging progress" in the ongoing U.S.-Iran talks, outlining preliminary maritime safety mechanisms for the Strait of Hormuz.

  • Pope Francis Laid to Rest: The Vatican hosted world leaders and hundreds of thousands of mourners over the weekend for the formal funeral Mass and burial of Pope Francis.

  • U.S. Air Campaign Resumes in Somalia: U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) ended a month-long lull by launching a coordinated wave of five targeted airstrikes against al-Shabab militant positions near Kismayo.

  • European Move Against Russia’s "Shadow Fleet": A joint parliamentary council of German and French lawmakers issued a formal demand for an international crackdown on the maritime network of unregistered tankers bypassing oil sanctions.

EDUCATION

  • LAUSD Superintendent resignation highlights district leadership struggles.
  • Various local school board meetings and summer schedules (e.g., transitions to four-day weeks in some districts).
  • Broader K-12 issues like teen math/reading score challenges and special education/civil rights shifts at the federal level.''
  • Push for America's First Indigenous Medical School: Prominent Native American health advocates unveiled plans for the Indigenous School of Medicine (ISOM), a specialized medical school integrating traditional culture into physical training, aimed for a 2030 launch.

  • Legal Battles Over Title IX and Religious Schools: Federal lawmakers are drafting new protections to shield religious schools and churches from recent appellate court rulings that apply strict secular sex-discrimination mandates to private institutions.

  • Study Reveals Inequities in Expungement Outcomes: A newly published study by Northeastern University highlights massive regional and racial disparities in California's criminal record relief system, noting longer median custody wait-times for minority applicants.

  • Tribal Nations Reclaim Educational Narratives: On the heels of the Summer Solstice, tribal education departments across the West launched updated historical curriculums ahead of this week's high-profile 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Little Bighorn.

ECONOMY

  • Positive ripple from Iran-U.S. talks, with reports of cheaper petrol/oil prices amid peace progress.
  • U.S. Q1 2026 GDP at +1.6% (second estimate); ongoing data watch (PMIs, etc.) and market reactions.
  • Broader resilience amid policy changes, energy uncertainties, and tech/AI influences.''
  • U.S. Manufacturing Startups Hit 30-Year Low: A new report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) reveals that domestic manufacturing startups have plummeted 58% since 1989, raising sharp bipartisan alarms over industrial defense readiness.

  • Summer Tourism Delivers Record Influx: State tourism boards across the Midwest and Pacific Northwest report record-breaking revenue figures for the opening weekend of summer, driven by an unprecedented surge in nature-based travel.

  • Data Center Grid Strain Sparks Infrastructure Battles: Local municipalities and energy utility networks are locking horns over real estate permits, as the explosive growth of AI-driven cloud infrastructure heavily stresses regional water and electrical grids.

  • Waymo Issues Major Robotaxi Recall: Autonomous driving giant Waymo announced a voluntary recall of its software fleet after multiple self-driving vehicles unexpectedly plowed into active highway construction zones.

TECHNOLOGY

  • SK Hynix overtakes Samsung as South Korea’s most valuable company (semiconductor/AI hardware momentum).
  • General AI and enterprise tech discussions, including infrastructure readiness and software advancements.
  • Limited specific daily headlines, but ongoing context around data centers, radar tech deals, and AI tools.'
  • Professional Sector AI Meltdown Warning: A major Thomson Reuters report warns that U.S. firms risk losing up to $143 billion in revenue due to lagging AI implementation, noting that one-third of professional employees now secretly use unsanctioned AI tools to get work done.

  • Mayo Clinic Deploys AI for Rural Care: Mayo Clinic announced a major expansion of its ARPA-H PARADIGM project, using trained AI algorithms to visually guide rural healthcare workers through complex clinical procedures without an on-site specialist.

  • The Rise of Clean-Tech Co-Location: Data center developers are shifting toward new blueprint designs that integrate server farms directly into localized, sustainable energy grids and waste-heat recovery systems.

  • Box Office Surge for Animated AI Production: Disney and Pixar’s Toy Story 5 smashed industry projections over the weekend, netting a franchise-best $160 million debut using highly advanced procedural rendering toolsets.

HEALTH'

  • Extreme heat warnings and alerts across regions (e.g., UK/France schools closing).
  • U.S. completed WHO withdrawal earlier in 2026 (ongoing context).
  • General public health notes on heat impacts and other seasonal concerns.'
  • ntel Declassifies Lab-Origin Reports: The Director of National Intelligence (DNI) released a trove of newly declassified files that critics argue points to an intentional regulatory cover-up regarding the biological origins of COVID-19.

  • Utah Battles Historic Measles Outbreak: State health authorities marked a full calendar year of continuous, localized measles transmission, warning the public that there is no immediate end in sight.

  • Federal Support for Remote Clinical Tech: Federal health agencies increased funding allocations for AI-driven clinical software, aiming to decentralize emergency medicine and preserve rural hospital capacities.

  • Avian Flu Preparedness Escalated: Federal agricultural and public health departments issued updated joint guidelines to agricultural sectors, stating they are ready to deploy a rapid-response system to tackle emerging avian flu mutations.

SPORTS

  • 2026 FIFA World Cup ongoing with matches (e.g., Spain wins, U.S./other group performances, fan stories).
  • MLB action and College World Series (e.g., Oklahoma vs. North Carolina finals if needed).
  • Other: Alex Eala at Wimbledon prep; various league updates.'
  • Special Olympics USA Games Begin: Minnesota Governor Tim Walz officially opened the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games in the Twin Cities, welcoming nearly 3,000 national athletes to a week of competitive events.

  • Historic Turnout at 50th Grandma’s Marathon: The iconic Duluth race recorded its largest field in history with 9,594 finishers, seeing Minnesota native Dakotah Popehn capture a historic third women's crown and Eritrea's Amanuel Mesel take the men’s division.

  • Ovechkin Inches Closer to Gretzky’s Record: Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin netted his 890th career goal during a high-scoring 8-5 loss to the Buffalo Sabres, putting him within striking distance of the all-time NHL record.

  • Spain Dominates World Cup Opener: In international soccer, Spain rebounded fiercely in its opening match of the group stage, secure a dominant 4-0 shutout victory over Saudi Arabia.

News evolves quickly—major themes today center on U.S.-Iran diplomacy and the World Cup. Check reliable sources for live updates.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY
TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Top US Education News

1. Trump Administration Accelerates Education Department Restructuring

The Trump administration is advancing its efforts to restructure the federal footprint in education. On June 16, the administration announced major interagency shifts, moving the oversight of special education to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and transferring civil rights enforcement in education to the Department of Justice (DOJ).

Education Secretary Linda McMahon stated that these partnerships are designed to reduce federal bureaucracy, though critics view the reclassifications as an effort to dismantle the Department of Education from within. Since closing a cabinet-level department requires an act of Congress, the administration is focusing on shifting programs "back to the states" via new policy waivers, including one recently approved for Indiana.

2. New Federal Dashboard Tracking Foreign Gifts to Higher Ed Sparks Debate

The U.S. Department of Education recently launched a public tracking dashboard for Section 117 disclosures, which require colleges to report any foreign contracts or gifts valued at $250,000 or more.

  • Data shows that 559 institutions have collectively reported $72 billion in foreign funding across 194 countries.

  • The top contributors identified are Qatar ($8.8 billion) and China ($6.8 billion).

  • While the administration frames the dashboard as a win for public transparency, higher education policy experts argue that the raw figures lack necessary context—such as the timeframes covered—and worry the data could be weaponized for political posturing.

3. Title IX Civil Rights Investigations Opened in Michigan and North Carolina

The Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) opened several high-profile Title IX investigations. This includes new inquiries into three separate Michigan school districts (Ann Arbor, Monroe, and Chippewa Valley) over alleged Title IX violations, as well as an investigation into Buncombe County Schools in North Carolina regarding policies on school restrooms.

Top World Education News

1. Thailand Climbs Global Education Competitiveness Rankings, Pushes AI Literacy

Thailand’s government announced an acceleration of its national education reform plans following a positive shift in the 2026 World Competitiveness Ranking published by the International Institute for Management Development (IMD).

  • Thailand rose three places to 52nd globally in education competitiveness, reversing a multi-year decline.

  • Its adult literacy ranking jumped nine spots to 48th.

  • In response, Thai education authorities are shifting focus toward widespread artificial intelligence (AI) literacy, enhanced English proficiency, and collaborating with pediatric specialists to establish balanced screen-time guidelines for primary schools.

2. UNESCO Highlights Severe Deficit in Higher Ed Access for Global Refugees

Marking World Refugee Day, a new global trends report from UNESCO's International Institute for Higher Education in Latin America and the Caribbean (IESALC) revealed that refugees remain starkly locked out of higher education.

  • While overall global refugee college enrollment has risen to 9% (up from just 1% in 2019), it still sits far below the general global enrollment rate of 44%.

  • The disparity is exceptionally severe in Latin America: despite the region having a general higher education enrollment rate of 59%, access for displaced populations and refugees drops to between 2% and 12% depending on the host country.

3. India Prepares for Massive NEET-UG Re-Exam Amid Security Reviews

In international higher education testing news, India’s Education Ministry is conducting high-level readiness reviews for the upcoming NEET-UG re-examination. The focus remains heavily locked on tightening cybersecurity and physical monitoring protocols to prevent the systemic leaks and testing vulnerabilities that disrupted earlier cycles of the massive medical entrance exam.


Legal roundup: Indian jurisdiction DA suits stayed, American Heartland case continues https://nondoc.com/2026/06/22/legal-roundup-indian-jurisdiction-da-suits-stayed-american-heartland-case-continues/ 

OPINION: The real college crisis isn’t enrollment. It’s college completion, and it’s time to start asking why https://hechingerreport.org/opinion-the-real-college-crisis-isnt-enrollment-its-completion-and-its-time-to-start-asking-why/ 

Summer jobs are getting harder for teens to find | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/summer-jobs-are-getting-harder-for-teens-to-find/760525 

Opinion | The ‘No Child Left Behind’ Nostalgia Is Delusional - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/opinion/schools-testing-accountability.html 

Cuba’s Fuel Crisis Brings Schools to a Standstill - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/world/americas/cuba-oil-gas-crisis-schools-education.html 

Embattled Superintendent of Los Angeles School District Resigns - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/us/superintendent-lausd-alberto-carvalho-resigns.html 

Carvalho resigns as LAUSD superintendent amid federal investigation - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-06-21/carvalho-resigns-as-lausd-superintendent-amid-federal-investigation 

L.A. could get democratic socialists in mayor, city attorney spots - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-06-22/dsa-wrapup 

Poll: Americans draw a new line in the betting bonanza sweeping over Wall Street — politics. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/22/poll-betting-markets-politics-00967298 

Trump Is Defying Congress on Foreign Aid — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-defying-congress-foreign-aid-usaid-vought-rubio-constitutional-crisis 

Texas may require more Bible stories, change history lessons in public schools https://www.texastribune.org/2026/06/22/texas-votes-bible-history-lessons-public-schools/

He profits off raw milk that’s making people sick. The government isn’t stopping him - Salon.com https://www.salon.com/2026/06/22/he-profits-off-raw-milk-thats-making-people-sick-the-government-isnt-stopping-him-partner/ 

Andy Burnham on course to be British PM in weeks after Keir Starmer quits – POLITICO https://www.politico.eu/article/keir-starmer-resigns-as-uk-prime-minister/ 

AI doomerism is misplaced. Here's what it will take to pop the bubble - Salon.com https://www.salon.com/2026/06/22/ai-doomerism-is-misplaced-heres-what-it-will-take-to-pop-the-bubble/

A rising populist tide is threatening New York’s powerful incumbents - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/22/a-rising-populist-tide-is-threatening-new-yorks-powerful-incumbents-00961088 

The military helped Black Americans find belonging. Pete Hegseth wants to reverse course - Salon.com https://www.salon.com/2026/06/22/the-military-helped-black-americans-find-belonging-pete-hegseth-wants-to-reverse-course/ '

Connecticut: Have You Called 911 for Help? Tell Us About Your Experience. — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/getinvolved/connecticut-ambulance-wait-times-callout 

Do You Work or Volunteer for Connecticut’s Emergency Medical Services? We Want to Hear From You. — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/getinvolved/connecticut-emergency-medical-services-callout 

'

Sunday, June 21, 2026

BROWN BEANS, FRIED POTATOES, AND THE AUDACITY OF HUNGRY CHILDREN IN THE RICHEST COUNTRY ON EARTH


BROWN BEANS, FRIED POTATOES, AND THE AUDACITY OF HUNGRY CHILDREN IN THE RICHEST COUNTRY ON EARTH


A personal reckoning with America's quiet war on its most defenseless citizens

By someone who once ate fast enough to maybe — maybe — get seconds.

The Dinner Table I Grew Up At


"The Blessing: Bless the meat, damn the skin, back your ears and cram it in, Amen"


Let me paint you a picture of my childhood dinner table. Six nights a week, it looked like this: brown beans, fried potatoes, and cornbread. Not because my mother lacked creativity. Not because we hadn't heard of variety. But because brown beans, fried potatoes, and cornbread were what we had. And we were grateful for every last bite.

Sunday, though? Sunday was church-level sacred. Sunday was fried chicken. Same potatoes — the potatoes were eternal, immovable, a constant in an uncertain universe — but fried chicken. We ate like it was the Last Supper, because in a very practical sense, it kind of was. Monday through Saturday stretched out ahead of us like a long, beige road paved entirely in legumes.

Breakfast was cereal. Lunch was a lunch meat sandwich. And the golden, unspoken rule of our household — the one that required no posting, no announcement, no family meeting — was this: eat fast, or don't eat twice. Seconds were not guaranteed. Seconds were a competition. I trained for that table like an Olympic athlete.

My father was a city firefighter. A man who ran into burning buildings for a living and then came home and picked up a second job, and sometimes a third, because one act of heroism doesn't pay the grocery bill. He worked himself to the bone so his kids could have brown beans and cornbread. And we were lucky. We knew it then. I know it even more now.

I know it because one of my teachers looked at me — skinny, hollow-cheeked, wearing the unmistakable uniform of a child who was not quite getting enough — and quietly reported me to Child Protective Services. She wasn't wrong to do it. She was doing her job. But I want you to sit with that image for a moment: a child so visibly underfed that a mandated reporter felt compelled to act. In America. In the richest country in the history of human civilization.

That child was me. And there are millions of children who are that child right now — today, this Sunday morning — while the rest of us eat brunch.

Enter the "One Big Beautiful Bill" — A Name Only a Lobbyist Could Love



Fast forward to 2025, and the United States Congress, in its infinite wisdom and with a straight face, passed the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" — because apparently when you're slashing $186 billion from food assistance for children, you need a title that sounds like a Vegas marquee to soften the blow.

Let's be precise about what "beautiful" actually means here, because language matters when children are hungry.

Beautiful means that parents of teenagers — kids aged 14 to 17 — must now document 80 hours of work per month or lose their food benefits. The old rule exempted caregivers of any child under 18. The new rule drops that to 14. So if you're a single mother working a gig economy job with unpredictable hours, raising a 15-year-old, and you can't produce the paperwork proving your 80 hours? Your family eats less. The teenager, who cannot legally work full-time, watches the refrigerator get lighter. Beautiful.

Beautiful means that immigrant families — many of them with U.S.-citizen children, born right here on American soil — are now so terrified that SNAP enrollment data might be shared with immigration enforcement that they're voluntarily removing their eligible children from the program. The children are legal. The children qualify. The children are hungry. But fear is a more effective policy tool than any eligibility rule. Beautiful.

Beautiful means the Thrifty Food Plan — the federal government's calculation of what it costs to feed a child a modest, healthy diet — is now permanently capped at historical levels, regardless of what inflation, supply chain chaos, or grocery prices actually do in the real world. In other words: food can cost more, but benefits legally cannot keep up. The gap between what families receive and what a bag of groceries actually costs will widen every single year, by design, forever. Beautiful.

Beautiful means SNAP-Ed — the program that funded school gardens, healthy eating workshops, and nutrition education for low-income kids — is simply gone. Eliminated. Because apparently teaching a food-insecure child what a vegetable is was a luxury we could no longer afford. Meanwhile, the defense budget remains, as they say, robust.

And the most elegant flourish of all? The federal government has shifted the cost of running SNAP from a 50/50 federal-state split to a 75/25 split — with states now carrying 75% of administrative costs. States that make errors in processing will be forced to fund up to 15% of actual food benefits themselves. The practical result: slower processing, reduced staffing, overwhelmed caseworkers, and families waiting longer to feed their children. But the federal ledger looks tidier. Priorities.

The Geography of Hunger: Where the Numbers Live

Here's where the data stops being abstract and starts being somebody's child.

The USDA tracks food insecurity state by state, and the map it produces is not subtle. Nearly 1 in 5 households in Arkansas — 19.4% — experience food insecurity. Kentucky sits at 18.8%. Louisiana at 17.7%. Texas, with its sheer population size, represents the largest absolute volume of food-insecure children in the country at 17.6%.

These are not statistics. These are children eating brown beans six nights a week — if they're lucky. These are children who don't get seconds. These are children whose teachers are quietly filling out CPS reports.

Meanwhile, North Dakota clocks in at 9.0% food insecurity. New Hampshire at 9.1%. Vermont, with its state-funded universal school meal programs and robust local food networks, at 9.4%.

The difference between a child in Vermont and a child in Arkansas is not work ethic, not family values, not personal responsibility. It is geography and policy. It is whether the state they were born in decided that feeding children was worth the budget line.

Eighty-six percent of the counties with the highest food insecurity rates in America are rural — places where the nearest full grocery store might be 30 miles away, where dollar stores have become the de facto supermarket, and where families pay more for worse food because competition doesn't exist and fresh produce doesn't survive the drive. We built food deserts, and then we told the people living in them to make better choices.

The Billionaire in the Room

I want to address something directly, because I think it deserves to be said plainly and without the usual diplomatic softening.

We live in a world that has produced its first trillionaire. We live in a country where a small constellation of billionaires wields more practical political influence than the elected representatives of 330 million people. We are, by every measurable economic metric, the wealthiest nation in the history of organized human society.

And we are having a policy debate about whether to feed the children.

Not a resource debate. Not a "we simply don't have enough" debate. A policy debate. A choice. A deliberate, legislated, signed-into-law decision that hungry children are an acceptable line item in a budget that simultaneously extends tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.

I grew up eating brown beans and fried potatoes because my father — a man who ran into fires — couldn't quite make the math work on a firefighter's salary. He wasn't lazy. He wasn't irresponsible. He was working three jobs and still coming up short, because that is what the economy does to working people, and it does it on purpose, and it always has.

When I hear politicians talk about cutting food benefits for children as a matter of fiscal responsibility, I think about that teacher filling out that CPS report. I think about the race to the dinner table. I think about Sunday fried chicken as the weekly miracle. And I feel something that is not quite anger and not quite grief but lives in the neighborhood of both.

Hungry children in the richest country on Earth should be a national emergency, not a negotiating chip.

What You Can Actually Do Right Now

For families in California navigating this landscape, here is the practical ground truth:

SUN Bucks (Summer EBT) provides $120 per eligible child for summer groceries — loaded onto an EBT card, usable at grocery stores and farmers markets. Most children are automatically enrolled and receive cards by mail between late May and July. The application deadline for families not automatically enrolled is August 31 through their child's school. Cards expire 122 days after loading, so use them. The helpline is (877) 328-9677, available 24/7.

CalFresh (SNAP) remains available year-round. Mixed-status families — where a parent may not qualify but children do — can and should apply on behalf of the children. A parent's immigration status does not disqualify an eligible child. Under current rules, caregivers of children under 14 retain an automatic exemption from work requirements.

The Last Word



America has always had a complicated relationship with its poor — simultaneously mythologizing the bootstrap narrative while cutting the bootstraps. We celebrate the idea of the hardworking family man running into burning buildings and picking up side jobs, and then we design systems that ensure his kids are hungry anyway, and then we call the teacher who notices a troublemaker.

I ate fast as a kid because seconds weren't guaranteed. I learned early that in this country, you have to move quickly or someone else gets what little there is.

The children who are food-insecure today didn't get that memo. They're just hungry. They're not making policy decisions. They're not lobbying for tax cuts. They're not managing portfolios or restructuring federal nutrition programs.

They're just kids. Waiting for dinner. Hoping it's enough.

In the richest country in the world, that should never — not once, not ever — be a political question.

The author grew up poor, ate fast, and takes this personally.


Sources & References

🏛️ The "One Big Beautiful Bill" — SNAP Cuts & Policy Changes


📊 Food Insecurity Statistics by State


🌞 California SUN Bucks (Summer EBT) Program


📞 Key Helpline & Resource


All links verified as of June 2026. Policy details reflect the enacted H.R. 1 / One Big Beautiful Bill Act and current California CDSS program guidelines.