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Pavilion In The Park continues to rebuild after March 2023 tornado

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www.youtube.com – THV11 – 2025-03-20 23:26:32

SUMMARY: Pavilion in the Park in Little Rock continues to recover from the EF3 tornado that struck central and eastern Arkansas nearly two years ago. While progress has been slow, the ownership group is committed to restoring the building’s unique charm, despite challenges in finding replacement parts. The 1980s-designed property required extensive work, including matching old glass for the atrium and bringing the structure up to code. With all structural work completed, the focus is now on cosmetic repairs. The grand reopening is approaching, with tenants and staff remaining supportive throughout the lengthy recovery process.

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Though nearly two years have passed since the destructive EF-3 tornado in March 2023, Pavilion In The Park continues to make repairs after taking a hit.

https://www.thv11.com/article/news/local/pavilion-in-the-park-rebuild-march-2023-tornado/91-45aba0af-fb63-4c68-84c1-17d6d641154d

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Nonprofit wants to take on civil rights cases Trump’s Ed Department left behind

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arkansasadvocate.com – Linda Jacobson, The 74 – 2025-05-18 05:00:00


Protesters opposed the Trump administration’s cuts to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR), which left thousands of student civil rights complaints unresolved. Shaheena Simons, former chief of the DOJ’s Educational Opportunities Section, resigned due to shifting priorities that sidelined racial and disability discrimination cases. She now co-chairs the Public Education Defense Fund, launched by the National Center for Youth Law to support families whose complaints OCR no longer addresses. The fund offers pro-bono legal help and fellowships for displaced OCR attorneys. Critics warn that without robust federal enforcement, civil rights protections in education will weaken.

by Linda Jacobson, The 74, Arkansas Advocate
May 18, 2025

For nearly a decade, Shaheena Simons led the division that fought for students’ civil rights at the U.S. Department of Justice.

Her tenure encompassed President Donald Trump’s first term, a time when staff still addressed the “full range of complaints”  — from racial and gender discrimination to schools denying services to students with disabilities.

Shaheena Simons was chief of the Educational Opportunities Section at the U.S. Department of Justice for nine years. Now she’ll co-chair an advisory council for the new Public Education Defense Fund. (Courtesy of Shaheena Simons)

But to Simons, the Justice Department’s recent dismissal of a school desegregation order in Louisiana — at a time when racial and socioeconomic isolation continues — is a sign that the current administration has turned its back on students who don’t receive an equal education. It’s why she left the Educational Opportunities Section at the DOJ after 14 years  in April.

“The administration has been very clear that resources are going to be allocated to certain identified priorities,” she said — primarily keeping trans students out of women’s sports and punishing universities it accuses of tolerating anti-semitism. But that agenda, she said, “is leaving a lot of parents and kids with nowhere to turn.”

Now she aims to be part of a solution. She’s lending her expertise to a new initiative intended to give families another way to resolve their concerns — the Public Education Defense Fund.

The National Center for Youth Law, a 50-year-old nonprofit, launched the project on Friday to help families with complaints that the DOJ or the Office for Civil Rights at the Education Department either won’t acknowledge or no longer has the capacity to investigate. Simons will co-chair the fund’s advisory council.

Announced in advance of Saturday’s 71st anniversary of the Brown v. Board decision ending segregation, the effort will include a fellowship program for former OCR attorneys who lost their positions when the Trump administration gutted the agency and closed seven regional offices in March. The goal is to capitalize on the “brain drain” caused by the elimination of nearly 250 OCR staffers and connect families with pro-bono attorneys who can conduct investigations and bring lawsuits to resolve their concerns.

“I have zero confidence in [the department’s] ability to administer the system effectively,” said Johnathan Smith, chief of staff and general counsel at the center. “I think most parents who are looking at what’s happening probably would reach the same conclusion.”

As it shifts attention away from discrimination against LGBTQ students and racial minorities, OCR has left thousands of complaints untouched and dismissed many others. Trump’s 2026 budget proposal calls for an additional 35% cut to the office as the administration pushes to eliminate the department.

The center, along with parents and special education advocates, sued the department over the firings, and asked the District of Columbia federal court to immediately reinstate staff. A hearing is set for May 20.

Andy Artz was a supervising attorney in OCR’s New York City office until March 11, when the department placed him and hundreds of other department staffers on leave and locked them out of their computer systems. He was in the middle of helping a student who had been denied access to a senior trip because of multiple disabilities and close to reaching a resolution for a victim of sexual assault by a classmate.

“I found the work really meaningful,” said Artz, who hopes to work with the fund. “OCR was able to do a great job helping school districts and universities understand their obligations.”

To the new administration, however, OCR perpetuated discrimination by focusing on diversity, equity and inclusion and harmed women by extending Title IX protections to transgender students.

“Let me be clear: it is a new day in America,” Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Craig Trainor said when the department announced an investigation into a gender-neutral bathroom in Denver schools. “Under President Trump, OCR will not tolerate discrimination of any kind.”

Even if the court blocks the job cuts, it’s unclear whether attorneys would be allowed to return to cases that don’t align with the administration’s priorities. Smith still sees a need for the new project.

His team will work with local NAACP chapters, bar associations and other community organizations to get the word out about the OCR alternative, Smith said.

In addition to seeking attorneys who will represent students pro-bono, the fund hopes to attract some of the talent forced to leave the federal government by offering four- to six-month fellowships. Attorneys will receive a $12,500 stipend and non-attorneys will receive $9,000. Depending on funding, Smith expects up to 10 fellows in the first round.

Johnathan Smith, chief of staff and general counsel at the National Center for Youth Law, said filing a complaint with the Office for Civil Rights has often been “a black hole for families.” (Courtesy of Johnathan Smith)

‘Top-performing personnel’

When Trump was inaugurated, OCR had over 12,000 open cases, according to its website. But the database hasn’t been updated since before the new administration took over. According to Julie Hartman, a department spokeswoman, OCR continues to “evaluate all legitimate complaints” and has initiated over 200 disability-related investigations and dozens related to Title IX and anti-discrimination laws.

“OCR’s staff is composed of top-performing personnel with years of experience enforcing federal civil rights laws who work vigorously to protect all Americans’ civil rights,” she said.

She declined to comment on the fund specifically, but said the department “welcomes support from — and has often worked with — outside groups who want to advocate for students and families and help those who believe that their civil rights have been violated.”

Factoring in staff reductions and those who left voluntarily, Artz estimates that only about a third of OCR’s staff remains out of the over 560 attorneys, supervisors and other employees who worked there last fall.

As a former deputy assistant attorney general during the Obama administration, Smith doesn’t solely blame Trump for OCR being “terribly backlogged.”

“It was a system that often was a black hole for families,” he said. “What does it mean to have an Office for Civil Rights that’s actually responsive to families and to young people?”

For Callie Oettinger, a Fairfax County, Virginia, parent and special education advocate, getting OCR to act has yielded mixed results. She has seen complaints linger for years as well as recent steps by the new administration to act on disability cases.

OCR still hasn’t completed a probe into her 2019 complaint that the Fairfax district denied transportation to students with disabilities who needed extra time to complete the PSAT. At the same time, she’s noticed an uptick in OCR investigations on more recent issues. Since early April, officials have responded to two complaints she’s involved in, one filed in December and another in March.

“It’s not clear why they’re starting where they’re starting,” she said. “Things are definitely moving forward, but they’re not doing themselves a favor by keeping their website so outdated.”

Others are looking elsewhere for relief.

In Delaware’s Cape Henlopen School District, Louise Michaud Ngido, an English language teacher, said she’s heard nothing about her complaint that schools have failed to provide English learners with adequate support. Students new to the country, she said, don’t receive specific English development classes and staff members don’t provide translation services or interpreters for parents. The district denied any discrimination.

Under Cardona, OCR opened an investigation last October, but Ngido has heard nothing since. She said she hopes Delaware will be “more proactive” and investigate complaints that OCR won’t.

Department of Justice priorities

At least one Republican proposal to eliminate the education department would shift OCR’s workload to the DOJ. But the education staff there has always been a fraction of the size of OCR’s. Simon’s former office once had 40 attorneys. Now, she said, it has six.

The agency’s priorities have also changed.

In an interview with the Epoch Times, a conservative media outlet, Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said her agenda includes doing “some law enforcement” against hospitals conducting gender-affirming surgeries, elevating parental rights and dismissing school district consent decrees over desegregation.

The DOJ said in a press release that it ended its “probing federal oversight” of integration efforts in Louisiana’s Plaquemines Parish schools because the district was spending “precious local resources” to meet past administration’s demands for data on issues such as hiring and discipline.

In the interview, Dhillon said the department wants to “let people off the hook” if they corrected past discrimination. Consent decrees, in which a district pays a court-appointed monitor for ongoing oversight, are “a powerful tool” and appropriate when there’s been severe corruption or racism, she said. “What’s not appropriate is to maintain these rent-seeking financial arrangements …  beyond their normal life cycle.”

But Simons, the former DOJ section chief, said Black students are still disciplined at higher rates than their white peers and are more likely to attend “crumbling” schools. Research shows that racial and socioeconomic isolation has steadily increased since the 1980s.

“Segregation persists; inequality persists,” she said.

Working with universities to collect and preserve existing data is another one of the fund’s goals. The administration, Smith said, might point to a declining number of OCR complaints as evidence of fewer problems in schools, when, in fact, it’s a byproduct of fewer investigations.

“We want to be able to counter that narrative by showing that just because people aren’t going to OCR doesn’t mean that there aren’t real concerns and real issues of discrimination in our schools,” he said.

‘The aid of legal counsel’

Jackie Wernz, a civil rights attorney and consultant who worked at the department during the Obama and first Trump administrations, said it’s important for nonprofits like the center to “step up,” but cautioned that outside efforts have limitations.

“Without a robust federal civil rights arm, civil rights in this country are not going to be enforced,” she said.

States don’t have the same expertise and resources, she said, and it’s unclear who would enforce any changes.

But Smith countered that the bulk of what OCR investigators do is negotiate solutions between families and district staff.

“Having parents and children do that with the aid of legal counsel,” he said, “will yield far better results and outcomes than if they try to navigate those systems on their own.”

This story first appeared at The 74, a nonprofit news site covering education. Sign up for free newsletters from The 74 to get more like this in your inbox.

Arkansas Advocate is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Arkansas Advocate maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sonny Albarado for questions: info@arkansasadvocate.com.

The post Nonprofit wants to take on civil rights cases Trump’s Ed Department left behind appeared first on arkansasadvocate.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The content exhibits a Center-Left bias due to its critique of the Trump administration’s handling of civil rights in education, particularly the diminishing resources allocated to the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and its focus on certain issues such as gender-affirming policies and parental rights. The narrative strongly highlights the concerns of civil rights advocates who feel that the administration’s priorities have sidelined issues of racial and socioeconomic inequality in schools. The framing and language used in the article lean towards advocacy for a more inclusive and expansive approach to civil rights protections, which aligns with center-left values. The article also includes input from legal experts and advocacy groups calling for alternative mechanisms to protect students’ rights, further emphasizing a progressive stance on civil rights and education reform.

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Fayetteville shops go all in for Strawberry Festival preparations

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www.youtube.com – 40/29 News – 2025-05-17 17:18:00

SUMMARY: Downtown Fayetteville is gearing up for the 2nd-Annual Strawberry Festival, with local shops and nonprofits joining in the fun. Pearl’s Books is offering themed books and a pop-up donut shop featuring sourdough donuts filled with fresh strawberry jam and basil. These events bring in new customers, with businesses excited to connect with fresh foot traffic. The Folk School is also joining in, inviting the community to jam along and celebrate music. The festival provides an opportunity for local businesses and organizations to showcase their offerings and engage with new visitors.

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Fayetteville shops go all in for Strawberry Festival preparations Subscribe to 40/29 on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/PTElbK

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These 11 sets of twins are graduating from an Arkansas high school

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www.youtube.com – THV11 – 2025-05-16 10:11:10

SUMMARY: Eleven sets of twins are graduating from Cabot High School in Arkansas’s class of 2025, a rare and remarkable occurrence given the odds being less than 1%. These twins share a unique bond, having navigated 13 years of school together, supporting each other academically and personally. Some participate in sports like volleyball and soccer, while others pursue diverse interests like auto tech and broadcasting. As graduation approaches with three ceremonies scheduled, emotions run high—some twins will attend college together, while others will be apart for the first time. Despite the upcoming separation, their sibling rivalry and support remain a heartwarming highlight.

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The Cabot High School class of 2025 will make you do a double-take— this senior class of nearly 800 features 11 sets of twins.

https://www.thv11.com/article/news/education/11-sets-of-twins-graduate-cabot-2025-class/91-77396f2e-2d10-45aa-ba3c-0b265977fecb

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