Bill creating guidance for AI in Illinois schools heading to Pritzker's desk
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WCIA) — A bill developing guidance of artificial intelligence across Illinois schools passed both the House and the Senate.
Illinois Senate Bill 1920 passed out of both Houses on May 31 and will now be headed to Governor JB Pritzker's desk. The bill, first enacted by Sen. Doris Turney on Feb. 6, requires the State Board of Education to develop statewide guidance for school districts and educators on the use of artificial intelligence in elementary and secondary education.
Illinois bill on governor's desk would require law enforcement to work with federal gun tracing database
It also sets a deadline of July 1, 2026, for the State Board of Education to encourage school districts to collect teaching resources in order to support American Sign Language (ASL) programs. The board must always post on its website the process in which the board evaluates content area knowledge tests to determine the validity of content, a lack of bias or the scores needed to pass these tests.
The bill initially passed the House on May 23, and the following alternate co-sponsors were added before the bill headed back to the Senate:
Rep. Nicolle Grasse
Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl
Rep. Michael Crawford
Rep. Mary Beth Canty
Additionally, the bill includes recognizing and reporting online harassment and cyber-bullying with respect to the recommendation of an age-appropriate unit of internet safety instruction. This includes making and distributing false representations of people created by AI, such as sexually explicit images and videos.
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"Addressing changes to Social Security benefits directly may have been difficult to do under the Senate budget reconciliation rules, so this appears to be an effort to honor Trump's proposal in a manner that works under the budget reconciliation rules," Luscombe said. It's up for debate as to which version — House or Senate — ultimately prevails. Or even if there is some compromise figure or restrictions that are reached. Luscombe said much will probably depend primarily on the overall budget numbers and how the provision might be paid for with revenue offsets or spending cuts or whether it adds to the projected deficit. Again, not all seniors will benefit from this new bonus tax break. "Keep in mind that lower-income seniors would get no benefit since they already make less than the current standard deduction," Gleckman said. Lower-income households that do not have taxable income would not benefit, experts said, as they do not have income to offset. 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Many retirees in their 70s must withdraw at least some money from traditional 401(k) plans and traditional retirement savings, not Roth plans, to address complex required minimum distribution rules each year. The Secure 2.0 Act, passed by Congress in late 2022, raised the age for required minimum distributions in general to 73 for those who turned 72 in 2023 and later. If you reached age 73 in 2024, the Internal Revenue Service notes, you could have delayed taking your first required distribution for this year until April 1, 2025, but those who delayed still must take another required minimum distribution for 2025 by Dec. 31, 2025. In other words, those savers who delay would face two required minimum distributions in 2025. Large withdrawals in a year from a traditional pretax 401(k) will trigger taxes and possibly send you into a higher marginal tax rate — and in some cases push you beyond the thresholds for being able to claim the proposed senior "bonus" deduction. Many times, of course, retired people combine income from retirement accounts with Social Security to pay the bills. As a result, Gleckman noted, it can be difficult for many to defer income unless they have a good deal of disposable income. We're talking about many moving parts with what Trump calls "One big, beautiful bill" or OBBB. The proposed enhanced deduction is one provision that those 65 and older will want to watch. Contact personal finance columnist Susan Tompor: stompor@ Follow her on X @tompor.