(CHICAGO, ILLINOIS) Some members of the Chicago Board of Education are urging Chicago Public Schools to offer remote learning options amid stepped-up immigration operations, but district leadership is holding the line. CEO Dr. Macquline King has stated that the district cannot offer remote learning in response to enforcement activity, arguing that schools remain the best and safest place for student learning.
The back-and-forth has intensified as families share fears tied to immigration enforcement and talk of possible National Guard deployment, raising questions about how the nation’s third-largest district should respond to pressures beyond the classroom.

CPS officials say they understand the anxiety in school communities, but their message is blunt: the district’s learning plan will not shift because of immigration operations. Instead, CPS is pointing families to existing supports while insisting that in-person schooling is the surest way to keep students on track. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, large urban districts often face calls to pivot during periods of enforcement activity, yet most rely on existing policies rather than creating wide new options that could be hard to manage and verify.
District stance and safety message
The administration’s stance rests on a clear principle: schools remain open and in-person. District leaders say classrooms provide:
- Consistent routines
- Daily meals
- Trusted adults who can spot when children need help
CPS also argues that sudden shifts to remote learning can disrupt learning time, create digital access challenges, and reduce attendance. Even as some board members press for remote learning to shield families from possible enforcement operations, CPS maintains that the school building is central to both safety and stability.
Families have asked whether the district could pause attendance rules during active immigration operations or set up temporary online days. CPS leadership has rejected these ideas and points to its formal Remote Education Policy, which limits remote programs to specific individual cases. The district notes that any wide change would fall outside that framework and undercut consistent instruction.
The district’s stance is also shaped by Illinois education rules, which expect in-person instruction as the baseline for public schools, with tight controls on any alternative format.
Remote Education Policy constraints
CPS does have a Remote Education Policy, but it is highly restricted and designed for individual students with special circumstances, not as a district-wide response to external events.
- Eligibility is limited to students who:
- Have documented individual learning, living situation, or medical needs
- Meet specific attendance, discipline, and academic record requirements
- Can demonstrate that remote education best serves their particular circumstances
The district operates the Virtual Academy, a fully remote option for grades K–12. This program is reserved for students who qualify as medically fragile and have documented medical conditions. It is not available as a general choice for students concerned about immigration operations.
Policy guardrails and application process
The Remote Education Policy sets strict guardrails:
- Written applications are required for each student seeking remote placement.
- Participation cannot extend beyond 12 months without district approval through established guidelines.
- For students with Individualized Education Programs, IEP teams must approve any remote placement to ensure the program supports the student’s plan.
CPS underscores that any remote program must meet core standards and accountability measures. The district requires that the program:
- Align with Illinois State Learning Standards
- Provide instruction consistent with in-person learning at the same grade level
- Use certified instructors under Article 21 of the Illinois School Code
- Require student participation in all state and federal assessments
These requirements show why the district treats remote learning as an exceptional accommodation, not a general option that can be turned on in response to immigration operations. CPS views remote formats as a tool for very specific student needs, not a shield for broad community concerns — however real those concerns may be.
Practical and equity concerns cited by CPS
When parents ask whether the district can quickly widen remote access, CPS gives a consistent answer: the current policy does not allow it. The district cites several practical and equity concerns:
- Need for documented individual need and proper staffing
- Requirement to remain compliant with state-level rules
- Risk that many students would lack devices, stable internet, or adult support during the day
- Potential to widen learning loss if access is inconsistent
CPS leadership also warns that a broad remote model could:
- Erode predictability
- Spur uneven participation
- Stretch staff thin
- Offer little evidence it would protect families from enforcement activity that occurs outside school walls
Board members, advocates, and community response
Some board members remain skeptical. They argue that even a temporary remote option could reduce fear-driven absences during active enforcement operations and help families avoid difficult travel choices.
Community groups are urging clearer communication so parents know their children are welcome and safe at school. Advocates want:
- Proactive outreach
- Language access
- Calm attendance messaging on days when immigration operations spike
They warn that fear can empty classrooms even if schools remain open. CPS officials say they will continue to reinforce in-person learning and refer families to district supports, while reminding staff that student services remain in place during stressful periods.
CPS’s message to families: keep sending children to school and disclose individual needs through the existing application process if a student may qualify for remote placement.
Federal context and resources
For families seeking federal context about enforcement practices in the United States, the Department of Homeland Security posts public guidance about enforcement operations and locations. Readers can review current policy materials via the Department of Homeland Security guidance.
CPS has not tied its decisions to any specific federal document and continues to frame its choices around state standards and its own policy framework.
Where things stand
As the debate continues, the Chicago Board of Education faces a balancing act: respond to community worries without unraveling the standards-based remote policy that CPS has built over time.
District officials say the guardrails in place protect academic integrity and ensure that any remote program mirrors in-person learning with certified instructors, aligned curriculum, and required assessments. Supporters of a temporary remote option say the district should make room for short-term relief.
For now, the policy holds, and classrooms remain open.
This Article in a Nutshell
Amid heightened immigration enforcement, some Chicago Board of Education members urged CPS to offer temporary remote learning to protect families. CPS leadership, led by CEO Dr. Macquline King, rejected district-wide remote pivots, arguing in-person schooling provides routines, meals, trusted adults, and consistent instruction. The district’s Remote Education Policy is narrowly targeted to individual cases—documented medical, learning, or living needs—and the Virtual Academy is reserved for medically fragile K–12 students. CPS cites state rules, staffing, equity concerns, digital access gaps, and accountability requirements as reasons to maintain in-person norms. Advocates ask for clearer communication, language access, and outreach; CPS points families to existing supports and formal application processes for exceptions.