שיקאגאו שולעס האבן אויסגעגעבן 7.7 מיליאן דאלער אין לוקסעריעזע רייזעס אין צייט וואס סטודענטן האבן זיך געפלאגט
Chicago Public Schools is facing outrage after an explosive Inspector General report revealed that staff members spent $7.7 million on luxury travel during the last fiscal year—despite the district’s massive $734 million deficit and some of the lowest academic proficiency scores in the country. The report, released November 12, 2025, exposes more than 600 trips taken by CPS employees to resorts, international destinations, and high-end hotels, many of which bypassed required approvals and violated spending limits.
Investigators detailed a principal’s $945-per-night Las Vegas suite, along with staff trips to Egypt complete with safaris and cruises—travel billed to a system struggling to educate students, manage its finances, and maintain basic accountability. The total travel spending more than doubled pre-pandemic levels, raising questions about oversight within the district and the priorities of those entrusted with taxpayer dollars.
Meanwhile, CPS student outcomes remain dire. Only 40.6% of students are proficient in reading, and just 25% meet grade-level expectations in math. Parents and community leaders argue that such lavish expenditures are indefensible when classrooms lack resources, teachers face chronic shortages, and students continue to fall further behind.
In response to the scandal, CPS has frozen all non-essential travel and announced the creation of new safeguards, including a review committee and strict spending caps. Critics maintain that these reforms are far too late and that the district’s leadership allowed a culture of careless spending to thrive while academic performance plummeted.
For families, taxpayers, and educators committed to student success, the revelations highlight a painful truth: the crisis facing Chicago’s schools is not just about funding—it’s about leadership, priorities, and the urgent need for real accountability.
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