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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Families and communities throughout the United | ||||||
3 | States share similar hopes and dreams of a good life that is | ||||||
4 | free from worry about meeting basic needs, with reliable and | ||||||
5 | fulfilling work, a dignified and healthy standard of living, | ||||||
6 | and the ability to enjoy time with loved ones; and
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7 | WHEREAS, The United States faces the stress of multiple, | ||||||
8 | overlapping crises, old and new, that prevent the achievement | ||||||
9 | of these fundamental human rights and needs, in which the | ||||||
10 | COVID–19 pandemic has killed over 500,000 United States | ||||||
11 | residents including over 20,000 Illinoisans; more than | ||||||
12 | 10,000,000 United States workers remain unemployed and nearly | ||||||
13 | 7,000,000 more are not in the labor force but want a job; | ||||||
14 | rising economic inequality has made working families | ||||||
15 | vulnerable; tens of millions of individuals do not get the | ||||||
16 | health care they need, and intensifying climate change | ||||||
17 | increases the threats to our health, economy, and livelihoods; | ||||||
18 | and
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19 | WHEREAS, These health, economic, and climate crises have | ||||||
20 | magnified centuries-old injustices, causing high rates of | ||||||
21 | death and hardship among Black, Brown, and Indigenous | ||||||
22 | communities due to long-standing systemic racism, a fact | ||||||
23 | spotlighted by an emerging, multiracial movement to end |
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1 | violence against Black people; and
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2 | WHEREAS, These crises are causing the inequitable | ||||||
3 | workloads of women, particularly women of color, to grow, | ||||||
4 | especially as women of color overwhelmingly make up the | ||||||
5 | essential workforce, bearing the weight of the increased care | ||||||
6 | needs of children, the elderly, and the sick; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Even before the COVID–19 crisis, many rural | ||||||
8 | communities and independent family farmers suffered from | ||||||
9 | poverty, declining economic opportunity, and alarming rates of | ||||||
10 | farm bankruptcy, including loss of land from Black farmers and | ||||||
11 | the exploitation of Black, Brown, and Indigenous farmers | ||||||
12 | caused by predatory and racist public, private, and | ||||||
13 | governmental institutions and policies; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, The root of our interlocking economic and | ||||||
15 | environmental crises is society's historical willingness to | ||||||
16 | treat some communities and workers as disposable; and
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17 | WHEREAS, It is necessary to counteract systemic injustice | ||||||
18 | and value the dignity of all individuals in order to address | ||||||
19 | unemployment, pandemics, or climate change and ensure the | ||||||
20 | survival of the nation and the planet; and
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21 | WHEREAS, The choices made in response to these crises will |
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1 | shape the United States direction for the 21st century and | ||||||
2 | beyond, offering an opportunity to reshape our society to | ||||||
3 | provide a good life for each of us and for our children and | ||||||
4 | grandchildren; and
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5 | WHEREAS, The United States and the State of Illinois have | ||||||
6 | the means to support fulfilling livelihoods for millions of | ||||||
7 | people, Black, Indigenous, Brown, Latinx, Asian/Pacific | ||||||
8 | Islander, White, immigrant, urban and rural, old and young, of | ||||||
9 | many faiths, genders, abilities, and talents, while working to | ||||||
10 | heal harms, protect communities, and invest in a future that | ||||||
11 | fosters justice, not crisis; therefore, be it
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12 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
13 | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, | ||||||
14 | that:
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15 | (1) it is the duty of the Federal Government and the State | ||||||
16 | government to respond to the crises of racial injustice, mass | ||||||
17 | unemployment, a pandemic, and climate change with a bold and | ||||||
18 | holistic national mobilization, an Agenda to Transform, Heal, | ||||||
19 | and Renew by Investing in a Vibrant Economy (THRIVE) (referred | ||||||
20 | to in this resolving clause as the Agenda), to build a society | ||||||
21 | that enables: | ||||||
22 | (A) greater racial, economic, and gender justice; | ||||||
23 | (B) dignified work; | ||||||
24 | (C) healthy communities; and |
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1 | (D) a stable climate; and | ||||||
2 | (2) such Agenda shall be assessed upon its ability to | ||||||
3 | uphold its foundational pillars, including: | ||||||
4 | (A) creating millions of good, safe jobs with access | ||||||
5 | to unions by: | ||||||
6 | (i) investing in projects including: | ||||||
7 | (I) upgrading our broken infrastructure to | ||||||
8 | expand access to clean and affordable energy, | ||||||
9 | transportation, high-speed broadband, and water, | ||||||
10 | particularly for public systems; | ||||||
11 | (II) modernizing and retrofitting millions of | ||||||
12 | homes, schools, offices, and industrial buildings | ||||||
13 | to cut pollution and costs; | ||||||
14 | (III) investing in public health and care | ||||||
15 | work, including by increasing jobs, protections, | ||||||
16 | wages, and benefits for the historically unpaid | ||||||
17 | and undervalued work of caring for children, the | ||||||
18 | elderly, and the sick; | ||||||
19 | (IV) protecting and restoring wetlands, | ||||||
20 | forests, and public lands, and cleaning up | ||||||
21 | pollution in our communities; | ||||||
22 | (V) creating opportunities for family farmers | ||||||
23 | and rural communities, including by untangling the | ||||||
24 | hyper-consolidated food supply chain, bolstering | ||||||
25 | regenerative agriculture, and investing in local | ||||||
26 | and regional food systems that support farmers, |
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1 | agricultural workers, healthy soil, and climate | ||||||
2 | resilience; and | ||||||
3 | (VI) developing and transforming the | ||||||
4 | industrial base of the United States, while | ||||||
5 | creating high-skill, high-wage manufacturing jobs | ||||||
6 | across the country, including by expanding | ||||||
7 | manufacturing of clean technologies, reducing | ||||||
8 | industrial pollution, and prioritizing clean, | ||||||
9 | domestic manufacturing for the aforementioned | ||||||
10 | investments; | ||||||
11 | (ii) prioritizing the mobilization of direct | ||||||
12 | public investments, while excluding false solutions | ||||||
13 | that: | ||||||
14 | (I) increase inequality; | ||||||
15 | (II) privatize public lands, water, or nature; | ||||||
16 | (III) violate human rights; | ||||||
17 | (IV) expedite the destruction of ecosystems; | ||||||
18 | or | ||||||
19 | (V) decrease union density or membership; | ||||||
20 | (iii) driving investment toward real full | ||||||
21 | employment, where every individual who wishes to work | ||||||
22 | has a viable pathway to a meaningful and dignified job | ||||||
23 | with the right to form a union, including by | ||||||
24 | establishing new public employment programs, as | ||||||
25 | necessary; and | ||||||
26 | (iv) subjecting each job created under this Agenda |
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1 | to high-road labor standards that: | ||||||
2 | (I) require family-sustaining wages and | ||||||
3 | benefits, including child care support; | ||||||
4 | (II) ensure safe workplaces; | ||||||
5 | (III) protect the rights of workers to | ||||||
6 | organize; and | ||||||
7 | (IV) prioritize the hiring of local workers to | ||||||
8 | ensure wages stay within communities to stimulate | ||||||
9 | economic activity; | ||||||
10 | (B) building the power of workers to fight inequality | ||||||
11 | by: | ||||||
12 | (i) reversing the corporate erosion of workers' | ||||||
13 | organizing rights and bargaining power so that | ||||||
14 | millions of new clean energy jobs, as well as millions | ||||||
15 | of existing low-wage jobs across the economy, become | ||||||
16 | the family-supporting union jobs that everyone | ||||||
17 | deserves, including by: | ||||||
18 | (I) Congress passing the bipartisan Protecting | ||||||
19 | the Right to Organize Act; | ||||||
20 | (II) repealing the ban on secondary boycotts; | ||||||
21 | (III) requiring employer neutrality with | ||||||
22 | regard to union organizing; | ||||||
23 | (IV) ensuring that "franchising" and other | ||||||
24 | corporate structures may not be used to hinder | ||||||
25 | collective bargaining on a company-wide, regional, | ||||||
26 | or national basis; |
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1 | (V) advancing sectoral bargaining in certain | ||||||
2 | economic sectors; and | ||||||
3 | (VI) ensuring that no workers are | ||||||
4 | misclassified as "independent contractors"; | ||||||
5 | (ii) expanding union representation for all | ||||||
6 | workers; and | ||||||
7 | (iii) creating ladders of opportunity, | ||||||
8 | particularly for women and people of color, to access | ||||||
9 | registered apprenticeship and pre-apprenticeship | ||||||
10 | programs in communities of all sizes across the | ||||||
11 | country; | ||||||
12 | (C) investing in Black, Brown, and Indigenous | ||||||
13 | communities to build power and counteract racial and | ||||||
14 | gender injustice by: | ||||||
15 | (i) directing at least 40 percent of investments | ||||||
16 | to communities that have been excluded, oppressed, and | ||||||
17 | harmed by racist and unjust practices, including: | ||||||
18 | (I) communities of color; | ||||||
19 | (II) low-income communities; | ||||||
20 | (III) deindustrialized communities; and | ||||||
21 | (IV) communities facing environmental | ||||||
22 | injustice; | ||||||
23 | (ii) ensuring that investments in these | ||||||
24 | communities enable: | ||||||
25 | (I) the creation of good jobs with | ||||||
26 | family-sustaining wages; |
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1 | (II) economic ownership opportunities that | ||||||
2 | close the racial wealth gap; | ||||||
3 | (III) pollution reduction; | ||||||
4 | (IV) climate resilience; | ||||||
5 | (V) small business support; | ||||||
6 | (VI) economic opportunities for independent | ||||||
7 | family farmers and ranchers; and | ||||||
8 | (VII) the expansion of public services; | ||||||
9 | (iii) ensuring that affected communities have the | ||||||
10 | power to democratically plan, implement, and | ||||||
11 | administer these projects; | ||||||
12 | (iv) prioritizing local and equitable hiring and | ||||||
13 | contracting that creates opportunities for: | ||||||
14 | (I) people of color; | ||||||
15 | (II) immigrants, regardless of immigration | ||||||
16 | status; | ||||||
17 | (III) formerly incarcerated individuals; | ||||||
18 | (IV) women; | ||||||
19 | (V) LGBTQIAP+ individuals; | ||||||
20 | (VI) disabled and chronically ill individuals; | ||||||
21 | and | ||||||
22 | (VII) marginalized communities; and | ||||||
23 | (v) providing access to quality workforce | ||||||
24 | training, including through registered apprenticeships | ||||||
25 | and pre-apprenticeships to ensure real pathways to | ||||||
26 | good careers, including those that have historically |
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1 | been inaccessible; | ||||||
2 | (D) strengthening and healing the nation-to-nation | ||||||
3 | relationship with sovereign Native Nations, including by: | ||||||
4 | (i) making systemic changes in Federal policies to | ||||||
5 | honor the environmental and social trust | ||||||
6 | responsibilities to Native Nations and their Peoples, | ||||||
7 | which are essential to tackling society's economic, | ||||||
8 | environmental, and health crises; | ||||||
9 | (ii) strengthening Tribal sovereignty and | ||||||
10 | enforcing Indian treaty rights by moving towards | ||||||
11 | greater recognition and support of the inherent | ||||||
12 | self-governance and sovereignty of these nations and | ||||||
13 | their members; and | ||||||
14 | (iii) promulgating specific initiatives that | ||||||
15 | reflect the nuanced relationships between the Native | ||||||
16 | Nations, including: | ||||||
17 | (I) the confirmation by Congress that Tribal | ||||||
18 | nations can exercise their full and inherent civil | ||||||
19 | regulatory and adjudicatory authority over their | ||||||
20 | own citizens, lands, and resources, and over | ||||||
21 | activities within their Tribal lands; | ||||||
22 | (II) the codification of Free, Prior, and | ||||||
23 | Informed Consent as it relates to Tribal | ||||||
24 | consultation; and | ||||||
25 | (III) the implementation of the United Nations | ||||||
26 | Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, |
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1 | without qualification; | ||||||
2 | (E) combating environmental injustice and ensuring | ||||||
3 | healthy lives for all, including by: | ||||||
4 | (i) curtailing air, water, and land pollution from | ||||||
5 | all sources; | ||||||
6 | (ii) removing health hazards from communities; | ||||||
7 | (iii) replacing lead pipes to ensure clean water | ||||||
8 | is available to all; | ||||||
9 | (iv) remediating the cumulative health and | ||||||
10 | environmental impacts of toxic pollution and climate | ||||||
11 | change; | ||||||
12 | (v) ensuring that affected communities have | ||||||
13 | equitable access to public health resources that have | ||||||
14 | been systemically denied, which includes: | ||||||
15 | (I) upgrading unhealthy and overcrowded homes, | ||||||
16 | public schools, and public hospitals; | ||||||
17 | (II) ensuring access to healthy food, mental | ||||||
18 | health support, and restorative justice; and | ||||||
19 | (III) investing in universal childcare, care | ||||||
20 | for individuals with disabilities, senior care, | ||||||
21 | and a robust care workforce; and | ||||||
22 | (vi) focusing these initiatives in Black, Brown, | ||||||
23 | and Indigenous communities that have endured | ||||||
24 | disproportionately high death rates from COVID-19 due | ||||||
25 | to higher exposure to air pollution and other | ||||||
26 | cumulative health hazards as a result of decades of |
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1 | environmental racism; | ||||||
2 | (F) averting climate and environmental catastrophe, | ||||||
3 | including by: | ||||||
4 | (i) contributing to a livable climate and | ||||||
5 | environment for today and for future generations, | ||||||
6 | including by: | ||||||
7 | (I) staying below 1.5 degrees Celsius of | ||||||
8 | global warming; | ||||||
9 | (II) building climate resilience to keep | ||||||
10 | communities safe; and | ||||||
11 | (III) ensuring sustainable resource use; | ||||||
12 | (ii) deploying investments and standards in the | ||||||
13 | electricity, transportation, buildings, | ||||||
14 | manufacturing, lands, and agricultural sectors to spur | ||||||
15 | the largest expansion in history of clean, renewable | ||||||
16 | energy, emissions reductions, climate resilience, and | ||||||
17 | sustainable resource use; | ||||||
18 | (iii) transforming the power sector in order to | ||||||
19 | move the country, by not later than 2035, to carbon | ||||||
20 | pollution-free electricity that passes an | ||||||
21 | environmental justice screen to prevent concentrating | ||||||
22 | pollution in Black, Brown, Indigenous, and poor | ||||||
23 | communities; | ||||||
24 | (iv) prioritizing materials and parts that meet | ||||||
25 | high labor, environmental, and human rights standards | ||||||
26 | throughout the supply chain; |
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1 | (v) supporting sustainable, domestic production of | ||||||
2 | healthy, nutritious food that pays independent farmers | ||||||
3 | and ranchers a fair price for their land stewardship; | ||||||
4 | and | ||||||
5 | (vi) ensuring that funding under this Agenda goes | ||||||
6 | to workers and communities affected by the economic | ||||||
7 | and environmental crises, not to corporate fossil fuel | ||||||
8 | polluters; | ||||||
9 | (G) ensuring fairness for workers and communities | ||||||
10 | affected by economic transitions by: | ||||||
11 | (i) guaranteeing that workers and communities in | ||||||
12 | industries and regions in economic transition due to | ||||||
13 | COVID-19, climate change, and other economic shocks | ||||||
14 | receive: | ||||||
15 | (I) stable wages and benefits, including full | ||||||
16 | pension and health care; | ||||||
17 | (II) early retirement offerings; | ||||||
18 | (III) crisis and trauma support; and | ||||||
19 | (IV) equitable job placement; and | ||||||
20 | (ii) investing in transitioning areas to support: | ||||||
21 | (I) economic diversification; | ||||||
22 | (II) high quality job creation; | ||||||
23 | (III) community reinvestment; | ||||||
24 | (IV) retooling and conversion; | ||||||
25 | (V) reclamation and remediation of closed and | ||||||
26 | abandoned facilities and sites; |
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1 | (VI) child and adult care infrastructure; and | ||||||
2 | (VII) funding to shore up budget shortfalls in | ||||||
3 | local and State governments; and | ||||||
4 | (H) reinvesting in public sector institutions that | ||||||
5 | enable workers and communities to thrive by: | ||||||
6 | (i) rebuilding vital public services and | ||||||
7 | strengthening social infrastructure in cities and | ||||||
8 | counties, health care systems, schools, the postal | ||||||
9 | service, and other services; | ||||||
10 | (ii) investing in equitable public education | ||||||
11 | opportunities, including career and technical | ||||||
12 | education pathways that prepare youth, especially | ||||||
13 | girls; Black, Brown, and Indigenous students; students | ||||||
14 | with disabilities; students from low-income families; | ||||||
15 | and other students from marginalized groups, for | ||||||
16 | high-quality jobs of the future, and state of the art | ||||||
17 | technology and schools, so that from the beginning | ||||||
18 | students are prepared to transform society and | ||||||
19 | preserve democracy; | ||||||
20 | (iii) investing in the workers who provide care to | ||||||
21 | children, the elderly, and communities burdened by | ||||||
22 | neglect; | ||||||
23 | (iv) creating new public institutions, inspired by | ||||||
24 | and improving upon New Deal-era institutions, to | ||||||
25 | ensure universal access to critical resources and to | ||||||
26 | strategically and coherently mobilize and channel |
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1 | investments, in line with the above priorities, at the | ||||||
2 | scale and pace that these times require; and | ||||||
3 | (v) coupling this institutional renewal with | ||||||
4 | democratic governance and accountability to correct | ||||||
5 | the systemic misallocation of resources and | ||||||
6 | representation that prevents families and communities | ||||||
7 | from meeting fundamental human needs and pursuing | ||||||
8 | fulfilling lives.
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