New Photo - Gaudreau Family 5K raises more than $500,000 for accessible playground at special education school

Gaudreau Family 5K raises more than $500,000 for accessible playground at special education school DAN GELSTON August 1, 2025 at 11:42 PM FILE Jane Gaudreau, mother of hockey players Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau, who were fatally struck by a motorist while riding bicycles, poses for a portrait at Arc...

- - Gaudreau Family 5K raises more than $500,000 for accessible playground at special education school

DAN GELSTON August 1, 2025 at 11:42 PM

FILE - Jane Gaudreau, mother of hockey players Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau, who were fatally struck by a motorist while riding bicycles, poses for a portrait at Archbishop Damiano School in Westville, N.J., Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File) ()

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The first 5K held in the memory of John and Matt Gaudreau helped raise more than $500,000, enough to break ground later this year on an accessible playground at the special education school where the hockey players' mother works.

Thousands attended the Gaudreau Family 5K Walk /Run and Family Day in May at Washington Lake Park in southern New Jersey, a place John and Matthew went hundreds of times as kids and around the corner from Hollydell Ice Arena, where they started playing hockey. The 5K drew more than 1,100 participants in the walk, along with more than 1,100 virtually in the U.S., Canada and around the world.

From money raised in the walk, along with contributions made in memory of John and Matt, the financial goal was met for the planned accessible playground at Archbishop Damiano School, where Jane Gaudreau and her daughter Kristen work. It was a cause John and Matthew had begun to champion in honor of their grandmother Marie, who spent 44 years at the school and died in 2023.

Groundbreaking is scheduled for late August/early September, with Oct. 4 tentatively set for the start of a community build.

After a brief scare of a tornado watch the night before, the 5K went off without a hitch.

"Because of the rain, we had so many people we thought might not show up," Gaudreau said. "But I felt like it was such a great turnout. So many people asked us if we're going to do it again next year. It just such an outpouring of love and care, so much for the boys in our family."

To answer the question, yes: The next Gaudreau Family 5K Walk is tentatively scheduled for May 16, 2026.

The Gaudreau brothers — John played 10 full seasons in the NHL with Calgary and Columbus — were killed last August on the eve of their sister's wedding when they were hit by a suspected drunken driver while riding bicycles in their home state of New Jersey.

The playground initiative was launched by principal Michele McCloskey in October 2020. Raising the necessary funds over the last five years had been a slow build. So many friends from the hockey world and others now inspired by the brothers and the cause have since rallied around the effort.

"We heard so much from everyone how much they appreciated everything (the brothers) did for the community, and so they turned around and helped us out," Gaudreau said. "We heard a lot of nice stories, a lot of people were just so generous, just wanting to be there for our family and whatever they could do to keep John and Matty's legacy alive, which is what we wanted from the playground and to go forward from here."

The Gaudreaus and the staff at Archbishop Damiano threw themselves into fundraising for a modern playground that allows for everything from basic wheelchair accessibility to ramps and transfer platforms for the students. Students tacked their wish list for the playground to the walls inside the school. The 5K event also included an online memorabilia auction that stretched beyond hockey, with all proceeds donated toward the playground effort and its original $600,000 goal.

The new area for the playground has been staked out and the equipment has been ordered, yet there is still work ahead. The Gaudreaus and the school needed everything from 175 tons of crushed concrete to beach sand to other construction materials to complete the project."It's just planning out our community build, which we'll need assistance on," Gaudreau said.

Archbishop Damiano School was founded in 1968 for children with Down syndrome and now provides services for 125 students with special needs from ages 3 to 21. Jane Gaudreau's brother attended the school and their mother worked there. Jane was hired in 1984 and is still a finance associate. Kristen, the older daughter, has taught at the school for almost two decades. Katie, the younger daughter, who got married in July, used to assist with the kids when she could, and the two Gaudreau boys volunteered at the school when they weren't playing hockey.

___

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Gaudreau Family 5K raises more than $500,000 for accessible playground at special education school

Gaudreau Family 5K raises more than $500,000 for accessible playground at special education school DAN GELSTON August ...
New Photo - Jets DT Quinnen Williams (calf) sidelined 1-2 weeks

Jets DT Quinnen Williams (calf) sidelined 12 weeks Field Level MediaAugust 2, 2025 at 2:19 AM Jul 25, 2025; Florham Park, NJ, USA; New York Jets defensive tackle Quinnen Williams (95) warms up during training camp at Atlantic Health Jets Training Center.

- - Jets DT Quinnen Williams (calf) sidelined 1-2 weeks

Field Level MediaAugust 2, 2025 at 2:19 AM

Jul 25, 2025; Florham Park, NJ, USA; New York Jets defensive tackle Quinnen Williams (95) warms up during training camp at Atlantic Health Jets Training Center. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images (John Jones-Imagn Images)

New York Jets star defensive tackle Quinnen Williams will be out one to two weeks with a strained left calf, head coach Aaron Glenn confirmed Friday.

The three-time Pro Bowler sustained the injury during positional drills Thursday and did not participate in Friday's training camp session at Florham Park, N.J.

"We want to make sure this player is going to be good," Glenn said. "We know what he's all about. We know what he can do. And listen, we want to hold him out and we'll see how that goes."

Williams, 27, started 16 games last season and contributed 37 tackles, 18 quarterback hits and 6.0 sacks.

Glenn said sidelining Williams is "precautionary" and noted that he missed one game in 2022 with a calf injury.

"He understands exactly how you have to operate and make sure he goes through the process of getting healed," Glenn said. "He'll be just fine."

Williams earned All-Pro first-team honors in 2022 and signed a four-year, $96 million extension ahead of the 2023 season.

He has 39.0 sacks, 98 QB hits, 290 tackles, five forced fumbles, three fumble recoveries and one interception in 90 games (86 starts) since New York drafted him with the No. 3 overall pick in 2019.

The Jets' first preseason game is Aug. 9 at Green Bay. They open the regular season at home against their former quarterback Aaron Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sept. 7.

--Field Level Media

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Jets DT Quinnen Williams (calf) sidelined 1-2 weeks

Jets DT Quinnen Williams (calf) sidelined 12 weeks Field Level MediaAugust 2, 2025 at 2:19 AM Jul 25, 2025; Florham Pa...
New Photo - Yankees release starting pitcher Marcus Stroman, will activate Luis Gil on Sunday

Yankees release starting pitcher Marcus Stroman, will activate Luis Gil on Sunday Ian CasselberryAugust 2, 2025 at 4:00 AM The New York Yankees have released starting pitcher Marcus Stroman. The team announced the move on Friday.

- - Yankees release starting pitcher Marcus Stroman, will activate Luis Gil on Sunday

Ian CasselberryAugust 2, 2025 at 4:00 AM

The New York Yankees have released starting pitcher Marcus Stroman. The team announced the move on Friday.

His release comes after the Yankees added relievers David Bednar, Camilo Doval and Jake Bird (in addition to utilityman José Caballero) before Thursday's MLB trade deadline. In his final start for the Yankees, Stroman allowed four runs and six hits with three strikeouts in a 7-4 win over the Tampa Bay Rays. He allowed four runs in each of his past two appearances.

Stroman, 34, compiled a 6.23 ERA with a 3-2 record in nine starts for the Yankees this season. He struck out only 26 batters in 39 innings, tying a career-low with an average of six strikeouts per nine innings.

The Yankees still owe Stroman the remaining $5.61 million on his contract for this season, per MLB Trade Rumors. He signed a two-year, $37 million deal with the Yankees. Any team that decides to add Stroman will pay him the prorated major-league minimum.

Stroman's role for 2025 was uncertain during spring training as the Yankees projected to have a full five-man rotation with Gerrit Cole, free-agent addition Max Fried, Carlos Rodón, 2024 American League Rookie of the Year Luis Gil and Clarke Schmidt. He insisted that he was a starting pitcher and did not want to pitch out of the bullpen. As a result, Stroman was attached to trade rumors throughout the spring.

However, Cole underwent Tommy John surgery, while Gil and Schmidt began the season on the injured list. (Schmidt's season eventually ended with reconstructive surgery as well.) So Stroman essentially won a spot in the starting rotation by default. Yet he later missed two months of the early season with left knee inflammation.

Gil is scheduled to make his first start of the season on Sunday versus the Miami Marlins, which bumped Stroman from the rotation. Fried (12-4, 2.64 ERA) and Rodón (11-7, 3.18) will fill the first two spots on the Yankees' starting staff, followed by Gil, with rookies Will Warren (6-5, 4.64) and Cam Schlittler (1-1, 4.91) taking the last two turns.

In addition to releasing Stroman, the Yankees recently traded Carlos Carrasco to the Atlanta Braves and demoted Allan Winans to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre to streamline their pitching staff.

Over 11 MLB seasons, Stroman has a 3.79 ERA and 90-87 record, averaging 7.4 strikeouts per nine innings. He's pitched for the Toronto Blue Jays, New York Mets and Chicago Cubs before joining the Yankees.

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Yankees release starting pitcher Marcus Stroman, will activate Luis Gil on Sunday

Yankees release starting pitcher Marcus Stroman, will activate Luis Gil on Sunday Ian CasselberryAugust 2, 2025 at 4:0...
New Photo - A settler accused of killing a Palestinian activist is to be freed. Israel still holds the body

A settler accused of killing a Palestinian activist is to be freed. Israel still holds the body JULIA FRANKELAugust 1, 2025 at 8:42 PM FILE Caravans and simple structures for residents of the West Bank Bedouin village of Umm alKhair, are seen at the entrance on July 10, 2024.

- - A settler accused of killing a Palestinian activist is to be freed. Israel still holds the body

JULIA FRANKELAugust 1, 2025 at 8:42 PM

FILE - Caravans and simple structures for residents of the West Bank Bedouin village of Umm al-Khair, are seen at the entrance on July 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File)

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — An Israeli settler accused of killing a prominent Palestinian activist during a confrontation captured on video in the occupied West Bank will be released from house arrest, an Israeli court ruled Friday.

The video shot by a Palestinian witness shows Yinon Levi brandishing a pistol and tussling with a group of unarmed Palestinians. He can be seen firing two shots, but the video does not show where the bullets hit.

Witnesses said one of the shots killed Awdah Hathaleen, an English teacher and father of three, who was uninvolved and was standing nearby.

The Israeli military is still holding Hathaleen's body and says it will only be returned if the family agrees to bury him in a nearby city. It said the measure was being taken to "prevent public disorder."

The confrontation occurred on Monday in the village of Umm al-Khair, in an area of the West Bank featured in "No Other Land," an Oscar-winning documentary about settler violence and life under Israeli military rule.

In a court decision obtained by The , Judge Havi Toker wrote that there was "no dispute" that Levi shot his gun in the village that day, but she said he may have been acting in self-defense and that the court could not establish that the shots killed Hathaleen.

Israel's military and police did not respond to a request for comment on whether anyone else may have fired shots that day. Multiple calls placed to Levi and his lawyer have not been answered.

The judge said Levi did not pose such a danger as to justify his continued house arrest but barred him from contact with the villagers for a month.

Levi has been sanctioned by the United States and other Western countries over allegations of past violence toward Palestinians. President Donald Trump lifted the U.S. sanctions on Levi and other radical settlers shortly after returning to office.

A total of 18 Palestinians from the village were arrested after the incident. Six remain in detention.

Eitay Mack, an Israeli lawyer who has lobbied for sanctions against radical settlers, including Levi, said the court ruling did not come as a surprise.

"Automatically, Palestinian victims are considered suspects, while Jewish suspects are considered victims," he said.

Levi helped establish an settler outpost near Umm al-Khair that anti-settlement activists say is a bastion for violent settlers who have displaced hundreds since the start of the Israel-Hamas war. Palestinians and rights groups have long accused Israeli authorities of turning a blind eye to settler violence, which has surged since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war, along with attacks by Palestinians.

In a 2024 interview, Levi said he was protecting his own land and denied using violence.

Some 70 women in Umm al-Khair said they were beginning a hunger strike on Friday to call for Hathaleen's body to be returned and for the right of his family to bury him in the village.

Israel's military said in a statement to the AP that it would return the body if the family agrees to bury him in the "nearest authorized cemetery."

Hathaleen, 31, had written and spoke out against settler violence, and had helped produce the Oscar-winning film. Supporters have erected murals in his honor in Rome, held vigils in New York and have held signs bearing his name at anti-war protests in Tel Aviv.

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A settler accused of killing a Palestinian activist is to be freed. Israel still holds the body

A settler accused of killing a Palestinian activist is to be freed. Israel still holds the body JULIA FRANKELAugust 1,...
New Photo - PHOTO ESSAY: Starvation attacks the bodies of these children in Gaza

PHOTO ESSAY: Starvation attacks the bodies of these children in Gaza JEHAD ALSHRAFIAugust 2, 2025 at 3:52 AM 1 / 8Mideast Wars Gaza Starvation Photo EssaySamah Matar poses for a photo with her sons Yousef, 6, in her arms, and Amir, 4, who suffer from malnutrition and cerebral palsy, at a U.N.

- - PHOTO ESSAY: Starvation attacks the bodies of these children in Gaza

JEHAD ALSHRAFIAugust 2, 2025 at 3:52 AM

1 / 8Mideast Wars Gaza Starvation Photo EssaySamah Matar poses for a photo with her sons Yousef, 6, in her arms, and Amir, 4, who suffer from malnutrition and cerebral palsy, at a U.N.-run school in Gaza City, Saturday, July 26, 2025. In Gaza, malnutrition is often worsened by preexisting conditions and compounded by illnesses linked to inadequate health care and poor sanitation, largely the result of the ongoing war. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — In some tents and shelters in northern Gaza, emaciated children are held in their parents' arms. Their tiny arms and legs dangle limp. Their shoulder blades and ribs stick out from skeletal bodies slowly consuming themselves for lack of food.

Starvation always stalks the most vulnerable first. Kids with preexisting conditions, like cerebral palsy, waste away quickly because the high-calorie foods they need have run out, along with nutritional supplements.

But after months of Israeli blockade and turmoil in the distribution of supplies, children in Gaza with no previous conditions are also starting to die from malnutrition, aid workers and doctors say.

Over the past month, 25 children have died of malnutrition-related causes, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, though it's not known how many had other conditions. The ministry, part of the Hamas-run government, is staffed by medical professionals and its figures on war deaths are seen by the U.N. and other experts as the most reliable estimate of casualties.

Salem Awad was born in January with no medical problems, the youngest of six children, his mother Hiyam Awad said. But she was too weak from lack of food to breastfeed him.

For the first two months of Salem's life, there was a ceasefire in Gaza, and more aid entered, but even then it was hard to find milk for him, his mother said. In March, Israel cut off all food from entering the territory for more than 2 ½ months.

Since then, Salem has been wasting away. Now he weighs 4 kilograms (9 pounds), his mother said. "He just keeps losing weight. At the hospital, they say if he doesn't get milk, he could die," she said, speaking in the family's tent in Gaza City.

Israel has been allowing a trickle of aid into Gaza since late May. After an international outcry over increasing starvation, it introduced new measures last weekend it says are intended to increase the amount of food getting to the population, including airdrops and pauses in military operations in some areas. But so far, they have not had a significant effect, aid groups say.

Food experts warned this week the "worst-case scenario of famine is playing out in Gaza." The U.N. says the impact of hunger building for months is quickly worsening, especially in Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza, where it estimates nearly one in five children is now acutely malnourished.

Across Gaza, more than 5,000 children were diagnosed with malnutrition this month, though that is likely an undercount, the U.N. says. Malnutrition was virtually nonexistent before the war. Doctors struggle to treat the children because many supplies have run out, the U.N. says.

Israel denies a famine is taking place or that children are starving. It says it has supplied enough food throughout the war and accuses Hamas of causing shortages by stealing aid and trying to control food distribution.

Humanitarian groups deny that significant diversion of food takes place. Throughout nearly 22 months of war, the number of aid trucks has been far short of the roughly 500 a day the U.N. says is needed.

The impact is seen most strongly in children with special needs — and those who have been grievously wounded in Israeli bombardment.

Mosab al-Dibs, 14, suffered a heavy head wound on May 7 when an airstrike hit next to his family's tent. For about two months, he has been at Shifa Hospital, largely paralyzed, only partly conscious and severely malnourished because the facility no longer has the supplies to feed him, said Dr. Jamal Salha.

Mosab's mother, Shahinaz al-Dibs, said the boy was healthy before the war, but that since he was wounded, his weight has fallen from 40 kilograms to less than 10 (88 to 22 pounds)

At his bedside, she moves his spindly arms to exercise them. The networks of tiny blue veins are visible through the nearly transparent skin over his protruding ribs. The boy's eyes dart around, but he doesn't respond.

His mother puts some bread soaked in water — the only food she can afford — into a large syringe and squirts it into his mouth in a vain attempt to feed him. Most of it dribbles out from his lips. What he needs is a nutrient formula suitable for tube feeding that the hospital doesn't have, Salha said.

At a school-turned-shelter for displaced people in Gaza City, Samah Matar cradles her son Yousef as his little brother Amir lies on a cushion beside her — both of them emaciated. The two boys have cerebral palsy and also need a special diet.

"Before the war, their health situation was good," said Matar. They could get the foods they needed, but now "all those things have disappeared, and their health has declined continually."

Yousef, 6 years old, has dropped from 14 kilograms (30 pounds) before the war to 9 kilograms (19 pounds) now. His 4-year-old brother, Amir, has shrunk from 9 kilograms to under 6 (19 to 13 pounds), she said.

___

This is a documentary photo story curated by AP photo editors.

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PHOTO ESSAY: Starvation attacks the bodies of these children in Gaza

PHOTO ESSAY: Starvation attacks the bodies of these children in Gaza JEHAD ALSHRAFIAugust 2, 2025 at 3:52 AM 1 / 8Mide...
New Photo - Undocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule

Undocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule Kalyn Belsha for ChalkbeatAugust 2, 2025 at 12:30 AM A black Lindsey Nicholson // UCG / Universal Images Group via Getty ImagesUndocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule Undoc...

- - Undocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule

Kalyn Belsha for ChalkbeatAugust 2, 2025 at 12:30 AM

A black - Lindsey Nicholson // UCG / Universal Images Group via Getty ImagesUndocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule

Undocumented children will no longer qualify for federally funded preschool through the Head Start program under a major policy shift the Trump administration announced Thursday.

In a news release, the Department of Health and Human Services said it was rescinding a nearly 30-year-old interpretation of federal law issued under President Bill Clinton that allowed undocumented immigrants to access certain programs because they were not considered "federal public benefits."

As President Donald Trump pursues his anti-immigrant agenda, this change may be the most direct and far-reaching effort to target children after his attempts to end birthright citizenship. His administration has also ramped up immigration enforcement and deportations, withheld funding for English learners, and threatened to punish states that offer in-state tuition to undocumented college students.

Administration officials have said they hope many immigrants will "self-deport" if the United States makes life here more uncomfortable. Health and Human Services leaders cast the change as a way to protect benefits for Americans.

"For too long, the government has diverted hardworking Americans' tax dollars to incentivize illegal immigration," Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a press release. "Today's action changes that — it restores integrity to federal social programs, enforces the rule of law, and protects vital resources for the American people."

Early childhood education advocates, meanwhile, condemned the change as violating both the spirit and the letter of the 1965 law that authorized Head Start. They also warned the change could scare away eligible families, Chalkbeat reports.

"This decision undermines the fundamental commitment that the country has made to children," Yasmina Vinci, the executive director of the National Head Start Association, a nonprofit that represents Head Start staff and families, said in a written statement. "Head Start programs strive to make every child feel welcome, safe, and supported, and reject the characterization of any child as 'illegal.'"

The change is also at odds with how the Supreme Court has treated K-12 education. In the landmark Plyler v. Doe decision from 1982, the justices ruled that children have a right to a free public education regardless of immigration status. However, the courts have upheld laws restricting immigrants' access to welfare benefits.

Head Start provided preschool to over 544,000 children from low-income families, according to the latest federal data from the 2022-23 school year, while Early Head Start served more than 186,000 infants, toddlers, and expectant parents.

The program, which is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year, has reached 40 million children but has recently faced a number of challenges, from federal staff layoffs to threats of eliminating the program.

Head Start will now be considered a public benefit, the Trump administration said, because it offers services that are similar to welfare. Officials said the change aligns with Trump's executive orders, including a February order titled "Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Open Borders."

"While Head Start provides for school readiness, it also provides low-income children and their families with 'health, educational, nutritional, and social and other services, that are determined based on family needs assessment,'" federal officials wrote in a notice announcing the change. "Further, it may serve as child care for parents of young children."

Classifying Head Start as welfare, rather than education, could be a Trump administration strategy to avoid having to address whether the protections extended to undocumented children in Plyler apply here, said Nate Ela, an assistant professor of law at Temple University, in an email.

Reflecting Trump's America First agenda, Health and Human Services officials said in their press release that Head Start will be "reserved for American citizens from now on."

But a spokesperson for the Administration for Children and Families clarified that U.S. citizen children and "qualified" immigrant children would be eligible for Head Start. Under federal law, that includes legal permanent residents, children who've been granted asylum, refugees, and children with humanitarian parole.

In its statement, the National Head Start Association said providers were alarmed that programs would have to check the citizenship or immigration status of children before they could enroll. The law that governs Head Start has never required documentation of immigration status as a condition to enroll, the organization said, and "attempts to impose such a requirement threaten to create fear and confusion among all families."

It is unclear exactly how the new rules will be enforced. Guidance based on the new legal interpretation is forthcoming, the Administration for Children and Families spokesperson said.

"​​Are they going to monitor us when they come out for their federal review?" asked Lauri Morrison-Frichtl, the executive director of the Illinois Head Start Association. "Will there be something attached to our grant that we have to certify?"

The latest version of the law governing who is eligible for Head Start says nothing about immigration status, but it does say that the program can use federal funds to train staff, counsel children, and provide other services that are "necessary to address the challenges of children from immigrant, refugee, and asylee families, homeless children, children in foster care, limited English proficient children, children of migrant or seasonal farmworker families, [and] children from families in crisis."

The law says that children who are experiencing homelessness or whose families have incomes below the federal poverty line qualify. The Migrant Seasonal Head Start program also guarantees child care for the children of farm workers and seasonal workers.

This is not the first attempt to roll back educational rights for immigrant children and families. A number of Republican state legislators have backed bills that would limit enrollment for immigrant children or track their immigration status in ways that could intimidate families. So far, none has been successful. Meanwhile, the author of a brief from the conservative Heritage Foundation that called on states to charge undocumented children tuition to attend public school now works in the Education Department.

Restricting Head Start access could have ripple effects

Federal officials estimated that the Head Start change would free up $374 million a year for U.S. citizens and qualified immigrants to access Head Start, which represents about 3% of the program's annual budget in recent years.

But keeping children out of Head Start could lead to more costs down the road for public schools, advocates warned. Kindergartners who don't go to preschool may need more help with basics like learning their ABCs, colors, and how to work with classmates. They also may have missed out on health screenings.

"We're really shortchanging our community by cutting them off from strong early childhood programs that are going to put them on the right path to be successful in K-12 schools where they have a guaranteed right to attend," said Xilonin Cruz-Gonzalez, co-founder of the National Newcomer Network and deputy director of Californians Together, groups that advocate for immigrant rights in education.

There are typically many more children in poverty who qualify for Head Start than the program has funding to serve. A 2024 Government Accountability Office report found, for example, that for every 100 young children in poverty, there were typically 28 Head Start seats, with much larger gaps in some states.

Keeping out immigrant children wouldn't necessarily close those gaps. The main factor limiting Head Start seats is a lack of trained teachers, said Diane Schilder, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, a public policy think tank.

"A lot of programs are having challenges hiring teachers in preschool and infant-toddler classrooms who meet the requirements because the wages are not adequate," Schilder said.

Low-income families are less likely to have documents proving their children are citizens, Schilder said, and anti-immigrant sentiment can scare away even eligible families from applying. Parents are less likely to work when they don't have access to child care. The effects of these changes would be felt most strongly in urban areas and in communities with a large agricultural workforce.

Head Start providers worry that verifying children's immigration status will create more administrative work and could make it harder for all families to enroll. Federal officials estimated the cost of assembling documents and reviewing paperwork would be an additional $21 million a year.

And there would be more transition costs to change Head Start protocols, the federal notice stated.

Federal officials said the change would take effect as soon as it is published in the Federal Register. It has not been published, but has been submitted, the Trump administration said. The public will have 30 days to submit comments.

For now, Heather Frenz, the executive director of the Colorado Head Start Association, said her organization is telling Head Start providers to wait for further instructions before un-enrolling any children.

Reconsidering the eligibility or enrollment of children who are already attending Head Start would be expensive and time-consuming, Frenz said. The process involves everything from measuring children's height and weight to drawing up individual plans.

And if undocumented children miss out on preschool and other services Head Start provides, Frenz said it could "put a lot of strain" on other public entities when those children get older.

"They may not speak English or have never seen a dentist," Frenz said. "That's going to be a heavy load on the public school education system."

Chalkbeat New York reporter Michael Elsen-Rooney, Chalkbeat Philadelphia bureau chief Carly Sitrin, Chalkbeat Chicago bureau chief Becky Vevea, and Colorado bureau chief Melanie Asmar contributed reporting.

This story was produced by Chalkbeat and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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Undocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule

Undocumented children will be barred from Head Start preschool under new Trump rule Kalyn Belsha for ChalkbeatAugust ...
New Photo - Senate delays August recess for now as Trump presses for more confirmations

Senate delays August recess for now as Trump presses for more confirmations MARY CLARE JALONICK August 2, 2025 at 4:01 AM Sen. Majority Leader John Thune, RS.D., center, speaks during a news conference after a policy luncheon at the Capitol Tuesday, July 29, 2025, in Washington.

- - Senate delays August recess for now as Trump presses for more confirmations

MARY CLARE JALONICK August 2, 2025 at 4:01 AM

Sen. Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., center, speaks during a news conference after a policy luncheon at the Capitol Tuesday, July 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

WASHINGTON (AP) — A stalemate over the pace of confirmations has delayed the Senate's yearly August recess, for now, as President Donald Trump declares that his nominees "should NOT BE FORCED TO WAIT" and as Democrats slow the process by forcing procedural votes on almost all of Trump's picks.

Caught in the middle, Senate Majority Leader John Thune says he will keep the Senate in session over the weekend, at least, to hold confirmation votes while also negotiating with Democrats to speed up consideration of dozens of nominees. The two sides haven't come to agreement yet, and it's still unclear if Trump, who has been publicly calling on Republicans to cancel their break, would be onboard with any bipartisan deal.

Thune said Friday he was leaving some of the negotiations to Trump and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

"That's how this is going to get resolved," Thune said. "We'll see where that leads."

Senators in both parties are eager to leave Washington for their annual break, when many of them tour their states to talk to constituents. Republicans in particular are eager to return home and sell the massive tax and spending cuts package they passed in July as Democrats vow to use it against them in the 2026 midterm elections. The House, which has no role in the confirmation process, fled Washington a week ago.

But Trump has other plans.

"The Senate must stay in Session, taking no recess, until the entire Executive Calendar is CLEAR!!!" Trump posted on social media Thursday night, after a meeting with Thune at the White House. "We have to save our Country from the Lunatic Left. Republicans, for the health and safety of the USA, DO YOUR JOB, and confirm All Nominees."

Thune said this week that Republicans are considering changing the Senate's rules when they get back in September to make it easier to quickly approve a president's nominations — and to try and avoid a similar stalemate in the future. Democrats have blocked more nominees than usual this year, denying any quick unanimous consent votes and forcing roll calls on each one, a lengthy process that takes several days per nominee and allows for debate time.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said Friday that Senate GOP leadership was "going back, drafting a specific rule for us to react to" as they try to plot a path forward.

It's the first time in recent history that the minority party hasn't allowed at least some quick confirmations. Thune has already kept the Senate in session for more days, and with longer hours, this year to try and confirm as many of Trump's nominees as possible.

Democrats have little desire to give in, even though they too are eager to skip town after several long months of work and bitter partisan fights over legislation. Schumer has said Democrats have blocked quick votes because, "historically bad nominees deserved historic levels of scrutiny."

There are more than 150 nominations on the Senate calendar, and confirming them all would take more than a month even if the Senate does stay in session, if Democrats draw out the process.

The standoff is just the latest chapter in an ever-escalating Senate fight over nominations in the last two decades. Both parties have increasingly used stalling tactics to delay confirmations that were once quick, bipartisan and routine. In 2013, Democrats changed Senate rules for lower court judicial nominees to remove the 60-vote threshold for confirmations as Republicans blocked President Barack Obama's judicial nominations. In 2017, Republicans did the same for Supreme Court nominees as Democrats tried to block Trump's nomination of Justice Neil Gorsuch.

Still, Thune says, the Democrats' current delays are a "historic level of obstruction."

In his first year as leader, Thune has worked with Trump to quickly confirm his Cabinet and navigated complicated internal party dynamics to pass the tax and spending cuts package, which Trump sees as his signature policy achievement.

Yet the president is applying increasing pressure on Thune and his conference, trying to control the Senate's schedule and calling out three Republican senators in social media posts this week — including Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the senior-most Senate Republican who worked closely with Trump to confirm his picks for Supreme Court in his first term.

Trump criticized Grassley for keeping with Senate tradition and working with home state Democrats on some judicial confirmations, saying that he got Grassley re-elected "when he was down, by a lot."

Opening a committee hearing on Thursday, Grassley defended the practice and added that he was "offended by what the president said, and I'm disappointed that it would result in personal insults."

Trump also criticized Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley for working with Democrats on a stock trading ban for lawmakers. And in a post late Thursday, he counseled Republicans to "vote the exact opposite" of Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Susan Collins, a moderate who has worked with Democrats on spending bills this year and frequently opposes Trump.

___

writer Lisa Mascaro contributedto this report.

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Senate delays August recess for now as Trump presses for more confirmations

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