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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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When school starts each year, Pilger said, "I'm looking down at the feet to see which shoes have dollar-size holes in them. It's alarming."

Back at Nielson, in his windowless office, Pilger keeps a carefully highlighted printout of his caseload. On a recent morning, he pored through the names with Lorenzo Pugh, director of truancy programs for the Regional Office of Education, who works with 23 schools in Galesburg and four surrounding school districts.

A former football standout like Pilger, Pugh carries a badge and can issue $75 tickets to parents or refer them to the county state's attorney for neglect proceedings if all else fails.

He and Pilger strategized, using verbal shorthand that reflected their familiarity with the names on Pilger's spreadsheet.

"That one we need to keep an eye on," Pilger said, highlighting the name of a first-grade boy whose mother had just been arrested.

Just down the list was another kid who brought a switchblade to school last year. He was suspended for 10 days on top of the 13 absences he'd already racked up.

Pilger highlighted the name of a student with 11 sick days last year, saying: "They were shady excused."

"That is where the habit starts," Pugh said.

Starting this year, Galesburg requires a doctor's note after three consecutive sick days. And last year Galesburg joined the growing number of Illinois municipalities that have passed ordinances allowing tickets and fines for truant youth who are age 13 or older and for the parents of preteen kids.

Pugh said his office has issued 50 tickets, including 30 for the families of students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Most of the time, the $75 tickets are waived after the children return to school.

Pugh called the tickets effective for families with truant children in the elementary grades. "It makes a difference. It gets the kid to school," he said. "Citations do work."

Because of the success of these anti-truancy measures, Knox County prosecutors said they have had no need in recent years to file the most serious neglect charges against parents of truant youth. Under Galesburg's school policy, those misdemeanor neglect charges can be filed against the parent when a student age 11 or younger has 20 absences, whether excused or not.

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