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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, 300 years ago people of African descent were | ||||||
3 | forcibly brought to Illinois as slaves; and
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4 | WHEREAS, The French brought the first slaves of African | ||||||
5 | descent to Illinois Country in or around 1720; at that point, | ||||||
6 | slave labor became the economic engine responsible for Illinois | ||||||
7 | developing one of the largest economies in the world; and
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8 | WHEREAS, Slaves of African descent in Illinois Country | ||||||
9 | worked in the lead mines and the American Bottom, famous for | ||||||
10 | its fertile soil, in the modern day Metro East area; they also | ||||||
11 | provided free labor for the highly profitable saltworks | ||||||
12 | industries in the Salines; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Slaves of African descent were required to till | ||||||
14 | the land, plant crops, forge and mine for lead, make lucrative | ||||||
15 | salt, construct infrastructure, and build shelter in the | ||||||
16 | following Illinois counties: Alexander, Jackson, Randolph, | ||||||
17 | Gallatin, Franklin, Pope, Jefferson, Johnson, Wayne, Hamilton, | ||||||
18 | White, Fayette, Union, Marion, Monroe, St. Clair, Madison, | ||||||
19 | Bond, Washington, Montgomery, Green, Pike, Sangamon, Morgan, | ||||||
20 | Fulton, Edgar, Clark, Crawford, Lawrence, and Edwards; many of | ||||||
21 | these counties have been further subdivided in mid-2020; for | ||||||
22 | example, modern day Pulaski, Massac, Saline, Hardin, Perry, |
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1 | Effingham, and Williamson counties were all pro-slavery | ||||||
2 | counties; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, The French had a specific law called Code Noir, | ||||||
4 | designed to oversee the slaves of African descent in the Metro | ||||||
5 | East area; Code Noir was first implemented in Haiti in 1685 to | ||||||
6 | regulate the slave trade of people of African descent; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, In 1763, after France's loss to the British in the | ||||||
8 | French and Indian War, Illinois Country was ceded to the | ||||||
9 | British via the Treaty of Paris; at that point, Britain had | ||||||
10 | established itself as the dominant colonial power in North | ||||||
11 | America; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, Like the French, the British had long-standing | ||||||
13 | laws for regulating slaves of African descent in the Metro | ||||||
14 | East; beginning with the Barbados Slave Code of 1661, the | ||||||
15 | British continued to revise their Slave Codes in various | ||||||
16 | jurisdictions and ultimately shaped the body of law supporting | ||||||
17 | Slave Codes and Black Laws in Illinois; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, In 1789, following Britain's loss in the American | ||||||
19 | Revolutionary War, Illinois Country became part of the new | ||||||
20 | Northwest Territory; even though slavery was prohibited in the | ||||||
21 | Northwest Territory by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, most | ||||||
22 | territorial governors ignored the slavery ban and continued |
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1 | profiting from African descent slave labor; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, In 1800, Illinois Country was absorbed into the | ||||||
3 | Indiana Territory as America began to expand west by war or | ||||||
4 | purchase; notably, the Indiana Territory had its own Slave | ||||||
5 | Codes on the books entitled "An Act Concerning the Introduction | ||||||
6 | of Negroes and Mulattoes into this Territory"; these Slave | ||||||
7 | Codes allowed people of African descent to be brought into the | ||||||
8 | territory and indentured; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, In Gallatin County, African descent slave labor | ||||||
10 | was the catalyst for Illinois Country reaching a very large | ||||||
11 | agreement with the federal government regarding the abundance | ||||||
12 | of salt springs in the region of the Wabash and Saline rivers; | ||||||
13 | the two principal springs were known as the Half Moon Lick and | ||||||
14 | Nigger Springs; there were salines in Vermilion County, the Big | ||||||
15 | Muddy Saline and a saline at St. Genevieve, Missouri, but the | ||||||
16 | Gallatin County saline produced more than all the others | ||||||
17 | combined; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, An Act of Congress dated March 26, 1804 provided | ||||||
19 | among other things that "all salt springs, licks, wells with | ||||||
20 | the necessary land adjacent thereto were reserved from sale as | ||||||
21 | the property of the United States."; the territorial governor | ||||||
22 | of Illinois Country was authorized to lease these salt wells | ||||||
23 | and springs to the best interests of the general government; on |
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1 | April 30, 1804, Governor Harrison appointed Isaac White of | ||||||
2 | Vincennes to be a government agent and reside at the works and | ||||||
3 | collect the revenue due America; he assumed his duties and was | ||||||
4 | assisted by John Marshall, who probably resided at Shawneetown; | ||||||
5 | and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, In 1809, propelled by its slave labor, Illinois | ||||||
7 | became its own territory after being severed from Indiana | ||||||
8 | Territory; people of African descent in the new Illinois | ||||||
9 | Territory continued to be subjected to the body of law | ||||||
10 | contained in the Indiana Slave Codes; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Not even three decades after the signing of the | ||||||
12 | Treaty of Paris, which formalized Britain's recognition of the | ||||||
13 | United States of America, the two countries were again in | ||||||
14 | conflict in the War of 1812; resentment for Britain's | ||||||
15 | interference with American international trade, combined with | ||||||
16 | American expansionist visions, led Congress to declare war on | ||||||
17 | Great Britain on June 18, 1812; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, At this point, Illinois had to prove to the | ||||||
19 | pro-expansion supporters that it was capable of producing | ||||||
20 | benefits and revenue to help the U.S. both finance wars and | ||||||
21 | acquire more land; African descent slave labor from the | ||||||
22 | saltworks was key to Illinois' success in this regard; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, On April 8, 1818, President James Monroe signed | ||||||
2 | into law "An Act to Enable the People of Illinois Territory to | ||||||
3 | form a constitution and state government and for the admission | ||||||
4 | of such state into the Union on an equal footing with the | ||||||
5 | original states."; Illinois was now a state on the path to a | ||||||
6 | burgeoning economy largely driven by African descent slave | ||||||
7 | labor; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, In 1818, Illinois became a state divided between | ||||||
9 | English-speaking and French-speaking citizens; the first | ||||||
10 | Governor of the State of Illinois, Shadrach Bond, held slaves | ||||||
11 | of African descent; he further supported the introduction of a | ||||||
12 | pro-slave constitution; in a three-way race, French-speaking | ||||||
13 | Pierre Menard won the race for lieutenant governor; Menard also | ||||||
14 | held slaves of African descent; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, When the 1818 Illinois Constitution was adopted, | ||||||
16 | it revised several aspects of the status of slaves of African | ||||||
17 | descent to conform with the federal guidelines for statehood; | ||||||
18 | for example, it is clear that Illinois simply abolished slavery | ||||||
19 | to comply with the federal balance of slave states versus | ||||||
20 | non-slave states in the new America; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, The 1818 Illinois Constitution additionally | ||||||
22 | limited the right to vote to free white men, excluding all | ||||||
23 | others; Illinois also constitutionally excluded people of |
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1 | African descent from serving in the militia; in other words, | ||||||
2 | Illinois would not be policed by anyone of African descent and | ||||||
3 | would remain a slave state; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, The Constitution further kept an exemption | ||||||
5 | allowing slavery at the Illinois salines and other salt springs | ||||||
6 | near Shawneetown; according to historians, African descent | ||||||
7 | slave-operated saltworks contributed one-third of the revenue | ||||||
8 | for the new Illinois; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The initial legislatures followed the examples of | ||||||
10 | the French and British Slave Codes and their own beliefs when | ||||||
11 | they created Black Codes, effectively establishing two classes | ||||||
12 | of citizenship in Illinois; the new legislatures, sitting in | ||||||
13 | Vandalia, focused on restricting the movement of people of | ||||||
14 | African descent and made significant financial investments | ||||||
15 | into the state's roads, bridges, and yet another economic | ||||||
16 | engine, prisons; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, The new legislatures passed laws requiring people | ||||||
18 | of African descent to produce on demand a Certificate of | ||||||
19 | Freedom, verifying that they were a free person of color; | ||||||
20 | people of African descent were additionally required to post a | ||||||
21 | bond guaranteeing their good behavior under the new Black | ||||||
22 | Codes; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Notably, the good behavior bond requirements | ||||||
2 | ranged as high as $1,000, which was virtually unobtainable for | ||||||
3 | people of African descent at that time; consequently, most | ||||||
4 | people of African descent had to rely on a white person to | ||||||
5 | serve as their surety when posting their good behavior bond; | ||||||
6 | this was equally unobtainable for a person of African descent; | ||||||
7 | and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, The Black Codes received their first test in the | ||||||
9 | elections of 1822; the governor's race had four candidates, two | ||||||
10 | judges, a business man, and the eventual winner, a true | ||||||
11 | anti-slavery candidate; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, The pro-slavery faction carried both houses of the | ||||||
13 | legislature in the 1822 elections; yet, the pro-slavery faction | ||||||
14 | split the vote in the governor's race allowing Edward Coles, a | ||||||
15 | former federal envoy from Virginia, to win by a small margin; | ||||||
16 | and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Governor Coles, who had earlier emancipated his | ||||||
18 | own slaves of African descent and purchased land for them, | ||||||
19 | pursued an ambitious anti-slavery plan; he sought to free the | ||||||
20 | remaining slaves in Illinois (those who had been in the land | ||||||
21 | before the ordinance of 1789), loosen the harsh Black Codes, | ||||||
22 | and stop the kidnapping and enslavement of free people of | ||||||
23 | African descent; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, The pro-slavery legislature was not interested in | ||||||
2 | such a proposal; instead, it recommended that a referendum | ||||||
3 | question be put on the ballot asking voters to decide whether | ||||||
4 | Illinois should call a constitutional convention and amend its | ||||||
5 | constitution to become a slave state; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, Such a measure required a two-thirds majority in | ||||||
7 | the legislature; while the state Senate garnered the votes for | ||||||
8 | the proposal, it seemed destined to fall one vote short in the | ||||||
9 | House of Representatives; however, the pro-slavery forces in | ||||||
10 | the legislature unseated a man whose election had been | ||||||
11 | disputed, and they replaced him with one who supported their | ||||||
12 | slave state objective; the convention measure passed; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Citizens celebrated in the streets, holding | ||||||
14 | processions, parades, and public dinners; at one, this toast | ||||||
15 | was said to be offered, "The State of Illinois: the ground is | ||||||
16 | good, prairie in abundance; give us plenty of negroes, a little | ||||||
17 | industry, and she will distribute her treasures."; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, The next election was August 2, 1824; the | ||||||
19 | political campaign that ensued was impassioned, fractious, and | ||||||
20 | intense; the subject was addressed tirelessly in the pulpits | ||||||
21 | and the newspapers; the turnout on August 2nd was enormous | ||||||
22 | compared with the presidential election that fall, where 4,532 |
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1 | votes were cast in Illinois; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, On the slavery question in August of 1824, 11,612 | ||||||
3 | went to the polls; when the votes were counted, the pro-slavery | ||||||
4 | faction lost, 6,640 to 4,972; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, The following counties voted in favor of Illinois | ||||||
6 | becoming a slave state in 1824: Alexander, Jackson, Randolph | ||||||
7 | (the home county of the first lieutenant governor and | ||||||
8 | slaveowner Pierre Menard), Gallatin (saltworks), Franklin, | ||||||
9 | Pope, Jefferson, Wayne, Hamilton, White, and Fayette; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, In August of 1824, Johnson County voted equally on | ||||||
11 | the question of whether Illinois should become a slave state; | ||||||
12 | and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, The following counties voted in opposition to | ||||||
14 | Illinois becoming a slave state in 1824: Union, Marion, Monroe, | ||||||
15 | St. Clair, Madison, Bond, Washington, Montgomery, Green, Pike, | ||||||
16 | Sangamon, Morgan, Fulton, Edgar, Clark, Crawford, Lawrence, | ||||||
17 | and Edwards; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, In 1827, Illinois intensified production in its | ||||||
19 | African descent slave saltworks to obtain federal funding for | ||||||
20 | infrastructure and capital improvements; after intense | ||||||
21 | negotiations, Illinois ultimately passed a capital bill with |
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1 | federal funds tied to revenue from the saltworks; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, The captured federal funds for capital | ||||||
3 | improvements were distributed using a regional approach; the | ||||||
4 | eastern half of the state invested its portion of capital funds | ||||||
5 | in infrastructure, roads, and bridges, all to be supported by | ||||||
6 | African descent labor; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, The western portion of the state invested in the | ||||||
8 | privatization of a new business, prisons; in 1831, the Illinois | ||||||
9 | State Penitentiary was built in Alton, with large cost overruns | ||||||
10 | because of soil integrity issues; much later, a prison now | ||||||
11 | known as Menard Correctional Center followed in Randolph | ||||||
12 | County; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, During this time, the industrial revolution in | ||||||
14 | Great Britain was intensifying, leading to more opportunities | ||||||
15 | for Illinois businesses; Europe's textile factories needed | ||||||
16 | more cotton that was produced by slave labor, and the world | ||||||
17 | demand was increasing for salt, lead, and coal; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, The 1840 Illinois Constitution specifically | ||||||
19 | banned slavery in section 16 of its Declaration of Rights, | ||||||
20 | specifying "There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary | ||||||
21 | servitude in the State, except as a punishment for crime | ||||||
22 | whereof the party shall have been duly convicted."; however, it |
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1 | included a requirement that the General Assembly pass laws to | ||||||
2 | prohibit the emigration of free African Americans into the | ||||||
3 | state and to bar slaveholders from bringing slaves into the | ||||||
4 | state for the purpose of freeing them; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, There was, of course, opposition; the "Colored | ||||||
6 | People of Chicago", for example, met to draft resolutions | ||||||
7 | opposing the new constitution and the "unjust and partial laws" | ||||||
8 | in the state, but the General Assembly failed to adopt them; | ||||||
9 | and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, The 1848 Illinois Constitution continued to limit | ||||||
11 | the right to vote to only white males and excluded people of | ||||||
12 | African descent from serving in the militia; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Subsequent legislation led to one of the most | ||||||
14 | restrictive Black Code systems in the nation until the American | ||||||
15 | Civil War; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, In 1848, Belleville in the Metro East became home | ||||||
17 | to the first underground coal mining operation; the new | ||||||
18 | industry spread along shipping areas to ease access to large | ||||||
19 | commercial centers like St. Louis and Chicago; however, it was | ||||||
20 | not until the Civil War, when Illinois railroads grew by leaps | ||||||
21 | and bounds, that coal mining in Southern Illinois began to | ||||||
22 | rapidly develop; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, The broader tri-state area lead mining region, the | ||||||
2 | coal region in northern Illinois at the end of the nineteenth | ||||||
3 | century, centered around places like Spring Valley, Braidwood, | ||||||
4 | and Coal City, and the area around Vermilion County and | ||||||
5 | Danville all had significant numbers of miners of African | ||||||
6 | descent; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, According to the Illinois Secretary of State's | ||||||
8 | current website, "The 1853 Black Law passed in Illinois was | ||||||
9 | considered the harshest of all discriminatory Black Laws passed | ||||||
10 | by Northern states before the Civil War."; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, The 1853 Black Law prohibited any person of | ||||||
12 | African descent from outside of the state from staying in | ||||||
13 | Illinois for more than ten days, and if a person of African | ||||||
14 | descent remained beyond the ten-day period, they would be | ||||||
15 | subject to arrest, detention, a $50 fine, or deportation; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, The 1853 Black Law was often a tool used against | ||||||
17 | whole communities when white citizens found that the increase | ||||||
18 | in black population had reached an unacceptable level; people | ||||||
19 | of African descent who violated the law faced punishments that | ||||||
20 | included being advertised and sold at public auction; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, The 1853 Black Law served, according to one |
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1 | author, "as grinding reminders of apartheid intentions and | ||||||
2 | legal subjugation, and they offered white authorities and mobs | ||||||
3 | excuses for harassment and violence against blacks."; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, A wealthy freeman of African descent by the name | ||||||
5 | of John Jones was instrumental in repealing the 1853 Black Law; | ||||||
6 | with prodding from John Jones and the logic propelled by the | ||||||
7 | results of the Civil War, the Illinois General Assembly | ||||||
8 | repealed the Black Laws in early 1865; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The repeal of the Black Laws did not confer | ||||||
10 | suffrage or civil rights on the state's people of African | ||||||
11 | descent; instead, they had to wait for ratification of the 14th | ||||||
12 | and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and the Illinois | ||||||
13 | Civil Rights Act of 1885; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, The 14th Amendment was passed in 1868 to help | ||||||
15 | ensure the rights of newly freed people of African descent; men | ||||||
16 | of African descent were given the right to vote in 1870 by the | ||||||
17 | passage of the 15th Amendment; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, The 1870 Illinois Constitution also provided | ||||||
19 | those rights; the Illinois Civil Rights Act of 1885 was also | ||||||
20 | passed forbidding discrimination in public facilities and | ||||||
21 | places, such as hotels, railroads, theaters, and restaurants; | ||||||
22 | and |
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1 | WHEREAS, In the midst of these Constitutional wins, | ||||||
2 | pro-slavery, segregation, and disenfranchisement laws know as | ||||||
3 | "Jim Crow" were enacted; these laws required de jure | ||||||
4 | segregation in all public places and a specific etiquette, | ||||||
5 | while supposedly creating a separate but equal position for | ||||||
6 | people of African descent; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, Unfortunately for the people of African descent, | ||||||
8 | the United States Supreme Court helped undermine their | ||||||
9 | Constitutional protections with the infamous Plessy v. | ||||||
10 | Ferguson (1896) case; this decision legitimized the | ||||||
11 | pro-slavery Jim Crow laws and the Jim Crow etiquette; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, The Civil War Reconstruction period brought a | ||||||
13 | migration of people of African descent to Cairo in Alexander | ||||||
14 | County; racial tensions under pro-slavery Jim Crow were always | ||||||
15 | high in the community, but as the shipping and ferrying | ||||||
16 | industries declined, jobs grew more scarce, and the racial | ||||||
17 | unrest intensified; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, Moreover, these laws solidified the position that | ||||||
19 | America had two sets of citizens, those of European descent, or | ||||||
20 | first class citizens, and people of African descent, or second | ||||||
21 | class citizens; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Jim Crow etiquette further separated and | ||||||
2 | essentially enslaved people of African descent; for example, a | ||||||
3 | male person of African descent could not offer his hand to | ||||||
4 | shake hands with a white male because it implied being socially | ||||||
5 | equal; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, At the same time, a male person of African descent | ||||||
7 | could not offer his hand or any other part of his body to a | ||||||
8 | white woman because he risked being accused of rape; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Similarly, people of African descent and white | ||||||
10 | people were not supposed to eat together; if they did eat | ||||||
11 | together, whites were to be served first, and some sort of | ||||||
12 | partition was to be placed between them; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Without exception, a male person of African | ||||||
14 | descent was not to offer to light the cigarette of a white | ||||||
15 | woman; such a gesture would imply intimacy; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, People of African descent were not allowed to show | ||||||
17 | public affection toward one another in public, especially | ||||||
18 | kissing, because it offended whites; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Pro-slavery Jim Crow etiquette required that | ||||||
20 | people of African descent be first introduced to white people, | ||||||
21 | never the opposite; at the same time, white people were not to |
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1 | use courtesy titles of respect when referring to people of | ||||||
2 | African descent (i.e. Mr., Mrs., Miss., Sir, or Ma'am); and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Instead, people of African descent were called by | ||||||
4 | their first names and had to use courtesy titles when referring | ||||||
5 | to white people; people of African descent were not allowed to | ||||||
6 | call white people by their first names; for example: "Mr. | ||||||
7 | Reagan (the white person), this is Malcolm (the person of | ||||||
8 | African descent), that I spoke to you about."; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, With respect to transportation, if a person of | ||||||
10 | African descent rode in a car driven by a white person, the | ||||||
11 | person of African descent sat in the back seat or the back of a | ||||||
12 | truck; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Finally, white motorists had the right-of-way at | ||||||
14 | all intersections; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, These pro-slavery Jim Crow laws sparked race riots | ||||||
16 | in Illinois as people of African descent began to relocate from | ||||||
17 | the South; the first race riot occurred in 1908 in Springfield; | ||||||
18 | and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, The fact that the riots occurred in Illinois, "The | ||||||
20 | Land of Lincoln", proved that people of African descent were | ||||||
21 | mistreated and brutalized not only in the south but everywhere; |
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1 | in this case, a white mob of 5,000 people beat people of | ||||||
2 | African descent throughout Sangamon county; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, In mid-August 1908, the white population of | ||||||
4 | Springfield reacted to reports that a white woman had been | ||||||
5 | assaulted in her home by a man of African descent; soon | ||||||
6 | afterward, another instance of an assault by a man of African | ||||||
7 | descent on a white woman was reported; these incidents, coming | ||||||
8 | within hours of each other, sparked a gathering of a mob; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Mob leaders carefully directed the participants | ||||||
10 | to destroy only homes and businesses either owned by blacks or | ||||||
11 | which served black patrons, thus leaving nearby white homes and | ||||||
12 | businesses untouched; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, This white mob looted businesses that served those | ||||||
14 | of African descent and lynched several people of African | ||||||
15 | descent; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Throughout World War I, people of African descent | ||||||
17 | continued migrating north for jobs, education, and | ||||||
18 | opportunities and to escape Jim Crow; another race riot | ||||||
19 | occurred in East St. Louis in 1917; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Up to 250 people of African descent were beaten, | ||||||
21 | shot, lynched, and killed; nine white people were killed, and |
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1 | 6,000 people of African descent were left homeless; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, A large number of people of African descent fled | ||||||
3 | East St. Louis; the enrollment in local public schools | ||||||
4 | plummeted by 35% in the fall; in other words, 1 out of 3 | ||||||
5 | children left the City of East St. Louis after the riots of | ||||||
6 | 1917; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, From 1918-1919, the Spanish Flu pandemic killed | ||||||
8 | 23,500 people in Illinois and 675,000 in America; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, At the same time, the summer of 1919 was called | ||||||
10 | "the Red Summer" due to the bloodbath in race riots in 26 | ||||||
11 | American cities, including 38 people killed in a Chicago race | ||||||
12 | riot; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Chicago was a laboratory for segregation; the | ||||||
14 | tools of analyzing real estate and racial data were being | ||||||
15 | created in Chicago in the early 20th century; other tools, such | ||||||
16 | as restrictive covenants, to segregate the city based on race | ||||||
17 | were created in Chicago; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, In 1927, the City of Chicago continued with racist | ||||||
19 | housing practices during the Great Migration; the Chicago Real | ||||||
20 | Estate Board (CREB) sent representatives throughout the city to | ||||||
21 | promote restrictive covenants; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, The board representatives provided model | ||||||
2 | contracts drafted by the Chicago Plan Commission as part of | ||||||
3 | their efforts; by 1928, the Hyde Park Herald reported that the | ||||||
4 | covenants prevailed throughout the South Side; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Most neighborhoods of people of African descent | ||||||
6 | were bounded by covenanted areas, since 85% of Chicago was | ||||||
7 | covenanted; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, After the stock market crash of 1929, FDR | ||||||
9 | introduced the New Deal; contained in this bold plan was the | ||||||
10 | creation of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) with the | ||||||
11 | purpose of aiding homeowners in default to prevent | ||||||
12 | foreclosures; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, In the early 1930s, it was soon discovered that | ||||||
14 | pro-slavery ideals remained in housing; the racist attitudes | ||||||
15 | and language found in HOLC appraisal sheets and Residential | ||||||
16 | Security Maps created by the HOLC gave federal support to | ||||||
17 | racist land use practices that helped to further marginalize | ||||||
18 | people of African descent in Illinois; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, This practice of "redlining" in the 1930s locked | ||||||
20 | neighborhoods of African descent into concentrated poverty by | ||||||
21 | systematically diminishing home ownership, home values, and |
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1 | median credit scores; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, During World War II, people of African descent | ||||||
3 | emigrating to Chicago were directed to the "Black Belt" for | ||||||
4 | their housing needs; this area was generally bounded between | ||||||
5 | 12th and 79th streets and Wentworth and Cottage Grove avenues; | ||||||
6 | and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, Approximately 60,000 people of African descent | ||||||
8 | moved to Chicago during 1940 to 1944 in search of jobs; in an | ||||||
9 | effort to keep the newly arriving people of African descent out | ||||||
10 | of their neighborhoods, white people formed restrictive | ||||||
11 | covenants; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, This housing system in Chicago led to overcrowding | ||||||
13 | in the Black Belt; such overcrowding, while difficult in | ||||||
14 | itself, also contributed to generally poor housing conditions | ||||||
15 | for people of African descent; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Demand for housing far exceeded its supply after | ||||||
17 | World War II; this led to rent gouging, a practice where | ||||||
18 | exorbitant rental amounts were charged for small kitchenettes | ||||||
19 | with no heat, no bathroom, and deplorable conditions; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, These conditions of ramshackle and dangerous | ||||||
21 | housing, neglect and indifference from city officials, and poor |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | sanitation resulted in infestation by rats in the Black Belt; | ||||||
2 | infant mortality and overall death rates were higher in the | ||||||
3 | Black Belt than in the rest of Chicago; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, The "Southern Illinois Black Belt" in East St. | ||||||
5 | Louis has an aging housing stock where people of African | ||||||
6 | descent have lived since 1720; in 1985, as the housing stock | ||||||
7 | aged and there were inadequate resources to preserve it, HUD | ||||||
8 | placed the East St. Louis public housing system under federal | ||||||
9 | administrative receivership; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, According to the U.S. Government Accountability | ||||||
11 | Office, "[r]eceiverships at housing authorities have generally | ||||||
12 | resulted from long-standing, severe, and persistent management | ||||||
13 | problems that led to deterioration of the housing stock."; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, Yet, for 32 years, HUD did little to | ||||||
15 | comprehensively address issues concerning the aging complexes | ||||||
16 | in East St. Louis, which severely compromised the housing stock | ||||||
17 | for the people of African descent in East St. Louis; many of | ||||||
18 | the people of African descent say that the public housing stock | ||||||
19 | was infested with rats; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, In 2017, HUD officially transitioned housing | ||||||
21 | authority of the City of East St. Louis to local control after | ||||||
22 | 32 years of federal administrative receivership; HUD's |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | oversight of East St. Louis was the first and longest | ||||||
2 | receivership of a local public housing authority in HUD's | ||||||
3 | history; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, The East St. Louis housing authority may be | ||||||
5 | eligible for Replacement Housing Factor Fund grants, which are | ||||||
6 | awarded to housing authorities that have removed units from | ||||||
7 | inventory for the purpose of developing new public housing | ||||||
8 | units; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Only two other housing authorities in America are | ||||||
10 | under federal administrative receivership; one is in Cairo, and | ||||||
11 | the other is in Gary, Indiana, just outside of Chicago; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, In 1988, after electing a person of African | ||||||
13 | descent as mayor, some white residents living in Chicago's | ||||||
14 | "Bungalow Belt" (i.e. single-family homes built in the 1910s | ||||||
15 | and 1920s in a collar on the northwest side and southwest side | ||||||
16 | of Chicago's city limits), pushed for reforms and insurance if | ||||||
17 | persons of African descent moved into the Bungalow Belt and | ||||||
18 | property values dropped; in response, the legislature created | ||||||
19 | three home equity taxing districts for the white home owners | ||||||
20 | living in the Bungalow Belt; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, On a most basic level, all homeowners in these | ||||||
22 | taxing districts pay a small tax to a fund; homeowners |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | voluntarily enroll in the equity program, and if the appraisal | ||||||
2 | is less than the original purchase price when they decide to | ||||||
3 | sell then that homeowner receives a cash claim for the | ||||||
4 | difference; very few, if any, people of African descent are | ||||||
5 | enrolled in this well-funded program; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, In February of 2016, the Alexander County Housing | ||||||
7 | Authority in Cairo (ACHA) was placed under federal | ||||||
8 | administrative receivership; there was strong evidence that | ||||||
9 | the ACHA failed to maintain the Elmwood and McBride complexes, | ||||||
10 | resulting in significant degradation in the quality of the | ||||||
11 | housing in Cairo where people of African descent reside; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, A year later, HUD announced to 185 families that | ||||||
13 | the Elmwood and McBride housing complexes in Cairo would be | ||||||
14 | closed and its residents relocated; this meant that almost 400 | ||||||
15 | people would be forced to leave the city as there was not | ||||||
16 | sufficient HUD-sanctioned housing in town; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, In reported interviews, HUD explained it was | ||||||
18 | hesitant to take Cairo into receivership as it could take many | ||||||
19 | years to execute, require four to five full-time employees, and | ||||||
20 | cost more than $5 million; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, From 2012 to 2018, for every $1 banks loaned in | ||||||
22 | Chicago's white neighborhoods, they invested just 12 cents in |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | the city's neighborhoods of African descent; JPMorgan Chase, | ||||||
2 | for instance, lent 41 times more money in Chicago's white | ||||||
3 | neighborhoods than African-descent neighborhoods; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, During that same time period, Bank of America lent | ||||||
5 | 29 times more money in Chicago's white communities than it did | ||||||
6 | in
African-descent communities; Wells Fargo lent 10 times more | ||||||
7 | in white areas than African-descent areas, and Guaranteed Rate | ||||||
8 | lent 15 times more in Chicago's white communities than its | ||||||
9 | African-descent communities; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, The air quality in communities of African descent | ||||||
11 | is far below acceptable standards; the National Resources | ||||||
12 | Defense Council (NRDC) recently reported that people of African | ||||||
13 | descent in minority neighborhoods on the West and South Sides | ||||||
14 | of Chicago have the greatest exposure to toxic air pollution | ||||||
15 | and other environmental health hazards in the city; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, The communities of Englewood and Roseland rank | ||||||
17 | remarkably high for pollution exposure in Chicago according to | ||||||
18 | the NRDC; Chicago has acknowledged that there are | ||||||
19 | disproportionate pollution problems across Chicago; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Midway through 2020, the world faces a pandemic | ||||||
21 | like it did in 1920; so far, this pandemic has killed 120,000 | ||||||
22 | in the U.S.; in Illinois, as of May 15, 2020, approximately |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | 6,300 Illinoisans have died; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, During the course of this pandemic, like it did in | ||||||
3 | 1920, racial uprisings occurred throughout communities of | ||||||
4 | African descent after a white police officer, while on openly | ||||||
5 | conspicuous videotape, suffocated a man of African descent for | ||||||
6 | nine minutes because he committed, if at all, a petty crime; | ||||||
7 | prior to that, a white Chicago Police Officer shot an unarmed | ||||||
8 | teenager of African descent 16 times for committing, if at all, | ||||||
9 | a petty offense; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, The new currency in life is compassion; while | ||||||
11 | Illinois has grown and become a global power, the people of | ||||||
12 | Illinois cannot ignore the contributions of people of African | ||||||
13 | descent who were the catalyst to the economic growth of | ||||||
14 | Illinois; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, The people of Illinois also can not ignore the | ||||||
16 | injustices that were and continue to be barriers to an equal | ||||||
17 | society; without question, there is a marked contrast between | ||||||
18 | the communities for people of African descent, other minority | ||||||
19 | communities, and the majority white community; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Illinois currently has 3,123 census tracts, 9,691 | ||||||
21 | block groups, and 451,554 census blocks; and |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | WHEREAS, Census tracts generally have a population size | ||||||
2 | between 1,200 and 8,000 people, with an optimal size of 4,000 | ||||||
3 | people; a block group is a cluster of blocks within a census | ||||||
4 | tract; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, In the urban cores of most older cities, census | ||||||
6 | blocks are small because development preceded the introduction | ||||||
7 | of urban transportation technologies (such as interurban | ||||||
8 | railways, streetcars, and the automobile) and the | ||||||
9 | decentralization of industries and jobs; surrounding these | ||||||
10 | urban cores in the eastern and southern regions of the nation, | ||||||
11 | one typically finds dense, irregular street patterns and an | ||||||
12 | extensive system of connecting roads due principally to the | ||||||
13 | metes and bounds survey; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, Today, the energy sector has the ability to create | ||||||
15 | no cost electricity from the earth that was worked by slaves in | ||||||
16 | Illinois for 300 years; there is currently legislation in | ||||||
17 | Illinois designed to exponentially increase renewable energy | ||||||
18 | generation, but the companies leading this effort are not | ||||||
19 | businesses led or owned by people of African descent; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, For example, a microgrid of unknown cost is | ||||||
21 | currently underway for an community of African descent in | ||||||
22 | Chicago; it will be located in an area bounded from 33rd Street | ||||||
23 | to the North, 38th Street to the South, State Street to the |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | West, and South Dr. Martin L. King Jr. Drive to the East; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, Phase I of the project will include 2.5 MW of load | ||||||
3 | and require reconfiguration of an existing feeder and | ||||||
4 | installation of battery storage and solar photovoltaics; it | ||||||
5 | will directly serve approximately 490 customers; and
| ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, Phase II of the project will add approximately 570 | ||||||
7 | customers and an additional 4.5 MW of load and 7 MW of | ||||||
8 | Distributed Energy Resources (DERs), enough to meet the peak | ||||||
9 | electricity demand of customers within the microgrid footprint | ||||||
10 | and maintain service when the microgrid is islanded from the | ||||||
11 | main grid; the completed project will serve approximately 1,060 | ||||||
12 | residential, commercial, and small industrial customers; and
| ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, This microgrid project contemplates that 1 MW of | ||||||
14 | energy will service 150 customers from a base load perspective; | ||||||
15 | if DERs are included in the calculation, the number of | ||||||
16 | customers would climb to 300; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Notably, the microgrid contemplates that | ||||||
18 | customers will be either homes, businesses, and/or small | ||||||
19 | industrial business; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, In 2013, natural gas utilities Peoples Gas, Ameren | ||||||
21 | Illinois, and Nicor Gas began performing infrastructure |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | upgrades; for example, in Chicago, The Peoples Gas System | ||||||
2 | Modernization Program (SMP) is underway; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, SMP is an accelerated, comprehensive, | ||||||
4 | multi-decade program to remove and replace 2,300 miles of 100 | ||||||
5 | year-old, deteriorating cast or ductile iron pipe and upgrade | ||||||
6 | its blow pressure natural gas delivery system to a medium | ||||||
7 | pressure system; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, The broadband sector has also engaged in enhanced | ||||||
9 | wireless and internet capabilities; Cook, Mason, and | ||||||
10 | Washington counties are targeted for significant technological | ||||||
11 | upgrades; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, An integration of wired and wireless technology is | ||||||
13 | the current movement of society; soon networks will be | ||||||
14 | virtualized, and there will be enhanced experiences on mobile | ||||||
15 | devices; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, In 2018, the median property value in Illinois was | ||||||
17 | $203,400, and the homeownership rate was 66%; notably, the | ||||||
18 | median property value in Chicago was $271,600, and the | ||||||
19 | homeownership rate was 45.7%; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Alternatively, the median property value in East | ||||||
21 | St. Louis was $55,000, and the homeownership rate was 43.5%; at |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | the same time, the median property value in Cairo was $30,500, | ||||||
2 | and the homeownership rate was 58.5%; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Finally, the median household incomes in East St. | ||||||
4 | Louis, Cairo, Chicago, and the State of Illinois as a whole are | ||||||
5 | $20,659, $24,549, $57,238, and $65,030, respectively; the | ||||||
6 | disparities between the communities of African descent and | ||||||
7 | other communities is apparent both visually and from the data; | ||||||
8 | and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Black homeownership rates are lower today than | ||||||
10 | they were 50 years ago when housing discrimination was | ||||||
11 | outlawed, and they are particularly bad in Chicago; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, There has never been a successful affirmative | ||||||
13 | action housing policy in the State of Illinois for people of | ||||||
14 | African descent; such a plan is not a novel concept, as one was | ||||||
15 | proposed during the Civil War while the pro-slavery movement | ||||||
16 | began to suffer defeats; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, General William T. Sherman entered Executive | ||||||
18 | Field Order #15 on January 16, 1865; his field order first | ||||||
19 | designated certain captured lands along the coastlines of South | ||||||
20 | Carolina, Georgia, and Florida (i.e. Charleston to | ||||||
21 | Jacksonville along the coastline and then 30 miles inward); and |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | WHEREAS, By General Sherman's order, subject to | ||||||
2 | ratification by President Lincoln, the specified coastal tract | ||||||
3 | of land was gifted to people of African descent for their own | ||||||
4 | agricultural and housing purposes following slavery; by the | ||||||
5 | order, each family of African descent was awarded "a plot of | ||||||
6 | not more than forty acres of tillable ground"; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, Before it was ratified, President Abraham Lincoln | ||||||
8 | was assassinated; President Andrew Johnson, from Raleigh, | ||||||
9 | North Carolina, assumed the presidency; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, President Johnson soon revoked General Sherman's | ||||||
11 | order hampering efforts by people of African descent to gain | ||||||
12 | economic independence after the Emancipation Proclamation; | ||||||
13 | President Johnson was later the first president to be impeached | ||||||
14 | for abuse of power and other high crimes and misdemeanors; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, The regressive policies of the State of Illinois | ||||||
16 | relating to people of African descent are well documented and | ||||||
17 | date back 300 years; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, Among other things, the regressive policies have | ||||||
19 | created a stark contrast in the housing available to people of | ||||||
20 | African descent and the housing available to people of | ||||||
21 | non-African descent; and |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | WHEREAS, There is an immediate need to drastically improve | ||||||
2 | the housing stock and the communities where people of African | ||||||
3 | descent reside; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, There is a compelling need to drastically improve | ||||||
5 | the housing conditions of people of African descent residing in | ||||||
6 | the State of Illinois; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, The least restrictive means of drastically | ||||||
8 | improving the housing stock, communities, and conditions of | ||||||
9 | people of African descent is for the current Governor of the | ||||||
10 | State of Illinois to act; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, The Governor must act to shape a narrowly tailored | ||||||
12 | approach to drastically improve the housing stock, | ||||||
13 | communities, and conditions of people of African descent | ||||||
14 | residing in the State of Illinois; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Immediate affirmative action by the Governor is | ||||||
16 | needed to counteract continuing conscious and unconscious | ||||||
17 | biases and prejudices against people of African descent in the | ||||||
18 | housing sector; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Such affirmative action in Illinois would not rise | ||||||
20 | to the level of discrimination against other minorities, as no | ||||||
21 | other minority group, apart from people of African descent, was |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | enslaved in the State of Illinois from as early as 1720; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, Moreover, no other minority group was | ||||||
3 | discriminated against by being subjected to separate Slave | ||||||
4 | Codes in Illinois; to that end, no other minority group was | ||||||
5 | required in an apartheid-like fashion to produce a Certificate | ||||||
6 | of Freedom and proof of a behavior bond to travel in public in | ||||||
7 | Illinois; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, Furthermore, no other minority group in Illinois | ||||||
9 | was discriminated against by being subject to Jim Crow laws and | ||||||
10 | in many cases victims of Lynch Law, where they were hung, shot, | ||||||
11 | burned at the stake, castrated, beaten with clubs, or | ||||||
12 | dismembered; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Further still, no other minority group was | ||||||
14 | discriminated against by being subject to redlining and | ||||||
15 | restrictive covenants in Illinois' housing sector; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Finally, no other minority group, apart from | ||||||
17 | people of African descent, was discriminated against by being | ||||||
18 | subject to the greatest exposure to air toxicity, air | ||||||
19 | pollution, and other environmental health hazards; therefore, | ||||||
20 | be it
| ||||||
21 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
2 | it is in the best interest of the people of Illinois for the | ||||||
3 | Governor of the State of Illinois to immediately act to shape a | ||||||
4 | narrowly tailored approach to drastically improve the housing | ||||||
5 | stock, communities, and conditions of and for people of African | ||||||
6 | descent residing in the State of Illinois; and be it further | ||||||
7 | RESOLVED, That we urge the Governor of the State of | ||||||
8 | Illinois and the Illinois General Assembly to invoke the | ||||||
9 | principles of the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of 2020 with | ||||||
10 | all deliberate speed; and be it further | ||||||
11 | RESOLVED, That there is an immediate need for legislation, | ||||||
12 | emergency rules, and/or a gubernatorial executive order to (1) | ||||||
13 | authorize funding and matching grants to municipalities and | ||||||
14 | private investors for the construction of housing, commercial | ||||||
15 | real estate, microgrids, water, sewer, gas, broadband | ||||||
16 | technology, and clean energy generation and storage in | ||||||
17 | low-income communities, (2) authorize funding and matching | ||||||
18 | grants to municipalities and private investors for urban | ||||||
19 | beautification, greenspace, and community gardens in | ||||||
20 | low-income communities, (3) create heightened home equity | ||||||
21 | taxing districts, opportunity zones, empowerment zones, | ||||||
22 | enterprise zones, tax increment financing districts, and | ||||||
23 | Special Service Areas in low-income communities, and (4) | ||||||
24 | authorize funding and matching grants to municipalities and |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | private investors to construct community centers, grocery | ||||||
2 | stores, gymnasiums, and natatoriums in low-income communities; | ||||||
3 | and be it further | ||||||
4 | RESOLVED, That there is long term need for legislation, | ||||||
5 | emergency rules, and/or a gubernatorial executive order to (1) | ||||||
6 | fund existing and created housing programs for people of | ||||||
7 | African descent which shall include, but shall not be limited | ||||||
8 | to, professional services, property tax relief, and navigators | ||||||
9 | of and counselors for the land use process, (2) provide rent | ||||||
10 | subsidies for elderly and disabled people of African descent, | ||||||
11 | (3) provide specific property tax relief for the elderly and | ||||||
12 | disabled people of African descent, (4) provide property tax | ||||||
13 | relief for adults 21 years of age to 18 years of age for people | ||||||
14 | of African descent, (5) enable people of African descent to | ||||||
15 | make no or very low down payments to obtain mortgages; to | ||||||
16 | authorize funding in conjunction with the Creating American | ||||||
17 | Investment, Redevelopment, and Opportunity (CAIRO) Task Force | ||||||
18 | Act to address the housing crisis in Cairo, (6) underwrite and | ||||||
19 | secure mortgages for people of African descent who choose to | ||||||
20 | reside in a census tract designated by the Equitable Economic | ||||||
21 | Land Use Plan of 2020, (7) authorize the acquisition of real | ||||||
22 | estate designated by the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of | ||||||
23 | 2020 via eminent domain and quick take authority, (8) partner | ||||||
24 | regularly with the Chicago Department of Planning and | ||||||
25 | Development (DPD) to provide insight and information regarding |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | their efforts to invest in communities of persons of African | ||||||
2 | descent, and (9) appoint an Emergency Task Force to facilitate | ||||||
3 | the purposes of the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of 2020; | ||||||
4 | and be it further | ||||||
5 | RESOLVED, That there is long term need for legislation, | ||||||
6 | emergency rules, and/or a gubernatorial executive order to | ||||||
7 | reform the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure and the Mortgage | ||||||
8 | Act and to further fund existing and created housing programs | ||||||
9 | that will assist people of African descent in the facilitation | ||||||
10 | of the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of 2020; and be it | ||||||
11 | further | ||||||
12 | RESOLVED, That the real property in census tracts | ||||||
13 | designated by the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of 2020 | ||||||
14 | should be valued as of July 1, 2020 and should be based upon | ||||||
15 | its fair cash market value at its highest and best use on July | ||||||
16 | 1, 2020 for purposes of the Equitable Economic Land Use Plan of | ||||||
17 | 2020; and be it further | ||||||
18 | RESOLVED, That because Pierre Menard was a slaveowner in | ||||||
19 | the Metro East, the name of the Menard Correctional Center | ||||||
20 | should revert back to the Southern Illinois Penitentiary; and | ||||||
21 | be it further
| ||||||
22 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | delivered to Governor JB Pritzker, House Speaker Michael | ||||||
2 | Madigan, Senate President Don Harmon, House Minority Leader Jim | ||||||
3 | Durkin, Senate Minority Leader Bill Brady, U.S. Senator Dick | ||||||
4 | Durbin, U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth, Chicago Mayor Lori | ||||||
5 | Lightfoot, Cairo Mayor Tyrone Coleman, East St. Louis Mayor | ||||||
6 | Robert Eastern III, the Illinois Department of Commerce and | ||||||
7 | Economic Opportunity, the Illinois Department of Corrections, | ||||||
8 | and the Illinois Housing Development Authority.
|