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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, Under Article IV, Section 3 of the Illinois |
3 | | Constitution of 1970, in the year following each federal |
4 | | decennial census year, the General Assembly by law shall |
5 | | redistrict the Legislative Districts and the Representative |
6 | | Districts by June 30; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, The United States Census Bureau failed to deliver |
8 | | the 2020 Census Public Law 94-171 population data to the |
9 | | States, including Illinois, by March 31, 2021 as required by |
10 | | the federal Census Act; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, While the 2020 Census Public Law 94-171 |
12 | | population data was not available as required by federal law, |
13 | | the General Assembly remained constitutionally mandated to |
14 | | enact a redistricting plan prior to June 30, 2021; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, On April 26, 2021, the United States Census |
16 | | Bureau released the 2020 Census apportionment data, which |
17 | | showed that the total resident population of Illinois as of |
18 | | April 1, 2020 was 12,812,508 according to the 2020 Census, a |
19 | | decrease of more than 18,000 people, or 0.14%, from the 2010 |
20 | | Census; and |
21 | | WHEREAS, In addition to the decennial census, the United |
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1 | | States Census Bureau conducts the American Community Survey, a |
2 | | nationwide, continuous survey that includes detailed questions |
3 | | about population and housing characteristics, and publishes |
4 | | the data on a 1-year and 5-year basis; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, The total resident population of Illinois |
6 | | according to the 2015-2019 American Community Survey data was |
7 | | 12,770,577, which is approximately 0.3% less than the total |
8 | | resident population from the 2020 Census; and |
9 | | WHEREAS, The 2015-2019 American Community Survey data |
10 | | represented the most accurate, recent low-level population |
11 | | data available to the Illinois public prior to June 30, 2021; |
12 | | and |
13 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois General Assembly conducted 50 |
14 | | hearings on redistricting, resulting in hundreds of |
15 | | testimonials from the public in April and May 2021; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, House and Senate staff reached out to more than |
17 | | 2,000 community groups, local leaders, and stakeholders in |
18 | | advance of these hearings; and |
19 | | WHEREAS, House Bill 2777 of the 102nd General Assembly was |
20 | | amended with legislative language creating the General |
21 | | Assembly Redistricting Act of 2021, which established the |
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1 | | boundaries of all 59 Legislative Districts and 118 |
2 | | Representative Districts using the 2015-2019 American |
3 | | Community Survey population data; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, The General Assembly passed House Bill 2777, in |
5 | | compliance with the requirements of Article IV, Section 8 of |
6 | | the Illinois Constitution of 1970, on May 28, 2021; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, The Governor signed House Bill 2777 into law as |
8 | | Public Act 102-10; and |
9 | | WHEREAS, Public Act 102-10 contained an immediate |
10 | | effective date and became effective on June 4, 2021 in |
11 | | accordance with Article IV, Section 10 of the Illinois |
12 | | Constitution of 1970; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, Through the enactment of Public Act 102-10 on |
14 | | June 4, 2021, the General Assembly met its constitutional |
15 | | deadline under Article IV, Section 3(b) of the Illinois |
16 | | Constitution of 1970 to redistrict the Legislative Districts |
17 | | and the Representative Districts by June 30 in the year |
18 | | following the Federal decennial census year; and |
19 | | WHEREAS, At the time of the passage of House Bill 2777, the |
20 | | House and Senate Democrats committed to reviewing the 2020 |
21 | | Census Public Law 94-171 population data and determining if |
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1 | | adjustments should be made to Public Act 102-10; and |
2 | | WHEREAS, The United States Census Bureau released the 2020 |
3 | | Census Public Law 94-171 population data on August 12, 2021 to |
4 | | the States, including Illinois; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, The 2020 Census population data shows that 15 |
6 | | Illinois counties grew in population from the 2010 Census; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, The 2020 Census population data shows that the |
8 | | counties of Carroll (2.0%), Champaign (2.4%), Cook (1.6%), |
9 | | DuPage (1.7%), Effingham (1.2%), Grundy (4.9%), Johnson |
10 | | (5.8%), Kane (0.2%), Kendall (14.9%), Lake (1.5%), McHenry |
11 | | (0.5%), McLean (0.8%), Monroe (6.1%), Will (2.8%) and |
12 | | Williamson (5.8%) gained population from the 2010 Census; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, The 2020 Census population data shows Cook County |
14 | | had the state's largest population growth with 80,866 |
15 | | additional people from the 2010 Census; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, These 15 counties grew by a total population of |
17 | | 159,253 from 2010 Census; and |
18 | | WHEREAS, The 2020 Census population data shows that 87 |
19 | | Illinois counties lost a total population of 177,377 from the |
20 | | 2010 Census, with St. Clair County losing the highest number |
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1 | | of people, 12,656 or -4.7%, and Alexander County losing the |
2 | | greatest percentage of its population, -36.4% or 2,998 people; |
3 | | and |
4 | | WHEREAS, These 87 counties lost by a total population of |
5 | | 177,377 from 2010 Census; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, the House and Senate Redistricting Committees |
7 | | conducted 9 hearings to receive public input on the 2020 |
8 | | Census data and Public Act 102-10, including proposed |
9 | | adjustments, after the release of the 2020 Census Public Law |
10 | | 94-171 population data; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, Article IV, Section 1 of the Illinois |
12 | | Constitution of 1970 vests legislative power in the General |
13 | | Assembly, and the General Assembly may pass legislation, as |
14 | | provided in Article IV, Section 8, to amend the redistricting |
15 | | plan enacted in Public Act 102-10, or adopt a new |
16 | | redistricting plan; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois General Assembly has drafted an |
18 | | amendment to the General Assembly Redistricting Act of 2021 to |
19 | | adjust the plan for redistricting the Legislative Districts |
20 | | and the Representative Districts to incorporate the 2020 |
21 | | Census Public Law 94-171 population data (hereinafter, the |
22 | | plan as amended shall be referred to as "the 2021 General |
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1 | | Assembly Redistricting Plan"); therefore, be it
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2 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
3 | | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
4 | | in establishing boundaries for Illinois Legislative and |
5 | | Representative Districts ("Districts"), the following |
6 | | redistricting principles were taken into account: |
7 | | (i) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
8 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be |
9 | | substantially equal in population; |
10 | | (ii) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
11 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be |
12 | | consistent with the United States Constitution; |
13 | | (iii) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
14 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be |
15 | | consistent with the federal Voting Rights Act, where |
16 | | applicable; |
17 | | (iv) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
18 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be |
19 | | compact and contiguous, as required by the Illinois |
20 | | Constitution; |
21 | | (v) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
22 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be |
23 | | consistent with the Illinois Voting Rights Act of 2011 |
24 | | where applicable; and |
25 | | (vi) each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
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1 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn taking into |
2 | | account the partisan composition of the District and of |
3 | | the Plan itself; and be it further
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4 | | RESOLVED, That in addition to the foregoing redistricting |
5 | | principles, each of the Districts contained in the 2021 |
6 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to reflect a |
7 | | balance of the following redistricting principles: the |
8 | | preservation of the core or boundaries of the existing |
9 | | Districts; the preservation of communities of interest; |
10 | | respect for county, township, municipal, ward, and other |
11 | | political subdivision boundaries; the maintenance of |
12 | | incumbent-constituent relationships and tracking of population |
13 | | migration; proposals or other input submitted by members of |
14 | | the public and stakeholder groups; public hearing testimony; |
15 | | other incumbent requests; respect for geographic features and |
16 | | natural or logical boundaries; and other redistricting |
17 | | principles recognized by state and federal court decisions; |
18 | | and be it further |
19 | | RESOLVED, That the House used the 2020 Census Public Law |
20 | | 94-171 population data, election data, and public input to |
21 | | establish the boundaries for the 2021 General Assembly |
22 | | Redistricting Plan; and be it further |
23 | | RESOLVED, That the House hereby adopts and incorporates by |
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1 | | reference all information received by the House Redistricting |
2 | | Committee or the Senate Redistricting Committee that was |
3 | | submitted by the general public and stakeholders in person or |
4 | | remotely at the hearings; by e-mail; by U.S. mail; by |
5 | | facsimile; or via the public portal on the House and Senate |
6 | | Democratic redistricting websites; and be it further |
7 | | RESOLVED, That the House further adopts and incorporates |
8 | | by reference transcripts of proceedings for all of the |
9 | | redistricting hearings conducted by either the House or Senate |
10 | | or both; and be it further |
11 | | RESOLVED, That the Representative Districts proposed in |
12 | | the 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are substantially |
13 | | equal in population, with a total deviation of less than 0.5%; |
14 | | and be it further |
15 | | RESOLVED, That the Representative Districts proposed in |
16 | | the 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are as compact |
17 | | overall as the existing Representative Districts adopted in |
18 | | 2011; and be it further |
19 | | RESOLVED, That the Representative Districts proposed in |
20 | | the 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are contiguous; |
21 | | and be it further |
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1 | | RESOLVED, That the following summary describes the general |
2 | | characteristics of each Representative District and makes |
3 | | reference to some but not all of the redistricting principles |
4 | | that were considered in drawing that District. The term |
5 | | "proposed RD", followed by a number, will refer to the |
6 | | Representative District proposed in the 2021 General Assembly |
7 | | Redistricting Plan, as amended, and the term "current RD", |
8 | | followed by a number, will refer to the Representative |
9 | | District under the plan adopted in 2011:
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10 | | Cook County and Chicago: Over the past decade, suburban |
11 | | Cook County's population decreased, mostly in the western and |
12 | | southern suburbs. The population in the City of Chicago |
13 | | remained steady, mostly due to population gains in the city |
14 | | center and the northern areas. As a result, the City of Chicago |
15 | | continues to have the same number of representatives, but the |
16 | | district lines are altered to address rapidly changing areas |
17 | | with dense population and those areas that suffered population |
18 | | losses. The changing populations, demographics, and migration |
19 | | of residents within Cook County and the Collar Counties |
20 | | (DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will Counties) requires |
21 | | adjustments to the current map. These districts were drawn |
22 | | using the articulated redistricting principles, with emphasis |
23 | | on ensuring equal population, preserving the core of the |
24 | | current districts if possible, and political considerations. |
25 | | Chicago Lakefront: Representative Districts 5, 6, 25, and |
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1 | | 26 represent the area most notably along or near Lake |
2 | | Michigan. These districts collectively had significant |
3 | | population growth and as a result the boundaries have been |
4 | | altered to accommodate the growing population, shifts in the |
5 | | other districts, and for political purposes. The results of |
6 | | the 2020 Census revealed additional population growth beyond |
7 | | what was estimated in the 2015-2019 American Community Survey |
8 | | data, necessitating further reconfiguration of these |
9 | | districts. These districts have numerous communities of |
10 | | interest, including concerns about maintenance of the beaches |
11 | | and lakefront, pollution control, and maintaining the urban |
12 | | lifestyle of the communities. These districts generally have |
13 | | majority Black populations, with small but growing Hispanic |
14 | | and Asian populations. The communities in these districts tend |
15 | | to pool their political power and traditionally elect members |
16 | | of the Democratic party. |
17 | | The configuration of Representative District 5 as enacted |
18 | | in 2011 contained 130,516 people according to the 2020 Census. |
19 | | This was overpopulated by 21,935 people compared to target |
20 | | population. The configuration of RD 5 as enacted in Public Act |
21 | | 102-10 contained 124,836 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was overpopulated by 16,255 people. As amended, the |
23 | | district is substantially the same as the current RD 5, |
24 | | maintaining a majority of the current district and the core of |
25 | | the current district. The district includes cultural, |
26 | | economic, racial and ethnic communities of interest as it |
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1 | | stretches in a corridor from the Near North Side to the Loop, |
2 | | Near South Side, Douglas, Grand Boulevard, Washington Park, |
3 | | Woodlawn, and Greater Grand Crossing. Like the current |
4 | | district, the proposed district maintains its high transit |
5 | | availability according to the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for |
6 | | Planning (CMAP). It includes numerous higher education |
7 | | institutions, including Columbia College, Roosevelt |
8 | | University, and DePaul University's Wintrust Arena, and |
9 | | provides ample transit for other institutions of higher |
10 | | education that are within one mile, including Illinois College |
11 | | of Optometry. It also includes some of the most prominent art |
12 | | and cultural attractions, including The Art Institute of |
13 | | Chicago, The Museum of Contemporary Photography, the Chicago |
14 | | Symphony Orchestra, and Cloud Gate, popularly known as "The |
15 | | Bean." Despite being a highly urban district, proposed RD 5 |
16 | | contains a large amount of green, open, or recreational space. |
17 | | It also contains Mercy Hospital and St. Bernard Hospital, both |
18 | | of which are safety net hospitals serving as a vital source of |
19 | | care for low-income and uninsured Illinoisans. |
20 | | The total population of RD 5 is 108,665. The voting age |
21 | | population is 51.13% African American, 10.27% Asian, 5.00% |
22 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
23 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
24 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
25 | | 53.42% African American. |
26 | | Representative District 6 has gained 8,546 people over the |
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1 | | past decade. This growth was underestimated in the American |
2 | | Community Survey, as the district as reconfigured under Public |
3 | | Act 102-10 was 10,477 people above the 2020 Census target |
4 | | population. To bring the population closer to the 2020 Census |
5 | | target population, the district boundaries from Public Act |
6 | | 102-10 were changed by moving the district's northern border |
7 | | slightly south, removing some of the most densely populated |
8 | | sections of downtown Chicago. |
9 | | As amended, the district is substantially the same as the |
10 | | current RD 6, maintaining the core of the current district and |
11 | | the majority of its population. Proposed RD 6, like current RD |
12 | | 6, is an urban district with cultural, economic, and ethnic |
13 | | diversity that stretches in a corridor from the Near North |
14 | | Side to the Loop, Near South Side, Douglas, Armour Square, New |
15 | | City, Gage Park, Chicago Lawn, West Englewood, Englewood, and |
16 | | Greater Grand Crossing. The proposed district continues to |
17 | | include the many higher education opportunities and cultural |
18 | | institutions, including Illinois Institute of Technology, the |
19 | | VanderCook College of Music, Guaranteed Rate Field, and the |
20 | | Harold Washington Library Center. It also contains primary |
21 | | offices for federal, State, and local governments, including |
22 | | Chicago City Hall, the George W. Dunne Cook County Office |
23 | | Building, the James R. Thompson Center, the Richard J. Daley |
24 | | Center, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. The proposed |
25 | | district would also largely keep Chicago's historic Financial |
26 | | District intact. |
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1 | | The total population of RD 6 is 108,689. The voting age |
2 | | population is 45.37% African American, 6.80% Asian, 26.19% |
3 | | Hispanic. Over the past decade, this region has experienced |
4 | | significant population growth and gentrification. Including |
5 | | individuals who identify as multiple races, the voting age |
6 | | population is 47.41% African American. |
7 | | The configuration of Representative District 25 as enacted |
8 | | in 2011 contained 112,221 people according to the 2020 Census. |
9 | | This was overpopulated by 3,640 people compared to target |
10 | | population. The configuration of RD 25 as enacted in Public |
11 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,487 people according to the 2020 |
12 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 94 people. The proposed |
13 | | district contains a majority of the current district and |
14 | | retains the core of the current district's population, |
15 | | including its many cultural, economic, religious and ethnic |
16 | | communities of interest. The proposed district splits fewer |
17 | | current wards than the current district, but continues to |
18 | | include major medical, educational, and cultural institutions |
19 | | such as portions of the University of Chicago campus, La |
20 | | Rabida Children's Hospital, the Museum of Science and |
21 | | Industry, the Frederick C. Robie House, the Smart Museum of |
22 | | Art, and numerous theological seminaries. |
23 | | The total population of RD 25 is 108,487. The voting age |
24 | | population is 53.63% African American, 6.49% Asian, 18.15% |
25 | | Hispanic. |
26 | | The configuration of Representative District 26 as enacted |
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1 | | in 2011 contained 121,318 people according to the 2020 Census. |
2 | | This was overpopulated by 12,737 people compared to target |
3 | | population. The configuration of RD 26 as enacted in Public |
4 | | Act 102-10 contained 113,480 people according to the 2020 |
5 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 4,899 people. The proposed |
6 | | district contains a majority of the current district |
7 | | population, with changes made to accommodate the growth of the |
8 | | district and population changes in other districts. The |
9 | | proposed district splits fewer wards than the current |
10 | | district, but keeps intact the cultural, economic, racial, and |
11 | | ethnic diversity. The district continues to house some of the |
12 | | most famous open spaces and parks, cultural institutions, and |
13 | | attractions in Chicago, including the University of Chicago, |
14 | | Grant Park, Navy Pier, McCormick Place, Adler Planetarium, the |
15 | | DuSable Museum of African American History, Burnham Harbor, |
16 | | Northerly Island, Burnham Park, and Washington Park. |
17 | | The total population of RD 26 is 108,741. The voting age |
18 | | population is 46.08% African American, 10.85% Asian, 5.51% |
19 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
20 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
21 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
22 | | 48.26% African American. |
23 | | The House Redistricting Committee received testimony |
24 | | requesting that the General Assembly increase the African |
25 | | American population in RD 26 and move the northern boundary of |
26 | | the district farther south, when compared to the district |
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1 | | under Public Act 100-0010. The requested change was not |
2 | | accommodated because this would disrupt a number of |
3 | | historically African American districts and potentially pair |
4 | | multiple incumbent Democratic legislators. Additionally, |
5 | | extending further south would cause at least one south side |
6 | | district to fracture into Iroquois County, creating districts |
7 | | with more rural population alongside city and suburban-based |
8 | | population. Although the district does not contain a majority |
9 | | African American voting age population, the district remains |
10 | | one in which African American voters have an equal opportunity |
11 | | to elect a candidate of their choice. |
12 | | Chicago Southwest and Southwest Suburbs: Representative |
13 | | Districts 1, 2, 21, 22, 23, and 24 represent the Southwest side |
14 | | of the City of Chicago and southwest suburban Cook County. |
15 | | These districts experienced population declines. The proposed |
16 | | districts were established following the redistricting |
17 | | principles and all share commonalities, including a |
18 | | significant Latino population and a majority who traditionally |
19 | | elects members of the Democratic party. These districts |
20 | | represent many blue-collar, working class families. |
21 | | Some participants at public hearings of the House |
22 | | Redistricting Committee suggested changes to the region and |
23 | | the possibility of creating a new majority-Hispanic district. |
24 | | While the General Assembly cannot, and should not, create a |
25 | | district solely for race-based reasons, the request was |
26 | | considered. Any such configuration would have a major impact |
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1 | | on neighboring districts and create a ripple effect throughout |
2 | | the redistricting plan. The most probable proposal submitted |
3 | | to create a new district did so by fracturing Chicago's Little |
4 | | Village neighborhood. That change would have a dramatic effect |
5 | | on the redistricting plan as a whole and require substantial |
6 | | changes to other districts. As a result, other communities of |
7 | | interest would need to be fractured, and many of the |
8 | | redistricting principles used when creating the plan would |
9 | | have to be wholly ignored or altered to the detriment of other |
10 | | principles taken into consideration for the entire |
11 | | redistricting plan. The request to fracture Little Village was |
12 | | taken into consideration, as well as the request to keep |
13 | | Little Village intact, and located in one district, to |
14 | | maximize the voting power and this community of interest. In |
15 | | reviewing the possibilities, it was also clear that in order |
16 | | to achieve population targets, a reconfigured district |
17 | | extending north would cut into multiple districts, including |
18 | | several that provide representation opportunities for |
19 | | African-American communities, and result in the pairing of two |
20 | | or more incumbents. These adjustments would also likely cause |
21 | | disruption to the south, forcing these districts further south |
22 | | and fracturing other communities of interest. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 1 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 109,593 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was overpopulated by 1,012 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 1 as enacted in Public Act |
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1 | | 102-10 contained 113,224 people according to the 2020 Census. |
2 | | This was overpopulated by 4,643 people. The core of the |
3 | | proposed RD 1 is substantially similar to the current RD 1. The |
4 | | district adds portions of current RDs 2, 6, 21, and 22, and |
5 | | represents the neighborhoods of Archer Heights, West Elsdon, |
6 | | Garfield Ridge, Archer Limits, Gage Park, Chicago Lawn and |
7 | | LeClaire Courts. The proposed district includes more of the |
8 | | 14th Ward. The communities of proposed RD 1 have many |
9 | | commonalities, including being tied together by the |
10 | | transportation industry. RD 1 continues to maintain clearly |
11 | | defined borders with permanent fixtures, such as railroad |
12 | | lines and expressways. The total population for RD 1 is |
13 | | 108,580. It has a voting age population that is 5.56% African |
14 | | American, 3.59% Asian, and 75.95% Hispanic. |
15 | | Representative District 2, renumbered from the current RD |
16 | | 24, was overpopulated by 2,034 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 2 as enacted in Public Act |
18 | | 102-10 contained 112,075 people according to the 2020 Census. |
19 | | This was overpopulated by 3,494 people. The core of the |
20 | | proposed RD 2 is substantially similar to the current RD 2. The |
21 | | proposed district adds portions of current RDs 8, 21, 23, and |
22 | | 24. Proposed RD 2 includes most of Cicero, all of Stickney, all |
23 | | of Lyons, and significant portions of Berwyn, Riverside, and |
24 | | Brookfield. These municipalities have similar demographics, |
25 | | with predominant or growing Hispanic populations, and many |
26 | | commonalities, including shared school districts. During the |
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1 | | Berwyn/Cicero hearing on April 3, 2021 of the House |
2 | | Redistricting Committee, the Mexican American Legal Defense |
3 | | and Educational Fund commented that they wished that this |
4 | | district maintained a strong Hispanic voting age population. |
5 | | It was a political priority to ensure these communities have |
6 | | an opportunity to elect the candidate of their choice. The |
7 | | district is renumbered and paired with a different Legislative |
8 | | District for purposes of maintaining communities of interest |
9 | | and the political power of the region. The proposed district |
10 | | moved west out of the 22nd Ward in Chicago - including losing |
11 | | parts of the neighborhood known as "Little Village" - and |
12 | | entirely into suburban Cook County in an effort to meet the |
13 | | intentions of the incumbent State representative who wished to |
14 | | represent more of Cicero. While Cicero is split into the same |
15 | | number of districts as the 2011 plan, more of the population is |
16 | | now consolidated into the proposed RD 2. The total population |
17 | | of RD 2 is 108,632. The voting age population is 3.44% African |
18 | | American, 1.23% Asian, 64.57% Hispanic. |
19 | | Representative District 21, which was current RD 23, was |
20 | | overpopulated by 1,123 people compared to target population. |
21 | | The configuration of RD 21 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 |
22 | | contained 110,895 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
23 | | was overpopulated by 2,314 people. Changes to the district are |
24 | | due in large part to those population shifts and changes in |
25 | | neighboring districts. The district is renumbered and paired |
26 | | with a different Legislative District for purposes of |
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1 | | maintaining communities of interest and the political |
2 | | composition of the region. The core of the proposed RD 21 is |
3 | | substantially similar to the current RD 23. Proposed RD 21 |
4 | | contains suburban Cook County communities west of Chicago, |
5 | | including portions of Bridgeview, Justice, Summit, McCook, La |
6 | | Grange, Brookfield, Riverside, North Riverside, Berwyn and |
7 | | Cicero. These communities share many commonalities, including |
8 | | school districts, several major roadways and key intersections |
9 | | that serve as major transportation and freight corridors |
10 | | connecting the communities throughout the region. These |
11 | | municipalities have similar demographics, with predominant or |
12 | | growing Hispanic populations, and many other commonalities, |
13 | | including shared school districts. The district has a majority |
14 | | Latino population, and as suggested by the Latino Policy Forum |
15 | | at a hearing of the House Redistricting Committee, this will |
16 | | provide opportunities for the Latino community to elect |
17 | | candidates of their choice. The total population of RD 21 is |
18 | | 108,781. The voting age population is 6.43% African American, |
19 | | 2.32% Asian, 51.74% Hispanic. |
20 | | The configuration of Representative District 22 as enacted |
21 | | in 2011 contained 110,338 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was overpopulated by 1,757 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 22 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,518 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 63 people. The core of the |
26 | | proposed RD 22 is substantially similar to the current RD 22. |
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1 | | The district contains the majority of Chicago's Garfield |
2 | | Ridge, all of Clearing, Chrysler Village, and West Elsdon |
3 | | neighborhoods, and smaller portions of the West Lawn and |
4 | | Archer Heights neighborhoods, along with suburban Burbank. The |
5 | | district includes the entirety of Chicago's 13th Ward, and |
6 | | portions of Wards 14, 18, and 23. This proposed district |
7 | | includes Midway Airport, which many witnesses described as the |
8 | | central hub of a community of interest. Witnesses cited the |
9 | | area's shared interest in soundproofing and the economic |
10 | | development surrounding the airport. |
11 | | The total population of RD 22 is 108,518. The voting age |
12 | | population is 1.92% African American, 1.55% Asian, 62.79% |
13 | | Hispanic. |
14 | | Representative District 23, which is current RD 21, was |
15 | | underpopulated by 6,417 people compared to target population. |
16 | | The configuration of RD 23 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 |
17 | | contained 109,696 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
18 | | was overpopulated by 1,115 people. Changes in neighboring |
19 | | districts. The district is renumbered and paired with a |
20 | | different Legislative District for purposes of maintaining |
21 | | communities of interest and the political power of the region. |
22 | | As amended, the district is substantially the same as the |
23 | | current RD 21, maintaining the core of the district. Proposed |
24 | | RD 21 is more compact than current RD 23. Boundaries of |
25 | | neighborhoods have shifted over the past 10 years, and the new |
26 | | lines reflect those shifting patterns. Plus, the district more |
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1 | | accurately reflects the socioeconomic and political priorities |
2 | | of the community, including a significant Democratic |
3 | | progressive population. The "26th Street Corridor", a |
4 | | lucrative economic entity, is in the district to benefit the |
5 | | surrounding community in District 23. At the request of |
6 | | community groups, the proposed district includes the entirety |
7 | | of the population of Little Village, which was previously |
8 | | split into multiple districts, to respect a significant |
9 | | community of interest. The demographics of the district |
10 | | continue to be largely Latino with varying ethnic groups and |
11 | | migration patterns accounted for in the composition, including |
12 | | the movement in the Mexican American community from Chicago's |
13 | | Pilsen community to Cicero. The total population of RD 23 is |
14 | | 108,507. The voting age population is 7.05% African American, |
15 | | 3.33% Asian, 84.44% Hispanic. |
16 | | Representative District 24, which is the current RD 2, |
17 | | lost over 1,000 in population. The configuration of RD 24 as |
18 | | enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 107,419 people |
19 | | according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 1,162 |
20 | | people. Changes to district are due in large part to |
21 | | population shifts in this and neighboring districts. The |
22 | | district is entirely within the City of Chicago and includes |
23 | | most of the population of current RD 2, plus portions of |
24 | | current RDs 6, 9, and 21. The core of the proposed RD 24 is |
25 | | substantially similar to the current RD 2. Like the current |
26 | | district, RD 24 unites Chinatown, and includes more of the |
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1 | | surrounding areas that coalesce around the Chinatown |
2 | | community. The district contains communities of interest |
3 | | connected to Chinatown, including Coalition For A Better |
4 | | Chinese American Community (CBCAC) and the Chicago Chinatown |
5 | | Chamber of Commerce. The district is renumbered and paired |
6 | | with a different Legislative District for purposes of |
7 | | maintaining communities of interest and the political power of |
8 | | the region. |
9 | | The total population of RD 24 is 108,608. The voting age |
10 | | population is 3.49% African American, 26.93% Asian, 48.50% |
11 | | Hispanic. |
12 | | Chicago Northern Shore: Representative Districts 11, 12, |
13 | | 13, and 14 represent the northern shore of the City of Chicago. |
14 | | These districts experienced significant population gain. As a |
15 | | result each of these districts were altered to reflect |
16 | | increases in population, changes to neighboring districts, and |
17 | | preservation of communities of interest. These districts |
18 | | traditionally elect members of the Democratic party, and |
19 | | partisan advantage was considered. The changes to these |
20 | | districts also make the districts more compact. |
21 | | The configuration of Representative District 11 as enacted |
22 | | in 2011 contained 119,492 people according to the 2020 Census. |
23 | | This was overpopulated by 10,911 people compared to target |
24 | | population. The configuration of RD 11 as enacted in Public |
25 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,644 people according to the 2020 |
26 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 63 people. As amended, the |
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1 | | district is substantially the same as the current RD 11, |
2 | | maintaining the core of the district and a majority of the |
3 | | current district's population. The district includes |
4 | | Ravenswood Gardens, unites large portions of Lake View, and |
5 | | keeps most of Roscoe Village. In following population |
6 | | migration district now includes parts of Wrigleyville, which |
7 | | is an important economic driver for the area in tourism and |
8 | | entertainment. |
9 | | The total population of RD 11 is 108,793. The voting age |
10 | | population is 3.51% African American, 6.99% Asian, 9.43% |
11 | | Hispanic. |
12 | | The configuration of Representative District 12 as enacted |
13 | | in 2011 contained 118,591 people according to the 2020 Census. |
14 | | This was overpopulated by 10,010 people compared to target |
15 | | population. The configuration of RD 12 as enacted in Public |
16 | | Act 102-10 contained 111,326 people according to the 2020 |
17 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,745 people. As amended, |
18 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 12, |
19 | | maintaining a majority of the district and preserving its |
20 | | core. The proposed district includes the vast majority of |
21 | | Boystown, Lakeview East, and Park West neighborhoods along |
22 | | with large parts of Lincoln Park and Near Northside. |
23 | | The total population of RD 12 is 108,656. The voting age |
24 | | population is 4.62% African American, 8.23% Asian, 6.45% |
25 | | Hispanic. |
26 | | The configuration of Representative District 13 as enacted |
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1 | | in 2011 contained 110,128 people according to the 2020 Census. |
2 | | This was overpopulated by 1,547 people compared to target |
3 | | population. The configuration of RD 13 as enacted in Public |
4 | | Act 102-10 contained 103,708 people according to the 2020 |
5 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 4,873 people. As amended, |
6 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 13, |
7 | | maintaining a majority of the current population of RD 13 as |
8 | | well as the core of the current district. Proposed RD 13 is |
9 | | made up of the neighborhoods Uptown, Sheridan Park, Winnemac, |
10 | | Ravenswood, Arcadia Terrace, Wolcott Gardens, West Edgewater, |
11 | | and Lincoln Square keeping these communities unified. |
12 | | The total population of RD 13 is 108,814. The voting age |
13 | | population is 10.91% African American, 10.26% Asian, 14.24% |
14 | | Hispanic. |
15 | | The configuration of Representative District 14 as enacted |
16 | | in 2011 contained 110,058 people according to the 2020 Census. |
17 | | This was overpopulated by 1,477 people compared to target |
18 | | population. The configuration of RD 14 as enacted in Public |
19 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,823 people according to the 2020 |
20 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 758 people. As amended, the |
21 | | district is substantially the same as the current RD 14, |
22 | | maintaining the core of the district and the majority of its |
23 | | current population. In addition to preserving many of the |
24 | | communities of interest, the proposed district brings together |
25 | | communities of interest by keeping together the vast majority |
26 | | of Rogers Park and Edgwater. |
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1 | | The total population of RD 14 is 108,411. The voting age |
2 | | population is 18.53% African American, 10.23% Asian, 16.96% |
3 | | Hispanic. |
4 | | Northside: Representative Districts 3, 4, 19, 20, 39, and |
5 | | 40 represent the northern parts of the City of Chicago, with |
6 | | some parts of neighboring suburbs. These districts experienced |
7 | | significant population shifts, arguably due to increasing |
8 | | gentrification of the area, and as a result the districts are |
9 | | altered to reflect the population and changes in neighboring |
10 | | districts. The shifting demographics of the area significantly |
11 | | impact these districts, and attempts have been made to |
12 | | maintain the communities of interest currently served by the |
13 | | districts. This area contains various cultural, racial, and |
14 | | ethnic communities of interest, and the districts were drafted |
15 | | with the goal of preserving as many of these communities of |
16 | | interest as possible. The current districts' cores are |
17 | | preserved, but the population shifts and migration patterns of |
18 | | the population result in changes to the borders of the |
19 | | district. The proposed districts follow the redistricting |
20 | | principles and all share commonalities, including a population |
21 | | that traditionally elects members of the Democratic party. |
22 | | The configuration of Representative District 3 as enacted |
23 | | in 2011 contained 108,018 people according to the 2020 Census. |
24 | | This was underpopulated by 563 people compared to target |
25 | | population. The configuration of RD 3 as enacted in Public Act |
26 | | 102-10 contained 105,132 people according to the 2020 Census. |
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1 | | This was underpopulated by 3,449 people. The majority of the |
2 | | proposed RD 3 is similar to the current RD 3. The district is |
3 | | majority Latino, but that was not the primary consideration |
4 | | when drawing the district. The incumbent preservation and the |
5 | | residence of the incumbent was a factor in adjustments to this |
6 | | district, as well as the ability to increase the partisan |
7 | | advantage. |
8 | | The total population of RD 3 is 108,636. The voting age |
9 | | population is 4.01% African American, 3.98% Asian, 54.13% |
10 | | Hispanic. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 4 as enacted |
12 | | in 2011 contained 107,602 people according to the 2020 Census. |
13 | | This was underpopulated by 979 people compared to target |
14 | | population. The configuration of RD 4 as enacted in Public Act |
15 | | 102-10 contained 109,899 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was overpopulated by 1,318 people. The majority of the |
17 | | proposed RD 4 is within the current RD 4. As requested during |
18 | | testimony before the House Redistricting Committee, the |
19 | | district maintains a majority of Chicago Grand Neighbors |
20 | | Association boundaries, and the boundaries of Talacott and |
21 | | Wolcott school boundaries. Important to the area and the |
22 | | incumbent, the district maintains the corridor along Division |
23 | | Street from Western to Kostner, which is the historical, |
24 | | cultural and economic center of the Puerto Rican community. At |
25 | | the request of witnesses attending House hearings, the |
26 | | district aligns more of the Puerto Rican community to maximize |
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1 | | their political power. The district is majority Latino, but |
2 | | that was not the primary consideration when drawing the |
3 | | district. At a public hearing it was stated that the proposed |
4 | | district follows the migration patterns of the Puerto Rican |
5 | | community. The residence of the incumbent was a factor in |
6 | | adjustments to this district, as well as the ability to |
7 | | increase the partisan advantage. |
8 | | The total population of RD 4 is 108,533. The voting age |
9 | | population is 11.99% African American, 2.66% Asian, 52.65% |
10 | | Hispanic. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 19 as enacted |
12 | | in 2011 contained 111,140 people according to the 2020 Census. |
13 | | This was overpopulated by 2,559 people compared to target |
14 | | population. The configuration of RD 19 as enacted in Public |
15 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,275 people according to the 2020 |
16 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 2,306 people. As amended, |
17 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 19, |
18 | | maintaining the core of the district and its population, with |
19 | | alterations to accommodate the growth of the region and |
20 | | population changes in other nearby districts. The district is |
21 | | more compact and fractures fewer townships and neighborhoods |
22 | | when compared to the current district. The district contains |
23 | | parts or all of several of Chicago's northwest side |
24 | | neighborhoods, including Jefferson Park, Dunning, Portage |
25 | | Park, and Albany Park. The reconfigured district brings large |
26 | | segments of Old Irving Park into the district to connect it |
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1 | | with neighboring community areas. |
2 | | The total population of RD 19 is 108,549. The voting age |
3 | | population is 2.26% African American, 8.36% Asian, 27.32% |
4 | | Hispanic. |
5 | | The configuration of Representative District 20 as enacted |
6 | | in 2011 contained 112,289 people according to the 2020 Census. |
7 | | This was overpopulated by 3,708 people compared to target |
8 | | population. The configuration of RD 20 as enacted in Public |
9 | | Act 102-10 contained 111,497 people according to the 2020 |
10 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,916 people. As amended, |
11 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 20, |
12 | | maintaining the core of the district and most of its current |
13 | | population. The district includes the 29th, 38th and 41st |
14 | | wards of the City of Chicago, all of Schiller Park and |
15 | | Norridge, most of Rosemont, and portions of River Grove, and |
16 | | Harwood Heights. The proposed district unites most of |
17 | | Rosemont, which allows a partisan advantage to other |
18 | | neighboring districts, and moves the casino located in Des |
19 | | Plaines to a district that includes a majority of Des Plaines |
20 | | (RD 55). |
21 | | The total population of RD 20 is 108,620. The voting age |
22 | | population is 1.09% African American, 5.02% Asian, 19.02% |
23 | | Hispanic. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 39 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 105,519 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was underpopulated by 3,062 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 39 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,336 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 755 people. As amended, the |
4 | | district is substantially the same as the current RD 39, |
5 | | maintaining the core of the district and its population, and |
6 | | includes significant portions of Portage Park, Belmont Cragin, |
7 | | Hermosa, Avondale, and Logan Square. It also maintains the |
8 | | vibrant business district along Milwaukee Avenue and unites it |
9 | | with another growing business district on Elston in RD 40 |
10 | | utilized by the constituents of the proposed RD 39. |
11 | | The total population of RD 39 is 108,434. The voting age |
12 | | population is 3.20% African American, 4.06% Asian, 51.61% |
13 | | Hispanic. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 40 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 103,081 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was underpopulated by 5,500 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 40 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 102,621 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 5,960 people. As amended, |
20 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 40, |
21 | | maintaining the core of the district and most of its |
22 | | population. The district includes communities in the Lincoln |
23 | | Park, Logan Square, North Center, Avondale, Irving Park, and |
24 | | Albany Park community areas of Chicago. It also preserves most |
25 | | of the Albany Park neighborhood, which has one of the highest |
26 | | foreign-born populations in the city and is the third most |
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1 | | diverse zip code in the country with more than languages |
2 | | spoken in the area's public schools. Many parts of this |
3 | | district have also experienced significant gentrification over |
4 | | the past decade. This area has experienced significant |
5 | | gentrification and demographic changes over the past decade. |
6 | | Residents are from regions of Central America, South America, |
7 | | Eastern Europe, India, Southeast Asia, and Eastern Asia. |
8 | | Albany Park residents with roots in Korea and other parts of |
9 | | Asia have shared cultural and social similarities and |
10 | | contributed to the redevelopment of Lawrence Avenue into a |
11 | | commercial corridor. This community of interest along Lawrence |
12 | | Avenue within the Albany Park neighborhood has been preserved. |
13 | | The total population of RD 40 is 108,660. The voting age |
14 | | population is 4.00% African American, 9.54% Asian, 42.76% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | Chicago West Side and West Suburbs: The districts located |
17 | | in Chicago's west side and western suburbs share many |
18 | | commonalities, including an overall loss of population. The |
19 | | 9th and 10th Representative Districts were affected by large |
20 | | population growth in the Chicago Loop area -- growth that |
21 | | exceeded the estimates of the American Community Survey and |
22 | | necessitated reconfiguration. Population migration patterns |
23 | | and gentrification in many parts of the west side have |
24 | | contributed to changes in the region. As a result, the current |
25 | | districts have been altered for population and considerations |
26 | | of communities of interest, politics, incumbent protection, |
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1 | | and maintaining minority opportunities to elect candidates of |
2 | | their choice. |
3 | | The configuration of Representative District 7 as enacted |
4 | | in 2011 contained 109,744 people according to the 2020 Census. |
5 | | This was underpopulated by 1,163 people compared to ideal |
6 | | population. The configuration of RD 7 as enacted in Public Act |
7 | | 102-10 contained 108,285 people according to the 2020 Census. |
8 | | This was underpopulated by 296 people. The current district is |
9 | | entirely within the Cook County suburbs, but to accommodate |
10 | | the population shifts and neighboring districts, the proposed |
11 | | district retains the core of the current district and adds a |
12 | | new population from DuPage County. The district contains all |
13 | | or parts of the following municipalities: Melrose Park, |
14 | | Maywood, Forest Park, River Forest, Broadview, Bellwood, |
15 | | Hillside, Berkeley, Northlake, Elmhurst, Oak Brook, |
16 | | Westchester, La Grange Park, and Western Springs. The |
17 | | communities have much in common, namely that nearly every |
18 | | community consists primarily of owner-occupied single-family |
19 | | homes. |
20 | | Like the current district, no single minority group |
21 | | represents a majority of the voting age population, but |
22 | | collectively the district has a majority minority population. |
23 | | The total population of RD 7 is 108,592. The voting age |
24 | | population is 42.33% African American, 3.21% Asian, 22.49% |
25 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
26 | | races, the voting age population is 44.05% African American. |
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1 | | The configuration of Representative District 8 as enacted |
2 | | in 2011 contained 109,504 people according to the 2020 Census. |
3 | | This was overpopulated by 923 people compared to target |
4 | | population. The configuration of RD 8 as enacted in Public Act |
5 | | 102-10 contained 110,811 people according to the 2020 Census. |
6 | | This was overpopulated by 2,230 people. RD 8 contains the |
7 | | majority of the current district and contains portions of |
8 | | Chicago, Oak Park, Cicero, Berwyn, Forest Park, North |
9 | | Riverside, Broadview, La Grange Park, La Grange, Western |
10 | | Springs, Indian Head Park, Countryside, and Hodgkins. To |
11 | | accommodate for the population gain and neighboring population |
12 | | loss, Brookfield is moved into another district and RD 8 adds |
13 | | population from other communities that are parts of the |
14 | | townships currently included in RD 8. The changes keep |
15 | | together more of the population encompassed by local high |
16 | | school districts. |
17 | | The total population of RD 8 is 108,552. The voting age |
18 | | population is 49.51% African American, 1.36% Asian, 15.11% |
19 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
20 | | races, the voting age population is 51.26% African American. |
21 | | The configuration of Representative District 9 as enacted |
22 | | in 2011 contained 120,173 people according to the 2020 Census. |
23 | | The configuration of RD 9 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 |
24 | | contained 114,253 people according to the 2020 Census, which |
25 | | is 5,672 above the target population. To bring the district |
26 | | closer to target population, the boundaries as enacted in |
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1 | | Public Act 102-10 were changed by receding in northern parts |
2 | | of the district and shifting boundaries with RD 10 to |
3 | | accommodate regional changes. |
4 | | The proposed RD 9 retains the core of the current |
5 | | population. The district is located entirely within Chicago |
6 | | and includes Sheffield Neighbors, Ranch Triangle, Goose |
7 | | Island, River West, Fulton River District, West Loop, |
8 | | Greektown, Little Italy, Illinois Medical District, Tri |
9 | | Taylor, Douglas Park, North Lawndale, and Homan Square. The |
10 | | area has undergone tremendous changes over the past decade, |
11 | | arguably due to gentrification and population shifts. The |
12 | | district was drawn to maintain as much of the core as possible, |
13 | | including retaining North Lawndale and the Illinois Medical |
14 | | District, one of the largest medical districts in the United |
15 | | States with the John H. Stroger Hospital of Cook County, Rush |
16 | | University Medical Center, University of Illinois College of |
17 | | Medicine, and the Jesse Brown VA Medical Center. |
18 | | The total population of RD 9 is 108,687. The voting age |
19 | | population is 40.54% African American, 12.81% Asian, 9.32% |
20 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
21 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
22 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
23 | | 42.30% African American. |
24 | | The House Redistricting Committee received testimony from |
25 | | multiple witnesses requesting that RD 9 be drawn to be over 50% |
26 | | African American voting age population while maintaining the |
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1 | | core of the district. Such a configuration could require |
2 | | significantly under populating the district. Alternatively, |
3 | | this would require African American population from other |
4 | | nearby districts, such as RDs 8 and 78, to be integrated into |
5 | | RD 9, reducing the opportunity of African-American voters of |
6 | | those districts to elect the candidate of their choice and the |
7 | | political compositions of those and other districts. Such |
8 | | reconfiguration would also result in multiple Chicago |
9 | | districts breaking the border with DuPage County. Although the |
10 | | district does not contain a majority African American voting |
11 | | age population, the district remains one in which African |
12 | | American voters have an equal opportunity to elect a candidate |
13 | | of their choice. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 10 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 114,021 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was overpopulated by 5,440 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 10 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 116,532 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was over/underpopulated by 7,951 people. As |
20 | | amended, the district is substantially the same as the current |
21 | | RD 10, maintaining the core of the district as well as the |
22 | | majority of its population. The district is located entirely |
23 | | within Chicago and includes Bucktown, Wicker Park, Sheffield |
24 | | Neighbors, Ranch Triangle, Pulaski Park, Noble Square, West |
25 | | Town, West Jackson Boulevard District, Garfield Park, and |
26 | | Fifth City. The proposed district takes a portion of the 27th |
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1 | | Ward from RD 9 and moves it into RD 10 to consolidate more of |
2 | | the ward. The area has undergone tremendous changes over the |
3 | | past decade, arguably due to gentrification and population |
4 | | shifts. |
5 | | The total population of RD 10 is 108,647. The voting age |
6 | | population is 38.96% African American, 4.86% Asian, 11.41% |
7 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
8 | | races, the voting age population is 40.77% African American. |
9 | | As with RD 9, the House Redistricting Committee received |
10 | | testimony advocating for RD 10 to be drawn to have a majority |
11 | | African American voting age population. Such a configuration |
12 | | would require significantly underpopulating the district or |
13 | | incorporating African American population from other nearby |
14 | | districts, such as RDs 8, 9, and 78, threatening the |
15 | | opportunity of African American voters of those districts to |
16 | | elect the candidate of their choice and the political |
17 | | compositions of those and other districts. Although the |
18 | | district does not contain a majority African American voting |
19 | | age population, the district has a majority minority voting |
20 | | age population and a plurality of African Americans. The |
21 | | African American population is likely large enough to be able |
22 | | to elect a candidate of their choice. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 77 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 106,369 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was underpopulated by 2,212 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 77 as enacted in Public |
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1 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,809 people according to the 2020 |
2 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 228 people. As amended, the |
3 | | district is substantially the same as the current RD 77, |
4 | | maintaining the core of the district and most of its |
5 | | population. The district contains parts of Bensenville, Stone |
6 | | Park, and Addison, plus the majority of Northlake, Franklin |
7 | | Park and Melrose Park. RD 77 includes the geographic footprint |
8 | | of O'Hare Airport, and the communities within the district are |
9 | | tied economically to O'Hare Airport and the extensive network |
10 | | of freight train lines and roadways that run through the area. |
11 | | The total population of RD 77 is 108,704. The voting age |
12 | | population is 3.05% African American, 3.51% Asian, 52.73% |
13 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
14 | | races, the voting age population is 3.99% African American. |
15 | | The configuration of Representative District 78 as enacted |
16 | | in 2011 contained 110,394 people according to the 2020 Census. |
17 | | This was overpopulated by 1,813 people compared to target |
18 | | population. The configuration of RD 78 as enacted in Public |
19 | | Act 102-10 contained 114,451 people according to the 2020 |
20 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 5,870 people. The core of |
21 | | the district remains the west side of Chicago in the Austin |
22 | | neighborhood and west suburban communities of Oak Park, |
23 | | Elmwood Park, and River Grove. As amended, the district is |
24 | | substantially the same as the current RD 78, maintaining the |
25 | | core of the district and its population. The major change is |
26 | | that a majority of Oak Park is united with a majority of River |
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1 | | Forest. Unifying the majority of Oak Park and River Forest |
2 | | preserves High School District (HSD) 209, the main high school |
3 | | district that serves this area. The western end of the |
4 | | district extends to pick up Triton Community College. This is |
5 | | an important connection, as many students from HSD 209 |
6 | | continue their education at Triton Community College, creating |
7 | | a unified education community in one Representative District. |
8 | | There are several small cultural institutions, such as |
9 | | museums, that remain in one district. |
10 | | The total population of RD 78 is 108,415. The voting age |
11 | | population is 30.75% African American, 4.38% Asian, 14.76% |
12 | | Hispanic. |
13 | | Chicago South Side and South Suburbs: The districts in |
14 | | Chicago's South Side and south suburbs sustained some of the |
15 | | heaviest population loss in northern Illinois. While Chicago's |
16 | | population overall remained steady over a ten-year period, |
17 | | significant growth in the Loop and north shore areas mask |
18 | | population loss on the south side. An overall population loss |
19 | | in Cook County was also largely concentrated in the |
20 | | southlands. |
21 | | The configuration of Representative District 27 as enacted |
22 | | in 2011 contained 103,321 people according to the 2020 Census. |
23 | | This was underpopulated by 5,260 people compared to target |
24 | | population. The configuration of RD 27 as enacted in Public |
25 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,878 people according to the 2020 |
26 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 703 people, with changes to |
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1 | | accommodate population shifts in the district and neighboring |
2 | | districts. RD 27 consists of portions of Chicago's Roseland, |
3 | | Morgan Park, and Washington Heights neighborhoods, along with |
4 | | Blue Island, Alsip, Crestwood, Oak Forest, Orland Park, Tinley |
5 | | Park, Homer Glen, and Orland Hills. RD 27 also goes slightly |
6 | | into Will County in areas similar to the bordering communities |
7 | | in Cook County. |
8 | | The total population of RD 27 is 108,605. The voting age |
9 | | population is 51.82% African American, 1.82% Asian, 6.49% |
10 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
11 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
12 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
13 | | 53.35% African American. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 28 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 99,681 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was underpopulated by 8,900 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 28 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 103,205 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 5,376 people. As amended, |
20 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 28, |
21 | | maintaining the core of its district and most of its |
22 | | population. To compensate for the population loss, the |
23 | | district moves further into suburban Cook County. The district |
24 | | includes a portion of Chicago and portions of Calumet Park, |
25 | | Riverdale, Blue Island, part of Posen, Robbins, Crestwood, Oak |
26 | | Forest, and Tinley Park. |
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1 | | The total population of RD 28 is 108,557. The voting age |
2 | | population is 45.40% African American, 1.66% Asian, 15.49% |
3 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
4 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
5 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
6 | | 46.75% African American. |
7 | | The configuration of Representative District 29 as enacted |
8 | | in 2011 contained 106,665 people according to the 2020 Census. |
9 | | This was underpopulated by 1,916 people compared to target |
10 | | population. The configuration of RD 29 as enacted in Public |
11 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,616 people according to the 2020 |
12 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,965 people. As amended, |
13 | | the district is substantially the same as the current RD 29, |
14 | | maintaining the core of the district and most of its |
15 | | population. The proposed RD 29 encompasses regions of Cook, |
16 | | Will, and Kankakee counties, and municipalities including the |
17 | | City of Chicago, Dolton, Calumet City, South Holland, |
18 | | Thornton, Glenwood, Ford Heights, Sauk Village, Steger, Crete, |
19 | | Beecher, Peotone, Manteno, and Bradley. Transportation |
20 | | arteries include proximity to I-57, I-80, I-94, I-294, and |
21 | | Route 394. Communities within the Will and Kankakee portions |
22 | | of proposed RD 29 are more suburban and exurban than rural, and |
23 | | several communities in the Will County portion are part of the |
24 | | Southland region of Illinois that share economic interests |
25 | | with southern Cook County. There are many communities of |
26 | | interest throughout this district, including schools that |
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1 | | often compete against each other in athletics. As proposed, |
2 | | the district is relatively homogenous in that it is largely |
3 | | composed of middle-class working families which is consistent |
4 | | with current RD 29. |
5 | | The total population of RD 29 is 108,520. The voting age |
6 | | population is 57.12% African American, 0.47% Asian, 6.12% |
7 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
8 | | races, the voting age population is 58.85% African American. |
9 | | The configuration of Representative District 30 as enacted |
10 | | in 2011 contained 98,006 people according to the 2020 Census. |
11 | | This was underpopulated by 10,575 people compared to target |
12 | | population. The configuration of RD 30 as enacted in Public |
13 | | Act 102-10 contained 101,719 people according to the 2020 |
14 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 6,862 people. RD 30 retains |
15 | | incumbent relationships for continuity of representation by |
16 | | continuing to include all or parts of the municipalities of |
17 | | Harvey, Dixmoor, Midlothian, Oak Forest, Markham, Olympia |
18 | | Fields, Phoenix, Dolton, Hazel Crest, East Hazel Crest, |
19 | | Homewood, and Flossmoor. These communities are part of the |
20 | | Southland region of the Chicago suburbs, which share similar |
21 | | economic interests. The majority of the current RD 30 is |
22 | | contained within the proposed RD 30, keeping the core of the |
23 | | district intact. |
24 | | The total population of RD 30 is 108,525. The voting age |
25 | | population is 51.17% African American, 1.78% Asian, 15.74% |
26 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
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1 | | races, the voting age population is 53.25% African American. |
2 | | The configuration of Representative District 31 as enacted |
3 | | in 2011 contained 105,926 people according to the 2020 Census. |
4 | | This was underpopulated by 2,655 people compared to target |
5 | | population. The configuration of RD 31 as enacted in Public |
6 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,821 people according to the 2020 |
7 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,240 people. The proposed |
8 | | district maintains the core of the current district and keeps |
9 | | similar communities of interest intact, while recognizing |
10 | | popular migration patterns. The district includes a portion of |
11 | | Chicago's Auburn Gresham, Beverly View, Wrightwood, and |
12 | | Ashburn neighborhoods, as well as the suburbs of Hometown, Oak |
13 | | Lawn, Chicago Ridge, Bridgeview, Palos Hills, Hickory Hills, |
14 | | and Justice. The total population of RD 31 is 108,638. The |
15 | | voting age population is 51.92% African American, 1.12% Asian, |
16 | | 11.23% Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
17 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
18 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
19 | | 53.50% African American. |
20 | | The configuration of Representative District 32 as enacted |
21 | | in 2011 contained 105,728 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was underpopulated by 2,853 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 32 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,187 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 394 people. The proposed |
26 | | district maintains the core of the current district and |
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1 | | extends west to gain population, while recognizing the needs |
2 | | of other neighboring districts. The district includes portions |
3 | | of Chicago's Greater Grand Crossing, Englewood, West |
4 | | Englewood, Marquette Park, Chicago Lawn Ashburn, and |
5 | | Scottsdale neighborhoods, suburbs of Burbank, Bridgeview, and |
6 | | Hickory Hills, and a small part of Justice. The boundaries of |
7 | | proposed RD 32 reflect the competing goals of preserving the |
8 | | existing district balanced against the need to obtain more |
9 | | population to reach the equal population target. It also |
10 | | maintains the core of the existing RD 32 to preserve |
11 | | continuity of representation. |
12 | | The total population of RD 32 is 108,536. The voting age |
13 | | population is 50.46% African American, 0.93% Asian, 31.17% |
14 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
15 | | races, the voting age population is 52.22% African American. |
16 | | The configuration of Representative District 33 as enacted |
17 | | in 2011 contained 106,236 people according to the 2020 Census. |
18 | | This was underpopulated by 2,345 people compared to target |
19 | | population. The configuration of RD 33 as enacted in Public |
20 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,444 people according to the 2020 |
21 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,137 people, with |
22 | | adjustments made for population in the district and |
23 | | neighboring districts. Proposed RD 33 comprises parts of |
24 | | Chicago, Burnham, Calumet City, Lansing, and Lynwood. The |
25 | | district connects the more urban suburbs of Cook County with |
26 | | the parts of Chicago that share common interests. Proposed RD |
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1 | | 33 is home to many employees who work in Chicago and Cook |
2 | | County and connects areas with similar median incomes and |
3 | | economic interests according to the Census Bureau. |
4 | | The total population of RD 33 is 108,624. The voting age |
5 | | population is 62.35% African American, 0.35% Asian, 20.83% |
6 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
7 | | races, the voting age population is 64.65% African American. |
8 | | The configuration of Representative District 34 as enacted |
9 | | in 2011 contained 105,993 people according to the 2020 Census. |
10 | | This was underpopulated by 2,588 people compared to target |
11 | | population. The configuration of RD 34 as enacted in Public |
12 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,970 people according to the 2020 |
13 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,611 people. The proposed |
14 | | district retains the core of the district while making |
15 | | adjustments for population in the district and neighboring |
16 | | districts and reducing split communities in the current |
17 | | district. Proposed RD 34 keeps most of the current district |
18 | | intact, with the southern border now going to the Kankakee |
19 | | County Line and part of the Southwestern border along the |
20 | | Kankakee River. To reduce the number of split communities, the |
21 | | majority of Sauk Village is now in one district, and many other |
22 | | municipalities in Kankakee County that are split in the |
23 | | current districts are consolidated into one district. |
24 | | The total population of RD 34 is 108,429. The voting age |
25 | | population is 66.87% African American, 0.29% Asian, 8.58% |
26 | | Hispanic. Including individuals who identify as multiple |
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1 | | races, the voting age population is 69.16% African American. |
2 | | The configuration of Representative District 35 as enacted |
3 | | in 2011 contained 108,853 people according to the 2020 Census. |
4 | | This was overpopulated by 272 people compared to target |
5 | | population. The configuration of RD 35 as enacted in Public |
6 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,085 people according to the 2020 |
7 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,496 people. To |
8 | | accommodate the population changes and shifts in other |
9 | | districts in the region, the proposed district reduces |
10 | | population in the northern portion and picks up population |
11 | | near the southern and western borders. A majority of the |
12 | | current district's population resides in the proposed |
13 | | district. The proposed district contains portions of Chicago, |
14 | | Merrionette Park, Alsip, Worth, Palos Heights, Palos Park, and |
15 | | Orland Park. This splits fewer communities than the current RD |
16 | | 35. The communities within proposed RD 35 are united by common |
17 | | socioeconomic characteristics, with the majority of residents |
18 | | being single-family homeowners who move into these communities |
19 | | to take advantage of their housing values, quality schools, |
20 | | and low crime rates. Many of the residents of the suburban |
21 | | townships have either moved from Chicago themselves or are the |
22 | | children of former Chicago residents. The eastern portion of |
23 | | the district in Beverly and Morgan Park is racially diverse |
24 | | and the far eastern portion in Washington Heights is largely |
25 | | African-American. These communities are economically similar |
26 | | to other portions of the proposed RD 35. Additionally, |
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1 | | religious communities are kept together in proposed RD 35 to |
2 | | the east and the suburban portion to the west. |
3 | | The total population of RD 35 is 108,568. The voting age |
4 | | population is 21.04% African American, 1.88% Asian, 8.67% |
5 | | Hispanic. |
6 | | The configuration of Representative District 36 as enacted |
7 | | in 2011 contained 109,801 people according to the 2020 Census. |
8 | | This was overpopulated by 1,220 people compared to target |
9 | | population. The configuration of RD 36 as enacted in Public |
10 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,606 people according to the 2020 |
11 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,025 people. The proposed |
12 | | district is nearly identical to the current district and |
13 | | maintains the core of the district as well as the majority of |
14 | | its population. Proposed RD 36 contains the same areas as the |
15 | | current district, including portions of Chicago's Ashburn, |
16 | | Beverly, and Mount Greenwood communities, all of Evergreen |
17 | | Park, the majority of Oak Lawn, Chicago Ridge, and Palos Hills |
18 | | as well as portions of Worth, Palos Heights, Palos Hills, |
19 | | Palos Park, and Willow Springs. The district is largely |
20 | | similar socioeconomically, with a high percentage of |
21 | | single-family owner-occupied homes and middle-class incomes. |
22 | | The total population of RD 36 is 108,750. The voting age |
23 | | population is 13.16% African American, 2.26% Asian, 14.12% |
24 | | Hispanic. |
25 | | The configuration of Representative District 37 as enacted |
26 | | in 2011 contained 112,743 people according to the 2020 Census. |
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1 | | This was overpopulated by 4,162 people compared to target |
2 | | population. The configuration of RD 37 as enacted in Public |
3 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,448 people according to the 2020 |
4 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 867 people. The district |
5 | | includes portions of Cook and Will counties, and the proposed |
6 | | district contains the same municipalities as the current |
7 | | district, which includes Frankfort, Homer Glen, Joliet, |
8 | | Lockport, Mokena, New Lenox, Orland Hills, Orland Park, and |
9 | | Tinley Park. The proposed district retains a majority of the |
10 | | current population. Proposed RD 37, like the current RD 37, is |
11 | | economically homogeneous, with median annual incomes above |
12 | | $80,000 and ranging to over $100,000. This district |
13 | | consolidates more of Homer Glen and Lockport than current |
14 | | districts. |
15 | | The total population of RD 37 is 108,575. The voting age |
16 | | population is 2.01% African American, 2.56% Asian, 6.40% |
17 | | Hispanic. |
18 | | The configuration of Representative District 38 as enacted |
19 | | in 2011 contained 106,439 people according to the 2020 Census. |
20 | | This was underpopulated by 2,142 people compared to target |
21 | | population. The configuration of RD 38 as enacted in Public |
22 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,369 people according to the 2020 |
23 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 2,212 people. and |
24 | | adjustments to the district were made to assist neighboring |
25 | | districts with population and increase the political |
26 | | competitiveness of the region. The core of the district |
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1 | | remains the same as the current RD 38. The proposed district |
2 | | retains a majority of the current population. The district |
3 | | contains communities Frankfort, Matteson, Olympia Fields, |
4 | | Country Club Hills, Tinley Park, Richton Park, and Mokena. |
5 | | According to the Census Bureau these communities have similar |
6 | | economic characteristics with a high percentage of home |
7 | | ownership and owner-occupied housing. |
8 | | The total population of RD 38 is 108,601. The voting age |
9 | | population is 47.04% African American, 2.16% Asian, 5.82% |
10 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
11 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
12 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
13 | | 48.67% African American. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 79 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 102,732 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was underpopulated by 5,849 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 79 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 105,113 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 3,468 people. The proposed |
20 | | district contains a majority of the current population. It |
21 | | includes the municipalities of Park Forest, Crete, University |
22 | | Park, Monee, Andres, Manteno, Bourbonnais, Bradley, Limestone, |
23 | | Kankakee, Bonfield, Irwin, Herscher, Sammons Point, Chebanse, |
24 | | Union Hill, Essex, Reddick, Cabrey, Braceville, Coal City, |
25 | | Godley, and Diamond. RD 79 contains four different counties - |
26 | | Cook, Will, Kankakee, and Grundy. The communities share |
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1 | | economic interests, many commuting into the city for work and |
2 | | making median household incomes ranging from $37,894 to |
3 | | $74,755 per year. This district was drawn to make the seat more |
4 | | competitive. |
5 | | The total population of RD 79 is 108,475. The voting age |
6 | | population is 24.05% African American, 1.09% Asian, 8.81% |
7 | | Hispanic. |
8 | | The configuration of Representative District 80 as enacted |
9 | | in 2011 contained 111,343 people according to the 2020 Census. |
10 | | This was overpopulated by 2,762 people compared to target |
11 | | population. The configuration of RD 80 as enacted in Public |
12 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,265 people according to the 2020 |
13 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 316 people. The proposed |
14 | | district retains a majority of the current population. The |
15 | | district is located in Cook and Will counties, and includes |
16 | | the municipalities of Chicago Heights, South Chicago Heights, |
17 | | Steger, Park Forest, Crete, New Lenox, Frankfort, Manhattan, |
18 | | Wilton, Symerton, and Wilmington. The district maintains |
19 | | numerous communities of interest and connects towns that share |
20 | | services, employers, and school districts. |
21 | | The total population of RD 80 is 108,843. The voting age |
22 | | population is 26.43% African American, 0.74% Asian, 15.37% |
23 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
24 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
25 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
26 | | 27.94% African American. |
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1 | | Northern Cook Suburbs and Lake County: Representative 26 |
2 | | Districts 15, 16, 17, 18, 51, 52, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, and 64 |
3 | | represent various parts of northern Cook, Lake, and McHenry |
4 | | counties. These districts sustained various changes in |
5 | | population. These districts were drawn to address population |
6 | | issues, maintain the cores of districts, and take into account |
7 | | political considerations. |
8 | | The configuration of Representative District 15 as enacted |
9 | | in 2011 contained 111,166 people according to the 2020 Census. |
10 | | This was overpopulated by 2,585 people compared to target |
11 | | population. The configuration of RD 15 as enacted in Public |
12 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,721 people according to the 2020 |
13 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,140 people. The proposed |
14 | | district retains the majority of the current population and |
15 | | core, preserving continuity of representation. The district |
16 | | includes portions of Chicago's Forest Glen, North Park, Irving |
17 | | Park, and Albany Park neighborhoods; the municipalities of |
18 | | Morton Grove, and Niles. The current district retains many |
19 | | portions of the current district, but to assist with |
20 | | population and compactness, the proposed district consolidates |
21 | | more of Niles, and the city of Glenview is removed from RD 15 |
22 | | and consolidated in RDs 17 and 18. |
23 | | The total population of RD 15 is 108,709. The voting age |
24 | | population is 2.42% African American, 22.06% Asian, 14.48% |
25 | | Hispanic. |
26 | | The configuration of Representative District 16 as enacted |
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1 | | in 2011 contained 115,955 people according to the 2020 Census. |
2 | | This was overpopulated by 7,374 people compared to target |
3 | | population. The configuration of RD 16 as enacted in Public |
4 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,891 people according to the 2020 |
5 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,310 people. The proposed |
6 | | district retains a majority of the current population. The |
7 | | core of the district remains in Skokie and Lincolnwood, with a |
8 | | portion of Chicago. These communities share similar racial, |
9 | | ethnic, and religious demographics. At the request of |
10 | | community members, the district will ensure more of the |
11 | | Orthodox Jewish community is kept together to maximize the |
12 | | political power of and maintain the community of interest. The |
13 | | reconfigured district consolidates more of Skokie and |
14 | | Lincolnwood. Additionally, the 50th Ward element of RD 16 |
15 | | contains an Orthodox Jewish identified in testimony before the |
16 | | House Redistricting Committee. Uniting all areas of the |
17 | | Orthodox community in one House district could not be done |
18 | | without fracturing the district's existing core of Skokie or |
19 | | Lincolnwood, or fracturing the district's significant Indian |
20 | | and Pakistani community. |
21 | | The total population of RD 16 is 108,819. The voting age |
22 | | population is 8.94% African American, 28.27% Asian, 14.43% |
23 | | Hispanic. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 17 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 114,448 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was overpopulated by 5,867 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 17 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 112,775 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 4,194 people. The district |
4 | | includes portions of Glenview, Northbrook, Wilmette, Skokie, |
5 | | Golf, and Evanston. A majority of the current district's |
6 | | population remains in the proposed district. The existing |
7 | | southeastern boundary remains largely unchanged except a few |
8 | | blocks of Skokie were exchanged for population reasons to |
9 | | ensure that the Orthodox Jewish community was more |
10 | | consolidated. At the request of community members, the |
11 | | proposed district consolidates a majority of Glenview School |
12 | | District, which was previously located in multiple districts. |
13 | | The total population of RD 17 is 108,474. The voting age |
14 | | population is 3.70% African American, 19.87% Asian, 6.67% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | The configuration of Representative District 18 as enacted |
17 | | in 2011 contained 114,382 people according to the 2020 Census. |
18 | | This was overpopulated by 5,801 people compared to target |
19 | | population. The configuration of RD 18 as enacted in Public |
20 | | Act 102-10 contained 112,497 people according to the 2020 |
21 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 3,916 people. The proposed |
22 | | district retains the majority of the current population. |
23 | | Proposed RD 18 includes most of Evanston, Winnetka, |
24 | | Northfield, and Kenilworth, and a small part of Wilmette. At |
25 | | the request of Evanston elected officials, Evanston is located |
26 | | entirely within one Legislative District and now sits within |
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1 | | RD 17 and The proposed district unites two densely populated |
2 | | wards that are historically home to a large African American |
3 | | population to maximize political power and increase the |
4 | | partisan advantage for the incumbent. This district links high |
5 | | income communities with similar interest areas. |
6 | | The southern end of the district extends down toward the |
7 | | 50th Ward of Chicago to bring RD 18 up to equal population |
8 | | while also preserving important communities of interest within |
9 | | RD 16. This change preserves the majority of an Orthodox |
10 | | Jewish community to the west, as described by witness |
11 | | testimony in Redistricting Committee hearings in Spring 2021, |
12 | | as well as a significant Indo-Pacific community to the south. |
13 | | The total population of RD 18 is 108,339. The voting age |
14 | | population is 12.70% African American, 10.21% Asian, 9.15% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | The configuration of Representative District 51 as enacted |
17 | | in 2011 contained 112,784 people according to the 2020 Census. |
18 | | This was overpopulated by 4,203 people compared to target |
19 | | population. The configuration of RD 51 as enacted in Public |
20 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,139 people according to the 2020 |
21 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,558 people. The proposed |
22 | | RD 51 includes all or part of the communities of Inverness, |
23 | | Palatine, Deer Park, Lake Zurich, Forest Lake, Kildeer, |
24 | | Hawthorn Woods, Long Grove, Barrington, Mundelein, and |
25 | | Libertyville. Proposed RD 51 becomes more compact while |
26 | | accounting for population shifts throughout the region and |
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1 | | state. |
2 | | The total population of RD 51 is 108,489. The voting age |
3 | | population is 1.39% African American, 13.52% Asian, 6.23% |
4 | | Hispanic. |
5 | | The configuration of Representative District 52 as enacted |
6 | | in 2011 contained 107,599 people according to the 2020 Census. |
7 | | This was underpopulated by 982 people compared to target |
8 | | population. The configuration of RD 52 as enacted in Public |
9 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,755 people according to the 2020 |
10 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,174 people. The proposed |
11 | | district contains a majority of the current district. It |
12 | | includes all or parts of the municipalities of Algonquin, |
13 | | Barrington, North Barrington, South Barrington, Barrington |
14 | | Hills, Lake Barrington, Tower Lakes, Volo, Island Lake, Long |
15 | | Grove, and Wauconda. The communities within the proposed |
16 | | district are largely upper middle class economically and share |
17 | | similar demographics. They share similar median home values as |
18 | | well as median income households that are largely above the |
19 | | statewide median income according to Census Bureau data. |
20 | | The total population of RD 52 is 108,647. The voting age |
21 | | population is 1.16% African American, 7.90% Asian, 9.57% |
22 | | Hispanic. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 59 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 113,498 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was overpopulated by 4,917 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 59 as enacted in Public |
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1 | | Act 102-10 contained 113,036 people according to the 2020 |
2 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 4,455 people. The proposed |
3 | | district includes a majority of the current district's |
4 | | population. The proposed district is mostly located in Lake |
5 | | County, with a small part of Cook County to retain a common |
6 | | area in Wheeling. The district includes the municipalities of |
7 | | Buffalo Grove, Wheeling, Lincolnshire, Indian Creek, Vernon |
8 | | Hills, Mundelein, Green Oaks, and Park City and portions of |
9 | | Libertyville and Mettawa. The proposed district remains mostly |
10 | | the same, although it brings in more of Libertyville to |
11 | | consolidate a township and keep communities of interest |
12 | | together. For example, Vernon Hills, Green Oaks, part of |
13 | | Indian Creek, part of Mettawa, and Libertyville all feed into |
14 | | Community High 26 School District 128. |
15 | | The total population for proposed RD 59 is 108,549. It has |
16 | | a voting age population that is 2.31% African American, 20.91% |
17 | | Asian, and 18.89% Hispanic. |
18 | | The configuration of Representative District 60 as enacted |
19 | | in 2011 contained 108,727 people according to the 2020 Census. |
20 | | This was overpopulated by 146 people compared to target |
21 | | population. The configuration of RD 60 as enacted in Public |
22 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,705 people according to the 2020 |
23 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 124 people. Proposed RD 60 |
24 | | contains a majority of the current RD 60. The proposed RD 60 |
25 | | contains the majority of Waukegan Township and has portions of |
26 | | Shields, Libertyville, and Warren townships. The district |
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1 | | includes most of Waukegan, a large part of North Chicago, and |
2 | | portions of Wadsworth Village, Gurnee, and Park City. Beach |
3 | | Park was removed from the district to consolidate it with |
4 | | similar communities to the north in RD 61, and more of North |
5 | | Chicago was included in RD 60 to further consolidate the |
6 | | municipality. |
7 | | The total population of RD 60 is 108,705. The voting age |
8 | | population is 18.87% African American, 4.13% Asian, 50.27% |
9 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
10 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
11 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
12 | | 20.79% African American. |
13 | | The configuration of Representative District 61 as enacted |
14 | | in 2011 contained 108,434 people according to the 2020 Census. |
15 | | This was underpopulated by 147 people compared to target |
16 | | population. The configuration of RD 61 as enacted in Public |
17 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,579 people according to the 2020 |
18 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 998 people. The proposed |
19 | | district contains a majority of the current district. It |
20 | | includes the municipalities of Beach Park, Gurnee, Zion, |
21 | | Winthrop Harbor, Wadsworth Village, Old Mill Creek, |
22 | | Lindenhurst, and Grandwood Park, and parts of Grayslake, |
23 | | Venetian Village, Third Lake, Gages Lake, and Lake Villa. This |
24 | | district was drawn for political purposes to assist with |
25 | | increasing the political advantage of this district, as well |
26 | | as to impact the political composition of neighboring |
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1 | | districts. |
2 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,652, |
3 | | with an African American voting-age population of 11.8%, a |
4 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 23.2%, and an Asian |
5 | | voting-age population of 6.5%. |
6 | | The configuration of Representative District 62 as enacted |
7 | | in 2011 contained 109,130 people according to the 2020 Census. |
8 | | This was overpopulated by 549 people compared to target |
9 | | population. The configuration of RD 62 as enacted in Public |
10 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,217 people according to the 2020 |
11 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,636 people. The proposed |
12 | | district contains a majority of the current district, |
13 | | including parts of the municipalities of Long Lake, Round Lake |
14 | | Heights, Round Lake Beach, Round Lake, Round Lake Park, |
15 | | Grayslake, Hainesville, Grayslake, Libertyville and Gurnee. |
16 | | This district was drawn for political purposes to assist with |
17 | | increasing the political advantage of this district, as well |
18 | | as to impact the political composition of neighboring |
19 | | districts. |
20 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,565, |
21 | | with an African American voting-age population of 4%, a |
22 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 27.3%, and an Asian |
23 | | voting-age population of 6.7%. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 63 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 107,982 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was underpopulated by -599 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 63 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 112,120 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 3,539 people. It includes |
4 | | parts of the municipalities of Crystal Lake, McHenry, |
5 | | Woodstock, Prairie Grove, Ridgefield, Oakwood Hills, Holiday |
6 | | Hills, Wonder Lake, Cary, and Bull Valley. Similar to the |
7 | | current RD 63, the proposed RD 63 is a mix of agricultural land |
8 | | as well as suburban area. Proposed RD 63, like the current RD |
9 | | 63, contains stops along Metra's Union Pacific Northwest line, |
10 | | which allows commuters to travel to and from downtown Chicago. |
11 | | Proposed RD 63, like the current RD 63, continues to |
12 | | represent communities along the Fox River and in the Fox River |
13 | | Valley. Within the proposed RD 63 are a number of lakes and |
14 | | recreational areas that serve local residents as well as |
15 | | visitors. This district was drawn for political purposes to |
16 | | assist with increasing the political advantage of this |
17 | | district, as well as to impact the political composition of |
18 | | neighboring districts. |
19 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,559, |
20 | | with an African American voting-age population of 1.2%, a |
21 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 13.8%, and an Asian |
22 | | voting-age population of 2.3%. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 64 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 111,915 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was overpopulated by 3,334 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 64 as enacted in Public |
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1 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,063 people according to the 2020 |
2 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 482 people. It contains |
3 | | nearly all of Richmond and Burton townships and a large |
4 | | portion of McHenry Township. In Lake County, proposed RD 64 |
5 | | contains portions of Antioch, Grant, and Lake Villa townships. |
6 | | This greatly reduces the number of townships represented and |
7 | | township splits from the current RD 64. |
8 | | Municipalities within the proposed RD 64 include parts of |
9 | | Wonder Lake, McCullom Lake, Lakemoore, Lake Catherine, |
10 | | Johnsburg, Pistakee Highlands, Fox Lake, Lake Villa, Richmond, |
11 | | Ringwood, Spring Grove, Volo, and Antioch. The northern |
12 | | boundary of proposed RD 64 is the state line with Wisconsin, |
13 | | like the current RD 64. Proposed RD 64, like the current RD 64, |
14 | | continues to represent communities along the Fox River and in |
15 | | the Fox River Valley. |
16 | | Within the proposed RD 64 are a number of lakes and |
17 | | recreational areas that serve local residents as well as |
18 | | visitors. Proposed RD 64 is served by Metra's North Central |
19 | | Service, which takes commuters to and from downtown Chicago. |
20 | | Proposed RD 64's is relatively homogeneous demographically and |
21 | | is predominantly middle class and upper middle class. The |
22 | | partisan advantage of the proposed RD 64 is similar to the |
23 | | current RD 64. |
24 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,575, |
25 | | with an African American voting-age population of 1.5%, a |
26 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 9%, and an Asian voting-age |
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1 | | population of 2%. |
2 | | Northwest Suburbs: Representative Districts 43, 44, 53, |
3 | | 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 65, and 66 comprise the northwest suburban |
4 | | areas. These districts retain the core of each existing |
5 | | district to the greatest extent possible, but there are |
6 | | deviations due to population shifts, the need to ensure equal |
7 | | population, and political considerations. Significant |
8 | | population growth in downtown Chicago has also necessitated |
9 | | many districts throughout the suburbs to adjust to take in new |
10 | | population to the east and south. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 43 as enacted |
12 | | in 2011 contained 107,984 people according to the 2020 Census. |
13 | | This was underpopulated by 597 people compared to target |
14 | | population. The configuration of RD 43 as enacted in Public |
15 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,756 people according to the 2020 |
16 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,175 people. Proposed RD 43 |
17 | | contains communities in Cook and Kane counties. Within Cook |
18 | | County, it contains part of Hanover Township and within Kane |
19 | | County it contains parts of Elgin and Dundee townships. It |
20 | | contains communities within the municipalities of Streamwood, |
21 | | Hoffman Estates, East Dundee, and Elgin. Proposed RD 43 was |
22 | | adjusted to encompass more of Elgin, consolidating a community |
23 | | that has historically been split among several districts into |
24 | | fewer representative districts. These communities have similar |
25 | | economic characteristics and demographics according to the |
26 | | Census Bureau. |
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1 | | Proposed RD 43 contains Chicago and North Western Railroad |
2 | | lines, which serve as major arteries to facilitate tourism, |
3 | | development, transportation, and commerce in the region. |
4 | | The total population of RD 43 is 108,581. The voting age |
5 | | population is 6.04% African American, 7.95% Asian, 51.19% |
6 | | Hispanic. |
7 | | The configuration of Representative District 44 as enacted |
8 | | in 2011 contained 109,195 people according to the 2020 Census. |
9 | | This was overpopulated by 614 people compared to target |
10 | | population. The configuration of RD 44 as enacted in Public |
11 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,147 people according to the 2020 |
12 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,434 people. Proposed RD |
13 | | 44 maintains the core of current RD 44 as well as the majority |
14 | | of its population and preserves incumbent-constituent |
15 | | relationships. Proposed RD 44 is located in Hanover and |
16 | | Schaumburg townships within Cook County. The reconfigured |
17 | | district unites more of Hoffman Estates in one district, and |
18 | | pairs it with neighboring communities of Streamwood, |
19 | | Schaumburg, and Hanover Park. These communities share similar |
20 | | demographics and economic characteristics according to the |
21 | | Census Bureau. They are further connected by shared |
22 | | transportation infrastructure and shared economies. The total |
23 | | population of RD 44 is 108,540. The voting age population is |
24 | | 4.91% African American, 19.10% Asian, 26.93% Hispanic. |
25 | | The configuration of Representative District 53 as enacted |
26 | | in 2011 contained 112,576 people according to the 2020 Census. |
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1 | | This was overpopulated by 3,995 people compared to target |
2 | | population. The configuration of RD 53 as enacted in Public |
3 | | Act 102-10 contained 112,157 people according to the 2020 |
4 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 3,576 people. The proposed |
5 | | district contains parts of Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, |
6 | | Rolling Meadows, Des Plaines, Schaumburg, and Palatine. These |
7 | | communities share similar demographics, incomes, and home |
8 | | values according to the Census Bureau. These communities are |
9 | | also majority homeowners with a smaller level of renters, with |
10 | | over 60% owning homes and less than 30% renting. Additionally, |
11 | | RD 53 contains Northwest Community Hospital. Healthcare is the |
12 | | largest employer in these municipalities and this region. By |
13 | | linking Northwest Community Hospital with communities such as |
14 | | Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Rolling Meadows, RD 53 |
15 | | keeps many employees linked with the major healthcare services |
16 | | in the district. |
17 | | The total population of RD 53 is 108,563. The voting age |
18 | | population is 2.69% African American, 14.41% Asian, 14.22% |
19 | | Hispanic. |
20 | | The configuration of Representative District 54 as enacted |
21 | | in 2011 contained 110,037 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was overpopulated by 1,456 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 54 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,297 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 716 people. Proposed RD 54 |
26 | | includes parts of Prospect Heights, Mount Prospect, Arlington |
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1 | | Heights, Buffalo Grove, Wheeling, and Palatine. Changes to the |
2 | | district unite more of Palatine within the neighboring 51st |
3 | | District and enhance the overall partisan composition of the |
4 | | district. |
5 | | The district includes portions of Prospect Heights, |
6 | | Arlington Heights, and Palatine. The district shares many |
7 | | similarities with RD 53, and together collectively combine |
8 | | municipalities that form a Legislative District that leans |
9 | | Democratic. The proposed district moves southeast to account |
10 | | for population shifts. |
11 | | The total population of RD 54 is 108,589. The voting age |
12 | | population is 2.26% African American, 9.80% Asian, 14.00% |
13 | | Hispanic. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 55 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 113,843 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was overpopulated by 5,262 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 55 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 111,230 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,649 people. The proposed |
20 | | district includes a majority of the population of the current |
21 | | district. The proposed district consists of Cook County and |
22 | | includes parts of Park Ridge, most of Des Plaines and a small |
23 | | portion of the 41st Ward in Chicago. Large portions of the |
24 | | district are united by being in Maine Township. The 41st Ward |
25 | | is a community of similar interest to the suburban Cook County |
26 | | portions of the proposed district. The new proposed district |
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1 | | improves the compactness of the district while maintaining the |
2 | | core of the district as Des Plaines. The proposed district |
3 | | also brings together two communities (Park Ridge and Des |
4 | | Plaines) that share a township and high school township |
5 | | district. |
6 | | The total population of RD 55 is 108,686. The voting age |
7 | | population is 2.52% African American, 18.57% Asian, 12.06% |
8 | | Hispanic. |
9 | | The configuration of Representative District 56 as enacted |
10 | | in 2011 contained 111,966 people according to the 2020 Census. |
11 | | This was overpopulated by 3,385 people compared to target |
12 | | population. The configuration of RD 56 as enacted in Public |
13 | | Act 102-10 contained 113,450 people according to the 2020 |
14 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 4,869 people. The proposed |
15 | | district includes a majority of the population of the current |
16 | | district. The boundaries of proposed RD 56 increase minority |
17 | | influence. Greater portions of the population draw from highly |
18 | | diverse areas of Cook County. The district shares a number of |
19 | | business interests, as it houses the corporate offices of many |
20 | | large companies, takes in all of the Elk Grove Industrial |
21 | | Park, and includes a significant retail community anchored by |
22 | | Woodfield Mall as well as many Indian, Pakistani, and |
23 | | Asian-owned businesses. Proposed District 56 contains school |
24 | | districts Lake Park Community High School District 108, |
25 | | Township High School District 214, Township High School |
26 | | District 211, Schaumburg Community Consolidated School |
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1 | | District 54, and Community Consolidated School District 59. |
2 | | The total population of RD 56 is 108,413. The voting age |
3 | | population is 3.39% African American, 18.72% Asian, 16.91% |
4 | | Hispanic. |
5 | | The configuration of Representative District 57 as enacted |
6 | | in 2011 contained 110,823 people according to the 2020 Census. |
7 | | This was overpopulated by 2,242 people compared to target |
8 | | population. The configuration of RD 57 as enacted in Public |
9 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,687 people according to the 2020 |
10 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,106 people. The district |
11 | | retains a majority of the population of the former district. |
12 | | The district sits mostly in Cook County, with a small portion |
13 | | in Lake, and includes Wheeling, Northbrook, Buffalo Grove, |
14 | | Glencoe, Riverwoods, and Lincolnshire and very small parts of |
15 | | Deerfield, Prospect Heights, Des Plaines and Glenview. The |
16 | | portions of Palatine and Mount Prospect were removed to assist |
17 | | other districts and aid in maintaining more of those |
18 | | municipalities' populations in other districts. To unite the |
19 | | cities on the west that share regional interests, the western |
20 | | border receded east to accommodate those communities of |
21 | | interest. RD 57 still represents both northern Cook and Lake |
22 | | counties which share socioeconomic, ethnic, and religious |
23 | | similarities. Proposed RD 57 consolidates more of the similar |
24 | | more urban communities in the region by traveling farther east |
25 | | and out of the previous western part of the district. |
26 | | The total population of RD 57 is 108,417. The voting age |
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1 | | population is 1.44% African American, 14.93% Asian, 14.12% |
2 | | Hispanic. |
3 | | The configuration of Representative District 58 as enacted |
4 | | in 2011 contained 108,366 people according to the 2020 Census. |
5 | | This was underpopulated by 215 people compared to target |
6 | | population. The configuration of RD 58 as enacted in Public |
7 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,916 people according to the 2020 |
8 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,335 people. The proposed |
9 | | district ensures equal population and retains nearly a |
10 | | majority of the current population. The district includes |
11 | | parts of Highland Park, Deerfield, Lake Forest, Bannockburn, |
12 | | Lake Bluff, Highwood City, Glencoe, Lincolnshire, Mettawa, |
13 | | Green Oaks, Knollwood, and North Chicago. RD 58 had to take in |
14 | | population and expanded west to keep a majority of the |
15 | | district in Lake County, and the area of Cook County shares |
16 | | commonalities with the rest of the district. |
17 | | The total population for proposed RD 58 is 108,398. It has |
18 | | a voting age population that is 3.97% African American, 6.07% |
19 | | Asian, and 9.75% Hispanic. |
20 | | The configuration of Representative District 65 as enacted |
21 | | in 2011 contained 123,080 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was overpopulated by 14,499 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 65 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,625 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,044 people. It includes |
26 | | the municipalities of South Elgin, Elgin, Campton Hills, Lily |
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1 | | Lake, Wayne, Bartlett, St. Charles, Elburn, Prestbury and |
2 | | Sugar Grove. This district also includes all of Plato and |
3 | | Campton Township, nearly all of St. Charles Township, and |
4 | | small portions of Blackberry, Geneva, Wayne, and Elgin |
5 | | township. Proposed RD 65 consolidates more of St. Charles than |
6 | | previously. |
7 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,537 |
8 | | with an African American voting-age population of 1.8%, a |
9 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 9.8%, and an Asian |
10 | | voting-age population of 6.1%. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 66 as enacted |
12 | | in 2011 contained 114,214 people according to the 2020 Census. |
13 | | This was overpopulated by 5,633 people compared to target |
14 | | population. The configuration of RD 66 as enacted in Public |
15 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,732 people according to the 2020 |
16 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,849 people. The proposed |
17 | | district includes a majority of the existing district |
18 | | population. The proposed RD 66 includes Kane and McHenry |
19 | | counties and includes the townships of Algonquin, Dundee, |
20 | | Elgin and Grafton. To reduce population, the proposed district |
21 | | removed the populated northwest side of Crystal Lake and added |
22 | | the less populated parts of Elgin and Carpentersville. The |
23 | | proposed district reflects changes requested during public |
24 | | testimony at the McHenry County redistricting hearing. Public |
25 | | comments asked for communities of similar economic and |
26 | | community interests by adding more of Carpentersville and |
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1 | | Elgin and removing the northwest side of Crystal Lake that |
2 | | best reflects the interests of the neighboring districts. RD |
3 | | 66 has the municipalities of Carpentersville, West Dundee, |
4 | | Sleepy Hollow, Elgin, a small portion of East Dundee, |
5 | | Algonquin, Lake in the Hills, and Crystal Lake. Due to the rise |
6 | | in population, much of the west side of the district 25 got put |
7 | | into a neighboring district to unite more similar communities. |
8 | | School Districts in proposed RD 66 include Community Unit |
9 | | School District 300 takes in students from Carpentersville, |
10 | | West and East Dundee, Sleepy Hollow, Algonquin, and Lake in |
11 | | the Hills. These represent a community of interest kept |
12 | | together in the proposed RD 66. Crystal Lake CCSD 47 also pulls |
13 | | in students from Crystal Lake and Lake in the Hills, keeping |
14 | | communities of interest united. |
15 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,650, |
16 | | with an African American voting-age population of 3.13%, a |
17 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 17%, and an Asian voting-age |
18 | | population of 6.6%. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify |
19 | | as members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals |
20 | | who identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
21 | | 56.46% African American. |
22 | | DuPage County: DuPage County saw a modest population |
23 | | increase over the past decade, and reconfigurations in this |
24 | | area reflect this; the cores of existing House districts were |
25 | | held largely intact with some adjustments in order to create |
26 | | compact districts of substantially equal population. Just as |
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1 | | many DuPage municipalities share transportation |
2 | | infrastructure, business interests, and community identity |
3 | | with neighboring areas of Cook, Will, and Kane counties, |
4 | | several of the districts cross adjacent counties. |
5 | | The configuration of Representative District 41 as enacted |
6 | | in 2011 contained 109,814 people according to the 2020 Census. |
7 | | This was overpopulated by 1,233 people compared to target |
8 | | population. The configuration of RD 41 as enacted in Public |
9 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,170 people according to the 2020 |
10 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 2,411 people. The proposed |
11 | | district includes a majority of the existing district |
12 | | population. The proposed district retains Naperville as the |
13 | | core of the district, contains a portion of Warrenville, and |
14 | | maintains an interest in the Illinois Technology and Research |
15 | | Corridor along Interstate 88. |
16 | | The total population of RD 41 is 108,579. The voting age |
17 | | population is 5.13% African American, 16.39% Asian, 8.05% |
18 | | Hispanic. |
19 | | Representative District 42, was formerly RD 48. The |
20 | | configuration of Representative District 48 as enacted in 2011 |
21 | | contained 112,509 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
22 | | was overpopulated by 3928 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 42 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,931 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was over/underpopulated by 2,350 people. The |
26 | | proposed district includes a majority of the existing 48th |
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1 | | District population. The proposed district retains the core of |
2 | | current RD 48 and contains Lisle, Lombard, Glen Ellyn, and |
3 | | Downers Grove. The proposed district maintains the core of the |
4 | | current district and the boundaries largely remain the same. |
5 | | Proposed RD 42 is anchored by Interstate 355, Interstate 88, |
6 | | the College of DuPage, Hidden Lake Forest Preserve and the |
7 | | Morton Arboretum, and it creates transportation corridors by |
8 | | extending to include the intersection of I-88 and I-355. |
9 | | Proposed RD 42 also contains Union Pacific Railroad and has |
10 | | public transportation available on the Metra through the Union |
11 | | Pacific West Line. The Western border follows boundaries |
12 | | created by Glen Ellyn Community Consolidated School District |
13 | | and Glenbard Township High School District 87. Proposed RD 42 |
14 | | picks up portions of former RDs 48 and 81. The district |
15 | | preserves numerous communities of interest, including a |
16 | | population of Asian households that stretch from the south |
17 | | section of Lombard to the portion of Downers Grove. |
18 | | The total population of RD 42 is 108,677. The voting age |
19 | | population is 4.69% African American, 10.25% Asian, 7.55% |
20 | | Hispanic. |
21 | | The configuration of Representative District 45 as enacted |
22 | | in 2011 contained 109,166 people according to the 2020 Census. |
23 | | This was overpopulated by 585 people compared to target |
24 | | population. The configuration of RD 45 as enacted in Public |
25 | | Act 102-10 contained 105,586 people according to the 2020 |
26 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 2,995 people. The proposed |
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1 | | RD 45 retains a majority of current RD 47. This district was |
2 | | drawn for political purposes to assist with increasing the |
3 | | political advantage for neighboring districts. It includes all |
4 | | or portions of Elmhurst, Oakbrook Terrace, Westmont, Clarendon |
5 | | Hills, Hinsdale, Willowbrook and Downers Grove. The district |
6 | | stretches from the northern municipal boundary of Elmhurst |
7 | | into the south regions of Westmont. The district includes |
8 | | Elmhurst University as well as intersections of several busy |
9 | | highways including US 20, I-290, IL State Route 83, and US 34. |
10 | | This district was drawn to protect communities of similar |
11 | | economic interest as well as keep several school districts |
12 | | together. |
13 | | The total population of RD 45 is 108,585. The voting age |
14 | | population is 2.89% African American, 11.05% Asian, 9.85% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | The configuration of Representative District 46 as enacted |
17 | | in 2011 contained 109,101 people according to the 2020 Census. |
18 | | This was overpopulated by 520 people compared to target |
19 | | population. The configuration of RD 46 as enacted in Public |
20 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,507 people according to the 2020 |
21 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 926 people. The proposed |
22 | | Representative District 46 retains a majority of the district, |
23 | | maintaining a large majority of its core, with small |
24 | | geographical shifts to account for population loss. The |
25 | | district contains all or portions of Carol Stream, |
26 | | Bloomingdale, Glendale Heights, Addison, Glen Ellyn and Villa |
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1 | | Park. The proposed district keeps Villa Park united and |
2 | | follows the boundaries of Villa Park and Glendale Heights, |
3 | | while also maintaining strong business districts, the DuPage |
4 | | County Forest Preserve, and access to Interstate 355. |
5 | | The total population for proposed RD 46 is 108,562. It has |
6 | | a voting age population that is 5.67% African American, 15.90% |
7 | | Asian, and 23.85% Hispanic. |
8 | | Representative District 47, the current RD 42, was |
9 | | overpopulated by 2,563 people compared to target population. |
10 | | The proposed RD 47 retains a majority of the current RD 42. The |
11 | | district is located entirely within DuPage County and includes |
12 | | Wayne, Bloomingdale, Milton, Winfield, Naperville, and Lisle |
13 | | townships. According to the Census Bureau, households in the |
14 | | communities within the proposed district have similar median |
15 | | incomes, ranging from $82,062 to $125,926. Proposed RD 47 is a |
16 | | strong professional community with socioeconomic similarities. |
17 | | Homes in the communities within the proposed district also |
18 | | share similar values, ranging from $221,700 in Warrenville and |
19 | | $416,700 in Naperville. |
20 | | The total population of RD 47 is 108,621. The voting age |
21 | | population is 3.50% African American, 9.47% Asian, 7.79% |
22 | | Hispanic. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 48 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 112,509 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was overpopulated by 3,928 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 48 as enacted in Public |
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1 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,344 people according to the 2020 |
2 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 2,237 people. The proposed |
3 | | RD 48 retains a majority of current RD 45. The proposed |
4 | | district is located within Cook and DuPage counties and |
5 | | contains communities in Carol Stream, Bloomingdale, Roselle, |
6 | | Itasca, Wood Dale, Addison, and Elk Grove Village. This |
7 | | suburban district contains communities within similar |
8 | | demographics and economic characteristics according to the |
9 | | Census Bureau. |
10 | | The total population of RD 48 is 108,568. The voting age |
11 | | population is 2.14% African American, 11.68% Asian, 12.35% |
12 | | Hispanic. |
13 | | Representative District 84 was overpopulated by more than |
14 | | 2,000 people. Proposed RD 84 was renumbered to RD 49 in Public |
15 | | Act 102-10, but has reverted to maintain its current district |
16 | | number. It contains the municipalities of Aurora, Oswego, |
17 | | Boulder Hill, Naperville, and Montgomery. The district is at |
18 | | the intersection of the counties of DuPage, Will, Kendall, and |
19 | | Kane. According to the Census Bureau, these communities have |
20 | | similar economic characteristics and demographics. |
21 | | The total population of RD 84 is 108,422. The voting age |
22 | | population is 10.66% African American, 18.53% Asian, 18.69% |
23 | | Hispanic. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 49 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 109,051 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was overpopulated by 470 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 49 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,422 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 159 people. |
4 | | Proposed RD 49 is located primarily in DuPage County, but |
5 | | also contains portions in Kane and Cook counties. |
6 | | Proposed RD 49 contains parts of the communities of |
7 | | Warrenville, Naperville, Aurora, Batavia, West Chicago, |
8 | | Geneva, Wayne, Bartlett, Elgin, and South Elgin. According to |
9 | | the Census Bureau, these communities share similar |
10 | | demographics and economic characteristics. Proposed RD 43 was |
11 | | adjusted to encompass more of Elgin, consolidating a community |
12 | | that has historically been split among several districts into |
13 | | fewer representative districts. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 49 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 109,051 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was 2,055 people over the target population. The proposed |
17 | | district unites a majority of West Chicago in one district. |
18 | | The district also unites a number of DuPage County's forest |
19 | | preserves and nature areas into a single district, including |
20 | | the James "Pate" Phillips State Park, Pratt Wayne Woods County |
21 | | Forest Preserve, West Chicago Prairie County Forest Preserve, |
22 | | Blackwell Forest Preserve, Herrons Woods State Habitat, |
23 | | Westbridge Park, Elgin Shores Forest Preserve, and DuPage |
24 | | County Big Woods Forest Preserve. |
25 | | The total population of RD 49 is 108,753. The voting age |
26 | | population is 4.01% African American, 14.01% Asian, 23.85% |
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1 | | Hispanic. |
2 | | Representative District 50 is renumbered from |
3 | | Representative District 83 as enacted in Public Act 102-10. |
4 | | This district was also known as RD 83 in Public Act 97-6. The |
5 | | configuration of Representative District 83 as enacted in 2011 |
6 | | contained 94,164 people according to the 2020 Census. This was |
7 | | underpopulated by 14,417 people compared to target population. |
8 | | The configuration of RD 50 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 |
9 | | contained 107,156 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
10 | | was underpopulated by 1,425 people. This proposed RD 50 |
11 | | remains substantially the same as current district 83. It |
12 | | contains most of Aurora as well as parts of North Aurora and |
13 | | Batavia. |
14 | | The total population of RD 50 is 108,660. The voting age |
15 | | population is 7.76% African American, 4.21% Asian, 48.78% |
16 | | Hispanic. |
17 | | The configuration of Representative District 81 as enacted |
18 | | in 2011 contained 110,166 people according to the 2020 Census. |
19 | | This was overpopulated by 1,585 people compared to target |
20 | | population. The configuration of RD 81 as enacted in Public |
21 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,499 people according to the 2020 |
22 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 918 people. The proposed |
23 | | district remains largely the same geographically and includes |
24 | | a majority of the population of the current district. There is |
25 | | a small shift to help consolidate the communities of |
26 | | Naperville, Woodridge, and Downers Grove. Proposed RD 81 |
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1 | | contains a major transportation corridor, as Interstate 355 |
2 | | bisects into the proposed district. |
3 | | The total population of RD 81 is 108,489. The voting age |
4 | | population is 4.34% African American, 12.36% Asian, 6.81% |
5 | | Hispanic. |
6 | | The configuration of Representative District 82 as enacted |
7 | | in 2011 contained 113,018 people according to the 2020 Census. |
8 | | This was overpopulated by 4,437 people compared to target |
9 | | population. The configuration of RD 82 as enacted in Public |
10 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,791 people according to the 2020 |
11 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,210 people. The proposed |
12 | | district contains a majority of the current district. It |
13 | | includes Cook, DuPage, and Will counties and the |
14 | | municipalities of Western Springs, Hinsdale, Indian Head Park, |
15 | | Burr Ridge, Willowbrook, Darien, Lemont, Palos Park, Homer |
16 | | Glen, Woodridge, and Lockport. This district was drawn to keep |
17 | | all of Lemont Township in one House district as well as several |
18 | | community school districts; Lemont Township HSD 210, Lemont |
19 | | Bromberek CSD 113A and Cass SD 63. The district also keeps |
20 | | almost all of Glower SD 62, Hinsdale Township HSD 86, and Lyons |
21 | | Township together. The northern border of the district is |
22 | | formed by the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad and has a |
23 | | southern border of north Homer Glen. |
24 | | The total population of RD 82 is 108,661. The voting age |
25 | | population is 3.03% African American, 7.44% Asian, 7.50% |
26 | | Hispanic. |
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1 | | Representative District 83 was renumbered from RD 50. The |
2 | | configuration of Representative District 50 as enacted in 2011 |
3 | | contained 119,740 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
4 | | was overpopulated by 11,159 people compared to target |
5 | | population. The configuration of RD 83 as enacted in Public |
6 | | Act 102-10 contained 92,390 people according to the 2020 |
7 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 16,191 people. The proposed |
8 | | district includes the core of the current RD 50 district. It |
9 | | contains parts of the municipalities of Oswego, Yorkville, |
10 | | Montgomery, Aurora, Batavia, Geneva, and St. Charles. These |
11 | | communities share similar demographics and economic interests |
12 | | according to the Census Bureau. |
13 | | The total population of RD 83 is 108,736. The voting age |
14 | | population is 6.11% African American, 2.82% Asian, 20.63% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | Will County: Representative Districts 85, 86, 97, and 98 |
17 | | sit mostly within Will County, with portions sitting in DuPage |
18 | | and Kendall counties. |
19 | | The configuration of Representative District 85 as enacted |
20 | | in 2011 contained 106,535 people according to the 2020 Census. |
21 | | This was underpopulated by 2,046 people compared to target |
22 | | population. The configuration of RD 85 as enacted in Public |
23 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,703 people according to the 2020 |
24 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 878 people. The proposed |
25 | | district includes a majority of the population of the current |
26 | | district, with minor adjustments to account for the population |
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1 | | change and changes to neighboring districts. The proposed |
2 | | district maintains the core of the district and contains part |
3 | | of Woodridge, part of Bolingbrook, part of Lemont, a majority |
4 | | of Romeoville, most of Lockport, most of Bonnie Brae, some of |
5 | | Crest Hill, most of Fairmont, and a small portion of |
6 | | Naperville. |
7 | | The total population of RD 85 is 108,384. The voting age |
8 | | population is 14.54% African American, 6.88% Asian, 23.27% |
9 | | Hispanic. |
10 | | The configuration of Representative District 86 as enacted |
11 | | in 2011 contained 106,802 people according to the 2020 Census. |
12 | | This was underpopulated by 1,779 people compared to target |
13 | | population. The configuration of RD 86 as enacted in Public |
14 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,289 people according to the 2020 |
15 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 292 people. The proposed |
16 | | district includes a majority of the population of the current |
17 | | district. It includes all of Jackson and Channahon townships |
18 | | and portions of Joliet and Troy townships. It includes parts |
19 | | of Joliet, Rockdale, Preston Heights, Shorewood, Channahon, |
20 | | Elwood, Ridgewood, and Ingalls Park. |
21 | | The total population of RD 86 is 108,572. The voting age |
22 | | population is 15.97% African American, 1.00% Asian, 30.41% |
23 | | Hispanic. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 97 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 120,820 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was overpopulated by 12,239 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 97 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 113,482 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 4,901 people. The proposed |
4 | | district contains a majority of the current district. It |
5 | | includes parts of Kendall and Will counties and all or parts of |
6 | | Aurora, Naperville, Plainfield, Joliet, Shorewood, and |
7 | | Bolingbrook municipalities. This district was drawn to keep |
8 | | families of similar economic interests and median incomes |
9 | | together, with incomes ranging from $70,000 - $130,000. The |
10 | | northern border is Wolf's Crossing Road with the southern |
11 | | border being the municipality of Shorewood. |
12 | | The total population of RD 97 is 108,719. The voting age |
13 | | population is 8.68% African American, 7.69% Asian, 15.85% |
14 | | Hispanic. |
15 | | The configuration of Representative District 98 as enacted |
16 | | in 2011 contained 110,268 people according to the 2020 Census. |
17 | | This was overpopulated by 1,687 people compared to target |
18 | | population. The configuration of RD 98 as enacted in Public |
19 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,650 people according to the 2020 |
20 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 931 people. The district |
21 | | includes all or parts of Joliet, Plainfield, Crystal Lawns, |
22 | | Crest Hill, Romeoville, and Bolingbrook, and the proposed |
23 | | district is entirely within Will County. Additional areas of |
24 | | Joliet were added to the district to enhance the partisan |
25 | | composition of the district. All communities in the district |
26 | | are linked by their proximity to Interstate 55, which bisects |
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1 | | the district. The district retains the majority of the current |
2 | | district, preserving its core, which was originally created |
3 | | based on witness testimony received in 2011 about the common |
4 | | interests of residents relocating to the growing area. Public |
5 | | transportation and school quality were among these concerns. |
6 | | Testimony indicated that it makes the most sense to keep these |
7 | | growing populations together, as opposed to pairing them with |
8 | | downstate communities. |
9 | | The total population of RD 98 is 108,505. The voting age |
10 | | population is 13.98% African American, 7.67% Asian, 22.57% |
11 | | Hispanic. |
12 | | North Central Illinois: The districts in the north central |
13 | | Illinois region suffered a significant loss of population, and |
14 | | as a result the districts have been reconfigured. For the most |
15 | | part, the core communities remain intact, but efforts were |
16 | | made to connect the more urban areas of the districts to |
17 | | maximize their political power. |
18 | | The configuration of Representative District 67 as enacted |
19 | | in 2011 contained 101,713 people according to the 2020 Census. |
20 | | This was underpopulated by 6,868 people compared to target |
21 | | population. The configuration of RD 67 as enacted in Public |
22 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,492 people according to the 2020 |
23 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,089 people. The proposed |
24 | | district retains a majority of the current district |
25 | | population. To adjust for the loss of population, the district |
26 | | adds parts of New Milford and Cherry Valley, which were |
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1 | | previously in RD 67 prior to 2011. The district keeps the 5th |
2 | | and 11th Wards of Rockford in the district as requested by |
3 | | Armando Cardenas from the Coalition of Latino Leaders in |
4 | | Rockford in his written and oral testimony at a hearing of the |
5 | | House Redistricting Committee. |
6 | | The median household income of Rockford is $40,100, |
7 | | $42,200 for New Milford and $58,800 for Cherry Valley, thus |
8 | | uniting communities of similar economic interest. The district |
9 | | remains entirely within Winnebago County. The proposed |
10 | | district has a total population of 108,458, with an African |
11 | | American voting-age population of 20.1%, a Hispanic voting-age |
12 | | population of 16.5%, and an Asian voting-age population of 2%. |
13 | | The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as members of |
14 | | multiple racial groups. Including individuals who identify as |
15 | | multiple races, the voting age population is 22.04% African |
16 | | American. |
17 | | The configuration of Representative District 68 as enacted |
18 | | in 2011 contained 107,158 people according to the 2020 Census. |
19 | | This was underpopulated by 1,423 people compared to target |
20 | | population. The configuration of RD 68 as enacted in Public |
21 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,426 people according to the 2020 |
22 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 155 people. The proposed |
23 | | district retains a majority of the current district |
24 | | population. The portions of the district that include Rockford |
25 | | remain largely unchanged with only slight variations to the |
26 | | borders. Manufacturing remains the top industry in the current |
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1 | | district and the proposed district moves east to include the |
2 | | city of Belvidere, which is home to the Belvidere Chrysler |
3 | | Assembly Plant. The workers at the plant are part of The |
4 | | International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and |
5 | | Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW). |
6 | | The Belvidere community shares a similar interest to the |
7 | | existing core of the current district in that they have a |
8 | | shared interest in being represented by someone who supports |
9 | | organized labor and carries a commitment to protecting the |
10 | | rights of organized labor and working families. |
11 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,450, |
12 | | with an African American voting-age population of 9.7%, a |
13 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 17.5%, and an Asian |
14 | | voting-age population of 3.8%. |
15 | | The configuration of Representative District 69 as enacted |
16 | | in 2011 contained 107,256 people according to the 2020 Census. |
17 | | This was underpopulated by 1,325 people compared to target |
18 | | population. The configuration of RD 69 as enacted in Public |
19 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,484 people according to the 2020 |
20 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,097 people. The changes |
21 | | in the district are primarily to account for population |
22 | | changes in the region. This district links numerous |
23 | | communities that contain outdoor recreational areas and parks. |
24 | | It also connects numerous conservation areas like Rush Creek |
25 | | Conservation Area, Brookdale Conservation Area, Marengo Ridge |
26 | | Conservation Area, Coral Woods Conservation Area, Pleasant |
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1 | | Valley Conservation Area, Piscasaw Fen Conservation Area, |
2 | | Beck's Woods Conservation Area, High Point Conservation, |
3 | | Winding Creek Conservation Area, North Branch Conservation |
4 | | Area, and Glacier Park Conservation Area. RD 69's proposed |
5 | | northeast border proceeds westward along the Illinois - |
6 | | Wisconsin border. |
7 | | The proposed district has a total population of 108,508, |
8 | | with an African American voting-age population of 1.5%, a |
9 | | Hispanic voting-age population of 13.5%, and an Asian American |
10 | | voting-age population of 3.1%. |
11 | | Following the release of the proposed legislative map on |
12 | | Friday, May 21, 2021, Republican state representatives made |
13 | | public comments criticizing the number of incumbent Republican |
14 | | state representatives whose primary residences were located in |
15 | | the same representative district as another incumbent |
16 | | Republican state representative. This new proposed district |
17 | | boundary therefore changed boundaries from the original |
18 | | proposal district from Friday, May 21. Following the request |
19 | | of Republicans, RD 69 was reconfigured to put Representative |
20 | | Keicher's home in RD 70, while keeping Representative |
21 | | Sosnowski's home in RD 69. |
22 | | The configuration of Representative District 70 as enacted |
23 | | in 2011 contained 105,830 people according to the 2020 Census. |
24 | | This was underpopulated by 2,751 people compared to target |
25 | | population. The configuration of RD 70 as enacted in Public |
26 | | Act 102-10 contained 111,087 people according to the 2020 |
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1 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,506 people. The changes in |
2 | | the district are primarily to account for population changes |
3 | | in the region. The proposed district maintains consistency in |
4 | | socioeconomic status, ethnic tradition, municipal government |
5 | | and various other practical considerations. Proposed RD 70 |
6 | | will contain Kane, DeKalb, Kendall, and McHenry counties, and |
7 | | the municipalities of Maple Park, Burlington, Sugar Grove, |
8 | | Gilberts, Huntley and Hampshire. Those municipalities have |
9 | | median incomes ranging from $65,984 to $100,809 respectively, |
10 | | uniting communities of similar levels of economic interest. |
11 | | The total population of RD 70 is 108,589. The voting age |
12 | | population is 2.00% African American, 3.77% Asian, 9.00% |
13 | | Hispanic. |
14 | | Following the release of the proposed legislative map on |
15 | | Friday, May 21, 2021, Republican state representatives made |
16 | | public comments criticizing the number of incumbent Republican |
17 | | state representatives whose primary residences were located in |
18 | | the same representative district as another incumbent |
19 | | Republican state representative. This new proposed district |
20 | | boundary therefore changed boundaries from the original |
21 | | proposal district from Friday, May 21. Following the request |
22 | | of Republicans, RD 70 was reconfigured to include |
23 | | Representative Keicher's home. |
24 | | The configuration of Representative District 75 as enacted |
25 | | in 2011 contained 117,180 people according to the 2020 Census. |
26 | | This was overpopulated by 8,599 people compared to target |
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1 | | population. The configuration of RD 75 as enacted in Public |
2 | | Act 102-10 contained 111,471 people according to the 2020 |
3 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 2,890 people. To reduce |
4 | | population and account for population shifts in neighboring |
5 | | districts, proposed RD 75 loses population in its current |
6 | | southern and eastern portions and gains population west and |
7 | | north. This helps make proposed RD 75 more compact. Proposed |
8 | | RD 75 contains portions of LaSalle, DeKalb, Kendall, and |
9 | | Grundy County. Townships in the proposed RD 75 include in |
10 | | DeKalb County, Sandwich; in LaSalle County, Northville, |
11 | | Mission, Miller, and Manlius; in Grundy County, Nettle Creek, |
12 | | Erienna, Vienna (partial), Morris, Saratoga, Aux Sable, and |
13 | | Felix; and in Kendall County, Seward (partial), Na-Au-Say |
14 | | (partial), Oswego (partial), Bristol (partial), Little Rock, |
15 | | Fox, Kendall, Lisbon, and Big Grove. Municipalities in |
16 | | proposed RD 75 include parts of Marseilles, Seneca, Sheridan, |
17 | | Lisbon, Morris, Channahon, Minooka, Joliet, Oswego, Yorkville, |
18 | | Milington, Millbrook, Somonauk, Plano, and Sandwich. |
19 | | Communities within proposed RD 75 are similar demographically |
20 | | and have similar rates of per capita income ranging from |
21 | | approximately $30,000 to $35,000. |
22 | | Proposed RD 75 is more compact than the current RD 75. The |
23 | | partisan composition of the proposed RD 75 is similar to that |
24 | | of the current RD 75. The total population of RD 75 is 108,653. |
25 | | The voting age population is 4.26% African American, 1.49% |
26 | | Asian, 12.33% Hispanic. |
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1 | | The configuration of Representative District 76 as enacted |
2 | | in 2011 contained 104,334 people according to the 2020 Census. |
3 | | This was underpopulated by 4,247 people compared to target |
4 | | population. The configuration of RD 76 as enacted in Public |
5 | | Act 102-10 contained 107,563 people according to the 2020 |
6 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,018 people. While this |
7 | | regional population loss necessitated some significant |
8 | | reconfiguration, a majority of the existing RD 76's core is |
9 | | maintained in the district. The proposed district achieves its |
10 | | target population by connecting several of the 18 largest |
11 | | cities in the north central Illinois region. The southern end |
12 | | of the proposed district maintains the existing connection |
13 | | between Ottawa, North Utica, LaSalle, Peru, and Spring Valley, |
14 | | and combines this with the city of DeKalb, which is kept whole |
15 | | in the proposed district. Several economic, geographic, and |
16 | | regional factors connect DeKalb and the Illinois River Valley |
17 | | communities. Median income in DeKalb is much closer to the |
18 | | median incomes of Peru, LaSalle, Ottawa, and other small parts |
19 | | of the district, as opposed to communities DeKalb is connected |
20 | | to the current configuration, where the median income reaches |
21 | | as high as $119,000. With economies centered around |
22 | | manufacturing and distribution, both DeKalb and the Illinois |
23 | | River Valley communities are centers for organized labor and |
24 | | have a shared interest in representation that will prioritize |
25 | | the needs of middle-class workers. In the northern end of the |
26 | | district, distribution centers for Target, Nestle, and 3M are |
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1 | | all located in DeKalb. Ferrara Distribution Center, also |
2 | | located in DeKalb, is a major regional distribution center for |
3 | | Wal-Mart located in Spring Valley in the southern end of the |
4 | | district. Nearly all the communities in the proposed district |
5 | | are hubs along the interstate highway system, giving these |
6 | | areas a shared interest in representation that prioritizes |
7 | | infrastructure investment and maintenance. Interstate 80 |
8 | | connects Ladd, Dalzell, LaSalle, and Dayton in the southern |
9 | | end of the district. Interstate 39 links LaSalle and |
10 | | Jonesville. DeKalb is a major stop along Interstate 88. The |
11 | | DeKalb Oasis, Interstate 88's only rest stop in Illinois, is |
12 | | included in the district. The district follows State Highway |
13 | | 23 from Ottawa to DeKalb. The district shares environmental |
14 | | interests. The proposed district links the four areas in the |
15 | | Illinois River Valley that have been designated as Superfund |
16 | | sites by the United States Environmental Protection Agency - |
17 | | Spring Valley, Ottawa, and two sites in LaSalle. Furthermore, |
18 | | including DeKalb in the district links these sites with |
19 | | Northern Illinois University - one of the state's leading |
20 | | institutions for environmental studies. |
21 | | The district also connects river communities with a shared |
22 | | interest in flood control and water quality. The Illinois |
23 | | River and its tributaries flow across the entire southern |
24 | | end of the district, while the Kishwaukee River flows through |
25 | | all of DeKalb in the northern part of the district. The |
26 | | district also includes Wedron, which borders the Fox River. |
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1 | | The Fox River makes up the district's southeastern boundary. |
2 | | Boating and watersports contribute to the economies of each of |
3 | | these communities. DeKalb, Wedron, LaSalle, Ottawa, and Peru |
4 | | have numerous businesses dedicated to river recreation, |
5 | | fishing, boat rental, and more. DeKalb and the Illinois River |
6 | | Valley communities included in the proposed district have a |
7 | | shared interest in hunting and fishing. The southern end of |
8 | | the district includes a number of popular duck, goose, and |
9 | | deer hunting locations, and hunting clubs are a significant |
10 | | part of the local economy. Meanwhile, numerous parks and |
11 | | nature areas in DeKalb attract fishers, including Prairie |
12 | | Park, East Lagoon, and Rotary Park. The proposed district |
13 | | reconnects DeKalb and LaSalle, which were previously connected |
14 | | into one representative district under legislative maps |
15 | | enacted in 1981. |
16 | | The total population of RD 76 is 108,628. The voting age |
17 | | population is 7.04% African American, 2.34% Asian, 11.66% |
18 | | Hispanic. |
19 | | Central Illinois: Representative Districts 87, 88, 91, 92, |
20 | | 95, 96, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, and 109 lost |
21 | | more than 4,000 people over the past decade, necessitating |
22 | | reconfiguration in parts of the region. |
23 | | The configuration of Representative District 87 as enacted |
24 | | in 2011 contained 103,051 people according to the 2020 Census. |
25 | | This was underpopulated by 5,530 people compared to target |
26 | | population. The configuration of RD 87 as enacted in Public |
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1 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,750 people according to the 2020 |
2 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 169 people. The proposed RD |
3 | | 87 It includes portions of McLean, Tazewell, DeWitt, Macon, |
4 | | Sangamon, and Logan counties. It includes all or portions of |
5 | | the communities of Armington, Atlanta, McLean, Chestnut, |
6 | | Warrensburg, Lincoln, Broadwell, Wapella, Clinton, Maroa, |
7 | | Delavan, New Holland, Danvers, Mackinaw, Tremont, and |
8 | | Heyworth. Proposed RD 87 is a major hub of transportation with |
9 | | several major highways running through it including I-55, |
10 | | I-74, I-155, Route 9, Route 10, Route 90, Route 122 and US-136. |
11 | | Proposed RD 87 also includes multiple nature preserves and |
12 | | outdoor recreation areas including Thaddeus Stubblefield Grove |
13 | | Nature Preserve and Mackinaw River State Fish and Wildlife |
14 | | Area, maintaining a community of interest. Proposed RD 87 |
15 | | connects the rural communities that lay outside of Bloomington |
16 | | and Peoria, which have shared interests different from those |
17 | | of more urban areas. |
18 | | Representative District 87 has a total population of |
19 | | 108,650 and a voting age population that is 2.1% African |
20 | | American, .7% Asian, and 2.2% Hispanic. |
21 | | The configuration of Representative District 88 as enacted |
22 | | in 2011 contained 109,108 people according to the 2020 Census. |
23 | | This was overpopulated by 527 people compared to target |
24 | | population. The configuration of RD 88 as enacted in Public |
25 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,648 people according to the 2020 |
26 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,933 people. To |
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1 | | accommodate population shifts in neighboring districts, |
2 | | Representative District 88 includes all or portions of |
3 | | Livingston, McLean, DeWitt, Piatt, Macon, and counties. It |
4 | | includes the municipalities of Argenta, Cisco, Monticello, |
5 | | Farmer City, Bement, Cerro Gordo, Forsyth, and parts of |
6 | | Bloomington. These areas share similar cultural values of more |
7 | | rural areas and a strong connection to larger cities in |
8 | | eastern Illinois. Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois |
9 | | lost large portions of population according to the 2020 |
10 | | census, this necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those |
11 | | districts. These areas were also generally overcounted in the |
12 | | 2015-2019 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. To |
13 | | accommodate population shifts in neighboring districts, |
14 | | Representative District 88 includes all or portions of |
15 | | Livingston, McLean, DeWitt, Piatt, Macon, and counties. It |
16 | | includes the municipalities of Argenta, Cisco, Monticello, |
17 | | Farmer City, Bement, Cerro Gordo, Forsyth, and parts of |
18 | | Bloomington. These areas share similar cultural values of more |
19 | | rural areas and a strong connection to larger cities in |
20 | | eastern Illinois. Proposed RD 88 also contains the |
21 | | intersections of several major roadways and highways including |
22 | | I-55, I-155, Route 10 and Route 121. Additionally, a community |
23 | | of interest connected through outdoor recreation is maintained |
24 | | as RD 88 is home to different nature preserves including |
25 | | Edward R. Madigan State Park, Chestnut Beason Park, Kickapoo |
26 | | Creek County Park, Weldon Springs State Park and Old Settlers |
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1 | | Park. Rd 88 includes Logan Correctional Center which serves as |
2 | | a major employer of the region, as well as educational |
3 | | institutions Lincoln Christian University and Lincoln College. |
4 | | Representative District 88 has a total voting population |
5 | | of 108,513, with an African American voting population of 4%, |
6 | | a Hispanic voting population of 3%, and an Asian voting |
7 | | population of 4.4%. |
8 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
9 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
10 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
11 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
12 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. Proposed |
13 | | Representative 91 contains parts of multiple current districts |
14 | | including RD 91, 88, 105, and 106. The configuration of RD 91 |
15 | | as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 105,668 people |
16 | | according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 2,913 |
17 | | people. |
18 | | Representative District 91 was underpopulated by over |
19 | | 7,600 and shifted to accommodate the need to gain population. |
20 | | Proposed RD 91 contains portions of Peoria, Tazewell, |
21 | | Woodford, and McLean counties. Communities within proposed RD |
22 | | 91 have similar home values and household incomes. Proposed RD |
23 | | 91 maintains a community of interest among college students, |
24 | | faculty, and staff by keeping Illinois State University and |
25 | | Illinois Wesleyan University united within a single |
26 | | representative district. As indicated by Republican lawmakers |
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1 | | at Redistricting Hearings in August 2021, the Central Illinois |
2 | | Regional Airport in Bloomington has been included in proposed |
3 | | RD 91 to keep the airport with the community of Bloomington. |
4 | | The total population of RD 91 is 108,488. The voting age |
5 | | population is 9.64% African American, 2.43% Asian, 5.84% |
6 | | Hispanic. |
7 | | The configuration of Representative District 92 as enacted |
8 | | in 2011 contained 100,700 people according to the 2020 Census. |
9 | | This was underpopulated by v7881 people compared to target |
10 | | population. The configuration of RD 92 as enacted in Public |
11 | | Act 102-10 contained 103,890 people according to the 2020 |
12 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 4,691 people. |
13 | | Representative District 92 saw population loss of more |
14 | | than 7,800 over the past decade, necessitating expansion. |
15 | | Proposed RD 92 remains entirely within Peoria County and |
16 | | expands to include more of the City of Peoria. It includes all |
17 | | or parts of Peoria City, Richwoods, Medina, Radnor, Kickapoo, |
18 | | Limestone, and West Peoria townships. Proposed RD 92 contains |
19 | | all or parts of the communities of Peoria, Peoria Heights, |
20 | | West Peoria, Bartonville and Bellevue. As indicated by |
21 | | Republican lawmakers at Redistricting Hearings in August 2021, |
22 | | the Peoria airport has been included in proposed RD 92 to keep |
23 | | the airport with the community of Peoria. |
24 | | The total population of RD 92 is 108,499. The voting age |
25 | | population is 25.84% African American, 3.24% Asian, 6.15% |
26 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
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1 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
2 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
3 | | 28.14% African American. |
4 | | The configuration of Representative District 96 as enacted |
5 | | in 2011 contained 100,036 people according to the 2020 Census. |
6 | | This was underpopulated by 8,545 people compared to target |
7 | | population. The configuration of RD 96 as enacted in Public |
8 | | Act 102-10 contained 104,264 people according to the 2020 |
9 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 4,317 people. |
10 | | Proposed RD 96 retains the communities of interest formed |
11 | | between the city of Decatur and Springfield - two major |
12 | | central Illinois cities connected by Interstate 72. The |
13 | | proposed district includes a majority of the population of the |
14 | | current district. The district as proposed contains the vast |
15 | | majority of urban Decatur, all of the towns of Mt. Auburn, |
16 | | Roby, and Buckhart, a significant portion of the city of |
17 | | Springfield, and portions of Jerome, which are surrounded |
18 | | entirely by Springfield. In response to repeated requests from |
19 | | Republican members of the House Redistricting Springfield's |
20 | | representation into fewer districts, the proposed RD 96 |
21 | | expands to include more of the city of Springfield and |
22 | | consolidate the city's central core into two House districts |
23 | | and one Senate district. The proposed district also fulfills |
24 | | requests from hearings by keeping the majority of Decatur |
25 | | intact as requested by a Decatur City Council member and |
26 | | reflecting the socioeconomic links between Decatur and parts |
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1 | | of Springfield as noted by a Decatur business owner. Eastern |
2 | | Springfield shares numerous socioeconomic similarities with |
3 | | Decatur; in many categories, including median household |
4 | | income, unemployment, and public school attendance, |
5 | | Springfield's east side compares more to Decatur than to other |
6 | | parts of Springfield outside of the proposed RD 96. Rather |
7 | | than creating multiple representative districts with a |
8 | | significant portion of residents with similar socioeconomic |
9 | | needs, proposed RD 96, by joining much of Decatur with the east |
10 | | side of Springfield, creates a representative district in |
11 | | which the needs and concerns of lower-income residents can be |
12 | | better addressed by one representative. With the seat of State |
13 | | government in Springfield, many State workers commute from |
14 | | Decatur to Springfield, and some Springfield residents work at |
15 | | the hospitals and manufacturing facilities in Decatur, |
16 | | creating a shared interest. The healthcare industry is a major |
17 | | employer in both Springfield and Decatur, linking this area |
18 | | with central Illinois hospitals with similar needs and |
19 | | interests in Decatur, including keeping Memorial Medical |
20 | | Center and HSHS St. John's Hospitals. This keeps the entire |
21 | | Springfield Medical District in the same Representative |
22 | | District, split in HB2777. The proposed RD 96 links Millikin |
23 | | University with Richland Community College, which was |
24 | | previously located in another district. The partisan |
25 | | composition of the district is enhanced by extending farther |
26 | | west into Springfield. As configured, Proposed RD 96 also |
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1 | | keeps small central Illinois cities Mechanicsburg, Buffalo, |
2 | | and Dawson complete in adjacent districts, as these |
3 | | communities share a school district. Stonington, Taylorville, |
4 | | and Rochester, which currently are fully or partially in RD 96 |
5 | | have been removed so they may be kept whole in proposed RD 95. |
6 | | The total population of RD 96 is 108,426. The voting age |
7 | | population is 26.96% African American, 1.56% Asian, 2.89% |
8 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
9 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
10 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
11 | | 29.14% African American. |
12 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
13 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
14 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
15 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
16 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
17 | | of RD 101 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 104,689 |
18 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
19 | | by 3,892 people. |
20 | | The proposed district reaches its most north point |
21 | | in-between the south side of Gibson City and the north side of |
22 | | Fisher. The district travels southeast along the outside of |
23 | | Champaign city limits. The district dips up to pick up St. |
24 | | Joseph before continuing south to reach its most southern |
25 | | point in Janesville. The western border travels from the |
26 | | southern border north passing through or containing the towns |
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1 | | Sullivan, Atwood, Ivesdale, Mahomet and Dickerson. The entire |
2 | | district is made of rural areas and small towns outside of |
3 | | Charleston and Mattoon. Communities within the proposed |
4 | | district are largely similar demographically. They are also |
5 | | bound together with similar median incomes. |
6 | | The total population of RD 101 is 108,583. The voting age |
7 | | population is 2.27% African American, 1.12% Asian, 4.04% |
8 | | Hispanic. |
9 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
10 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
11 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
12 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
13 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
14 | | of RD 102 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 105,283 |
15 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
16 | | by 3,298 people. |
17 | | The proposed Representative District 102 is in Champaign, |
18 | | Vermilion, Edgar, Clark, Cumberland, Coles, Effingham, Jasper, |
19 | | Crawford, and Lawrence Counties. Clark, Edgar, Jasper, |
20 | | Crawford, and Lawrence counties are kept whole. Other |
21 | | boundaries were drawn largely along township lines or major |
22 | | roadways in order to ensure substantially equal population and |
23 | | keep municipalities together. This includes many different |
24 | | municipalities throughout those counties that share rural |
25 | | interests and values. This district keeps many school |
26 | | districts intact, including Red Hill CUSD 9, Lawrence CUSD 20, |
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1 | | Palestine CUSD 3, Robinson CUSD 2, Oblong CUSD 4, Jasper CUSD |
2 | | 1, Hutsonville CUSD 1, Dieterich CUSD 30, Teutopolis CUSD 50, |
3 | | Cumberland CUSD 77, Casey-Westfield CUSD 4C, Martinsville CUSD |
4 | | 3C, Marshall CUSD 2C, Paris Union CUSD 95, Kansas CUSD 3, |
5 | | Shiloh CUSD 1, Edgar County CUSD 6, Salt Fork CUSD 512, |
6 | | Georgetown-Ridge Farm CUSD 4 and parts of Heritage CUSD 8 and |
7 | | Westville CUSD 2. |
8 | | The total population of RD 102 is 108,586. The voting age |
9 | | population is 2.57% African American, 0.34% Asian, 1.68% |
10 | | Hispanic. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 103 as |
12 | | enacted in 2011 contained 109,575 people according to the 2020 |
13 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 994 people compared to |
14 | | target population. The configuration of RD 103 as enacted in |
15 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 106,450 people according to the |
16 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 2,131 people. |
17 | | The district sits entirely within the cities of Champaign |
18 | | and Urbana, and retains 100% of the core of the existing |
19 | | district. Numerous factors link the cities of Champaign and |
20 | | Urbana, including current representation, partisan |
21 | | similarities, and the flagship campus of the University of |
22 | | Illinois - which is a major employer and economic engine in the |
23 | | district. It keeps the cores of Champaign and Urbana together |
24 | | with the University of Illinois campus, the main housing |
25 | | areas, and the major traffic patterns around Champaign, Urbana |
26 | | and the U of I campus. The proposed district also preserves, |
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1 | | intact and in one district, the community of interest |
2 | | populations of African Americans to the north of the city |
3 | | centers and Asians to the south of the city centers. Keeping |
4 | | the majority of the cities of Champaign and Urbana in one House |
5 | | district and entirely within one Senate district strengthens |
6 | | both an urban community of interest in this district and a |
7 | | rural community of interest in surrounding districts. This |
8 | | separation helps ensure that elected officials in surrounding |
9 | | areas can focus on issues that are more pressing to rural |
10 | | communities. |
11 | | The total population of RD 103 is 108,573. The voting age |
12 | | population is 16.61% African American, 19.11% Asian, 9.19% |
13 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
14 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
15 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
16 | | 18.43%. |
17 | | The configuration of Representative District 104 as |
18 | | enacted in 2011 contained 102,465 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 6116 people compared to |
20 | | target population. The configuration of RD 104 as enacted in |
21 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 103,519 people according to the |
22 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 5,062 people. The |
23 | | proposed RD 104 is in Champaign and Vermilion counties. The |
24 | | proposed district contains Danville, Tilton, Westville, |
25 | | Belgium, Oakwood, Muncie, Fithian, Royal, Savoy, Thomasboro, |
26 | | and Rantoul. RD 104 is made up of the areas outside of the |
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1 | | urban areas of Champaign and Urbana. It extends north of the |
2 | | city to take in Thomasboro and Rantoul. It travels east along |
3 | | the northern boundaries of Ogden and Stanton Townships. This |
4 | | northern boundary follows E 2500 North Rd. The eastern |
5 | | boundary extends all the way to the border of Illinois and |
6 | | Indiana. This envelopes nearly the entire municipality of |
7 | | Danville. This district was drawn to keep the surrounding |
8 | | communities around Champaign Urbana together. |
9 | | The total population of RD 104 is 108,592. The voting age |
10 | | population is 13.65% African American, 5.15% Asian, 5.51% |
11 | | Hispanic. |
12 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
13 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
14 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
15 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
16 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
17 | | of RD 105 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 106,399 |
18 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
19 | | by 2,182 people. |
20 | | Representative District 105 was overpopulated by nearly |
21 | | 2,500. Proposed RD 105 includes all of Putnam County and |
22 | | portions of Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Woodford, Tazewell, |
23 | | McLean, LaSalle, and Livingston counties. Lines largely follow |
24 | | township and municipal boundaries. It included the school |
25 | | districts of Putnam County CUSD 535, Lostant CUSD 425, |
26 | | Fieldcrest CUSD 6, Lowpoint Washburn CUSD #21, Roanoke-Benson |
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1 | | CUSD 60, Flanagan-Cornell Unit 74, El Paso Gridley, CUSD 11 |
2 | | and Lexington 7 McLean County 5. |
3 | | The total population of RD 105 is 108,658. The voting age |
4 | | population is 2.03% African American, 1.64% Asian, 2.91% |
5 | | Hispanic. |
6 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
7 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
8 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
9 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
10 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. This was |
11 | | underpopulated by 6,953 people compared to target population. |
12 | | The configuration of RD 106 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 |
13 | | contained 105,924 people according to the 2020 Census. This |
14 | | was underpopulated by 2,657 people. |
15 | | Representative District 106 was underpopulated by nearly |
16 | | 7,000. It includes portions of the counties of LaSalle, |
17 | | Grundy, Livingston, Ford, Champaign, and Iroquois. Households |
18 | | in the communities within proposed RD 106 have similar median |
19 | | incomes, ranging from $46,515 to $77,160. |
20 | | The total population of RD 106 is 108,394. The voting age |
21 | | population is 1.00% African American, 0.51% Asian, 5.87% |
22 | | Hispanic. |
23 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
24 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
25 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
26 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
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1 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
2 | | of RD 107 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 108,108 |
3 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
4 | | by 473 people. |
5 | | Representative District 107 is comprised largely of |
6 | | portions of current RDs 101 and 102. Proposed RD 107 contains |
7 | | all of Moultrie and Shelby counties along with portions of |
8 | | Macon, Christian, Montgomery, and Effingham counties. |
9 | | Municipalities of Taylorville, Pana, Owaneco, Wenonah, |
10 | | Nokomis, Strasburg, Witt, Coalton, Herrick, Altamont, |
11 | | Stewardson, Sigel, Sullivan, Lovington, Beecher, and Effingham |
12 | | are within the confines of proposed RD 107. The western border |
13 | | goes to Cumberland and Effingham County, then goes east to |
14 | | include the city of Effingham. Counties are split almost |
15 | | exclusively along township lines with the exception of South |
16 | | Wheatland and Neoga townships. These were split to ensure |
17 | | substantially equal population between the districts. |
18 | | The total population of RD 107 is 108,548. The voting age |
19 | | population is 0.71% African American, 0.58% Asian, 2.09% |
20 | | Hispanic. |
21 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
22 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
23 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
24 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
25 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
26 | | of RD 108 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 108,549 |
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1 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
2 | | by 32 people. |
3 | | Representative District 108 is comprised of portions of |
4 | | current RDs 87, 95, 96, 99 and 100. It includes parts of |
5 | | Macoupin, Montgomery, Christian, and Sangamon counties along |
6 | | with all of Menard County. The proposed district allows for |
7 | | Springfield to be less split over several districts than the |
8 | | current map. The district boundaries follow the local county |
9 | | and township boundaries. Only Chatham, Curran, Ball, Cotton |
10 | | Hill, Gardner, Clear Lake, and Mechanicsburg townships are |
11 | | split in proposed RD108. These splits are largely along |
12 | | municipal boundaries, major roads, and bodies of water. |
13 | | Interstate 55 runs through the core of proposed RD108. |
14 | | The total population of RD 108 is 108,600. The voting age |
15 | | population is 1.52% African American, 0.50% Asian, 1.27% |
16 | | Hispanic. |
17 | | Metro East: Generally labeled as the "Metro East", this |
18 | | region borders St. Louis, Missouri to the east. It has seen |
19 | | significant population loss over the last ten years, losing |
20 | | more than 10,000 residents within the four representative |
21 | | districts over the last decade. This has resulted in the |
22 | | representative districts having to add population to reach the |
23 | | targeted equal population. This is an economically and |
24 | | socially diverse region with common economic challenges which |
25 | | impact all or parts of the area. Many of the residents of these |
26 | | four representative districts work in and commute to St. Louis |
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1 | | every day. |
2 | | The configuration of Representative District 111 as |
3 | | enacted in 2011 contained 103,026 people according to the 2020 |
4 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 5,555 people compared to |
5 | | target population. The configuration of RD 111 as enacted in |
6 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 104,424 people according to the |
7 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 4,157 people. |
8 | | The proposed district keeps the majority of the current |
9 | | district, including the core of Riverbend Region. It is |
10 | | located entirely within Madison County, whereas current RD 111 |
11 | | is split between Madison and Jersey counties. The cities of |
12 | | Alton, Godfrey, Bethalto, Wood River, East Alton, Hartford, |
13 | | Rosewood Heights, Roxana and South Roxana all belong to the |
14 | | same Chamber of Commerce Group, the Riverbend Growth |
15 | | Association. The proposed district removes much of the rural |
16 | | areas of the current district and adds more of Granite City so |
17 | | it is only divided between two representative districts |
18 | | instead of three. The proposed district adds parts of Glen |
19 | | Carbon and Maryville which share many of the same social, |
20 | | cultural and economic characteristics as seen in other parts |
21 | | of the proposed district. |
22 | | The total population of RD 111 is 108,642. The voting age |
23 | | population is 9.02% African American, 0.82% Asian, 3.38% |
24 | | Hispanic. |
25 | | The configuration of Representative District 112 as |
26 | | enacted in 2011 contained 114,505 people according to the 2020 |
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1 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 5,924 people compared to |
2 | | target population. The configuration of RD 112 as enacted in |
3 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 113,336 people according to the |
4 | | 2020 Census. This was overpopulated by 4,755 people. |
5 | | The district boundaries were adjusted to accommodate |
6 | | significant population loss in the Metro East region, but it |
7 | | retains the core of the current district and most of its |
8 | | current population. It includes more of Granite City which |
9 | | splits Granite City between two representative districts and |
10 | | one legislative district instead of three representative |
11 | | districts and two legislative districts. The proposed district |
12 | | includes more of Caseyville and Fairview Heights, puts all of |
13 | | State Park Place and Fairmont Race Track in one district, and |
14 | | keeps Southern Illinois University Edwardsville campus in the |
15 | | district, with the campus boundary as one of the western |
16 | | district lines. Changes in the southern border of the proposed |
17 | | district return the district to some of the 2001 district |
18 | | boundaries. |
19 | | The total population of RD 112 is 108,602. The voting age |
20 | | population is 14.41% African American, 2.00% Asian, 5.66% |
21 | | Hispanic. |
22 | | The configuration of Representative District 113 as |
23 | | enacted in 2011 contained 101,432 people according to the 2020 |
24 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 7,149 people compared to |
25 | | target population. The configuration of RD 113 as enacted in |
26 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 108,460 people according to the |
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1 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 121 people. |
2 | | The proposed district is made up of portions of both |
3 | | Madison and St. Clair Counties. While the district expands its |
4 | | current border to add population, it roughly maintains the |
5 | | same shape and includes the majority of the current district. |
6 | | The divisions through Madison and Fairmont City follow along |
7 | | township and county boundaries. In the proposed district, both |
8 | | Belleville High School and O'Fallon High School are all in the |
9 | | South Western Conference for sports. |
10 | | The total population of RD 113 is 108,474. The voting age |
11 | | population is 29.56% African American, 1.66% Asian, 4.64% |
12 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
13 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
14 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
15 | | 31.21% African American. |
16 | | The configuration of Representative District 114 as |
17 | | enacted in 2011 contained 97,784 people according to the 2020 |
18 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 10,797 people compared to |
19 | | target population. The configuration of RD 114 as enacted in |
20 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 99,346 people according to the |
21 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 9,235 people. The |
22 | | proposed RD 114 largely maintains the same shape and includes |
23 | | a majority of the current district. The proposed district |
24 | | makes whole Cahokia, East Carondelet, Smithton, Sauget, |
25 | | Mascoutah, and Millstadt which were all previously split with |
26 | | another representative district. The proposed district's |
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1 | | southern border now follows the Fayetteville, Millstadt, |
2 | | Prairie Du Long, and New Athens Township lines and keeps the |
3 | | economic drivers and landmarks such as Scott Air Force Base in |
4 | | the district. The proposed district makes whole Cahokia |
5 | | Community Unit School District 187 and Dupo Community Unit |
6 | | School District 196, which were previously split. |
7 | | The total population of RD 114 is 108,384. The voting age |
8 | | population is 33.41% African American, 1.01% Asian, 2.38% |
9 | | Hispanic. The 2020 Census allowed people to identify as |
10 | | members of multiple racial groups. Including individuals who |
11 | | identify as multiple races, the voting age population is |
12 | | 34.90% African American. |
13 | | Western Illinois: The configuration of Representative |
14 | | District 71 as enacted in 2011 contained 106,494 people |
15 | | according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 2,087 |
16 | | people compared to target population. The configuration of RD |
17 | | 71 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 105,383 people |
18 | | according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 3,198 |
19 | | people. To gain population and accommodate population shifts |
20 | | in neighboring districts, RD 71 shifts south. Counties |
21 | | represented within the proposed RD 71 include Rock Island |
22 | | County, Henry County, Mercer County, Warren County, Knox |
23 | | County, and McDonough County. Proposed RD 71 contains the |
24 | | following townships: In Rock Island County, Coal Valley |
25 | | (portion), Hampton (portion), South Moline (portion), and |
26 | | Rural; in Henry County, Colona, Western, Lynn, and Oxford; in |
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1 | | Mercer County, Richland Grove, Rivoli, and North Henderson; in |
2 | | Knox County, Rio, Henderson, Galesburg City, Galesburg, and |
3 | | Knox; in Warren County, Kelly, Coldbrook, Monmouth, Lenox, |
4 | | Floyd, Roseville, Berwick, Swan, Greenbush; in McDonough |
5 | | County, Walnut Grove, Prairie City, Bushnell, Mound, Macomb, |
6 | | Emmet, and Macomb City (portion). Proposed RD 71 contains a |
7 | | higher education community of interest with Black Hawk |
8 | | College, Western Illinois University, Monmouth College, and |
9 | | Knox College. At the request of the Knox County Board, |
10 | | Galesburg is wholly located within one district. Proposed RD |
11 | | 71 preserves agricultural and small town communities of |
12 | | interest by keeping as many townships and municipalities as |
13 | | possible intact. The proposed RD 71's partisan index is |
14 | | similar to that of the current RD 71. |
15 | | The total population of RD 71 is 108,735. The voting age |
16 | | population is 7.28% African American, 1.87% Asian, 6.07% |
17 | | Hispanic. |
18 | | The configuration of Representative District 72 as enacted |
19 | | in 2011 contained 105,876 people according to the 2020 Census. |
20 | | This was underpopulated by 2,705 people compared to target |
21 | | population. The configuration of RD 72 as enacted in Public |
22 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,840 people according to the 2020 |
23 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 259 people. Proposed RD 72 |
24 | | includes a majority of the current district. Located entirely |
25 | | within Rock Island County, proposed RD 72 keeps South Rock |
26 | | Island, Rock Island, and Moline townships together, as they |
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1 | | are in current RD 72. To ensure compactness and unite |
2 | | communities of interest, proposed RD 72 fully incorporates |
3 | | Black Hawk Township, which is currently split between |
4 | | districts. Proposed RD 72 takes in additional portions of |
5 | | Milan, Moline, and East Moline, while removing more rural |
6 | | areas of current RD 72. Expanding eastward to gain population, |
7 | | proposed RD 72 includes all of Hampton and more of Silvis, |
8 | | which is currently divided by a boundary line. Proposed RD 72 |
9 | | lies within the Peoria Catholic Diocese, and the |
10 | | Davenport-Rock Island-Moline media market-all distinctions |
11 | | carried over from current RD 72. It contains one regional |
12 | | airport authority in Moline, is represented by the Tri-City |
13 | | Building Trades, operates on the Bi-State Regional Commission |
14 | | and is covered by the Moline office of the Department of |
15 | | Employment Security. All of these characteristics are carried |
16 | | over from current RD 72. |
17 | | The total population of RD 72 is 108,580. The voting age |
18 | | population is 11.39% African American, 2.50% Asian, 13.74% |
19 | | Hispanic. |
20 | | The configuration of Representative District 73 as enacted |
21 | | in 2011 contained 110,651 people according to the 2020 Census. |
22 | | This was overpopulated by 2,070 people compared to target |
23 | | population. The configuration of RD 73 as enacted in Public |
24 | | Act 102-10 contained 108,973 people according to the 2020 |
25 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 392 people. It includes |
26 | | portions of Henry, Bureau, Stark, Marshall, Peoria and |
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1 | | Woodford counties. The district has parts of northeast Peoria |
2 | | as its southern border. This district was drawn to keep |
3 | | communities of similar economic interest together as the |
4 | | median household income of all the counties range from $54,907 |
5 | | to $72,808. RD 73 was reconfigured to avoid pairing incumbents |
6 | | after concerns raised by House Republicans. |
7 | | Proposed RD 73 will contain Berlin, Bureau, Clarion, |
8 | | Concord, Dover, Fairfield, Gold, Greenville, Indianatown, La |
9 | | Moille, Macon, Manlius, Milo, Mineral, Neponset, Ohio, |
10 | | Princeton, Walnut, Westfield, and Wyanet Townships. |
11 | | The total population of RD 73 is 108,553. The voting age |
12 | | population is 1.16% African American, 3.32% Asian, 2.66% |
13 | | Hispanic. |
14 | | The configuration of Representative District 74 as enacted |
15 | | in 2011 contained 105,304 people according to the 2020 Census. |
16 | | This was underpopulated by 3,277 people compared to target |
17 | | population. The configuration of RD 74 as enacted in Public |
18 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,987 people according to the 2020 |
19 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 1,594 people. RD 74 links |
20 | | communities off I-88 and I-39, two major roadways in the area. |
21 | | This district also links communities along the Rock River, |
22 | | creating a community of interest for river communities. It |
23 | | includes the municipalities of Rochelle, Hillcrest, Creston, |
24 | | Malta, Steward, Lee, Shabbona, Paw, Earlville, Leland, |
25 | | Harding, Triumph, Troy Grove, Morrison, Rock Falls, Sterling, |
26 | | Nelson, Harmon, Amboy, Mendota, Ashton, Franklin Grove, Dixon, |
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1 | | and Coleta. |
2 | | The total population of RD 74 is 108,476. The voting age |
3 | | population is 2.96% African American, 0.68% Asian, 12.24% |
4 | | Hispanic. |
5 | | The configuration of Representative District 89 as enacted |
6 | | in 2011 contained 103,495 people according to the 2020 Census. |
7 | | This was underpopulated by 5,086 people compared to target |
8 | | population. The configuration of RD 89 as enacted in Public |
9 | | Act 102-10 contained 109,988 people according to the 2020 |
10 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,407 people. |
11 | | Proposed Representative District 89 has similar income |
12 | | levels, and similar home value levels. It has several highways |
13 | | within the confines of the district, including Interstate 39, |
14 | | State Route 2, State Route 38, State Route 64, State Route 70, |
15 | | State Route 72, State Route 75, and State Route 251. It also |
16 | | has several outdoor recreations, Hononegah Forest Preserve, |
17 | | Kieselburg County Forest Preserve, Rock Cut State Park, |
18 | | Rockton Bog Nature Preserve, Sugar River Alder Nature |
19 | | Preserve, Colored Sands Forest Preserve, Sand Bluff Bird |
20 | | Observatory, and Colored Sands Bluff Nature Preserve. |
21 | | Proposed RD 89 contains stateline communities bordering |
22 | | Iowa and Wisconsin as well as other communities in |
23 | | northwestern Illinois. These include Galena, Hanover, |
24 | | Elizabeth, Warren, Nora, Apple River, Winslow, Pearl City, |
25 | | Lake Carroll, Channon, Milledgeville, Savanna, Thomson, Mount |
26 | | Morris, Byron, Stillman Valley, Monroe center, Genoa, |
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1 | | Kirkland, and Davis Junction. |
2 | | The total population of RD 89 is 108,566. The voting age |
3 | | population is 1.34% African American, 0.44% Asian, 4.43% |
4 | | Hispanic. |
5 | | Rural areas in Illinois lost large portions of population |
6 | | according to the 2020 census, this necessitated a larger |
7 | | reconfiguration of those districts. These areas were also |
8 | | generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 American Community |
9 | | Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration of RD 90 as enacted |
10 | | in Public Act 102-10 contained 109,678 people according to the |
11 | | 2020 Census. This was overpopulated by 1,097 people. |
12 | | Proposed Representative District 90 contains all or |
13 | | portions of the communities of Freeport, Willow Lake, Ridott, |
14 | | Cedarville, Orangeville, Dakota, Rock City, Davis, Lake |
15 | | Summerset, Durand, Machesney Park, Roscoe, Rockton, South |
16 | | Beloit, Argyle. Proposed RD 90 is located within Stephenson |
17 | | County and Winnebago County. In Stephenson County it contains |
18 | | all or parts of Oneco, Dakota, Rock Grove, Rock Run, Ridott, |
19 | | Silver Greek, Freeport, Lancaster, Harlem, and Florence |
20 | | Townships. In Winnebago County it contains all or parts of |
21 | | Durand, Laona, Shirland, Harrison, Rockton, Roscoe, Owen, |
22 | | Harlem, and Rockford townships. Proposed RD 90 contains |
23 | | stateline communities bordering Wisconsin. |
24 | | The total population of RD 90 is 108,525. The voting age |
25 | | population is 5.56% African American, 1.48% Asian, 5.12% |
26 | | Hispanic. |
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1 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
2 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
3 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
4 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
5 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
6 | | of RD 93 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 109,437 |
7 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was overpopulated by |
8 | | 856 people. To accommodate population shifts, Representative |
9 | | District 93 expands and contains all or parts of Henry, Knox, |
10 | | Stark, Peoria, and Tazewell counties. It contains rural |
11 | | communities including Osco, Andover, Cambridge, Kewanee, |
12 | | Bishop Hill, Nekoma, Galva, La Fayette, Altona, Oneida, |
13 | | Wataga, Victoria, Oak Run, Williamsfield, Princeville, |
14 | | Wyoming, Toulon, Brimfield, Maquon, Gilson, Yates, Elmwood, |
15 | | Trivoli, Hanna City, Smithville, Lake Camelot, Glasford, |
16 | | Kingston Mines, Mapleton, and Norwood. It also contains |
17 | | communities in North Pekin, South Pekin, Pekin, and Marquette |
18 | | Heights. |
19 | | The total population of RD 93 is 108,708. The voting age |
20 | | population is 2.11% African American, 1.07% Asian, 3.10% |
21 | | Hispanic. |
22 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
23 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
24 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
25 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
26 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
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1 | | of RD 94 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 106,344 |
2 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
3 | | by 2,237 people. |
4 | | Proposed Representative District 94 contains communities |
5 | | including San Jose, Mason City, Green Valley, Easton, |
6 | | Kilbourne, Topeka, Forest City, Manito, Goofy Ridge, |
7 | | Liverpool, Banner, Havana, St. David, Dunfermline, Bath, |
8 | | Astoria, Ipava, Lewistown, Bryant, Canton, Cuba, Smithfield, |
9 | | Fairview, Vermont, Table Grove, Marietta, Ellisville, London |
10 | | Mills, Avon, St. Augustine, Abingdon, Adair, Industry, |
11 | | Littleton, Macomb, Colchester, Tennessee, Plymouth, Augusta, |
12 | | Golden, La Prairie, Bowen, Lorraine, West Point, Bentley, |
13 | | Carthage, Ferris, Elvaston, Hamilton, Warsaw, Lima, Meyer, |
14 | | Basco, Good Hope, Sciota, Blandinsville, La Harpe, Nauvoo, |
15 | | Niota, Pontoosuc, Dallas City, Lomax, Carman, Raritan, |
16 | | Stronghurst, Gulfport, Gladstone, Biggsville, Kirkwood, |
17 | | Oquawka, Little York, Seaton, Keithsburg, New Boston, Joy, |
18 | | Aledo, Viola, Matherville, Millersburg, Preemption, Reynolds, |
19 | | Hamlet Eliza, Illinois City, Buffalo Prairie, Taylor Ridge, |
20 | | Edington, and Andalusia. Proposed RD 94 contains all or parts |
21 | | of Rock Island, Mercer, Warren, Henderson, Hancock, Adams, |
22 | | McDonough, Fulton, Mason, Tazewell, and Knox counties. |
23 | | The total population of RD 94 is 108,580. The voting age |
24 | | population is 1.51% African American, 0.29% Asian, 1.77% |
25 | | Hispanic. |
26 | | The configuration of Representative District 95 as enacted |
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1 | | in 2011 contained 104,076 people according to the 2020 Census. |
2 | | This was underpopulated by 4,505 people compared to target |
3 | | population. The configuration of RD 95 as enacted in Public |
4 | | Act 102-10 contained 110,054 people according to the 2020 |
5 | | Census. This was overpopulated by 1,473 people. |
6 | | Proposed district 95 has its most north point on the |
7 | | southside of Sherman and contains the northern, western and |
8 | | southern outskirts of Springfield. Counties contained in the |
9 | | proposed district are Sangamon, Macon and Christian. Proposed |
10 | | RD 95 unites Rochester and Stonington municipalities, both of |
11 | | which are split in the current district. Proposed RD 95 also |
12 | | keeps the Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport, Lincoln's Tomb, and |
13 | | the Illinois State Fair grounds together in one district. |
14 | | The total population of RD 95 is 108,730. The voting age |
15 | | population is 7.86% African American, 2.87% Asian, 2.18% |
16 | | Hispanic. |
17 | | Representative District 99, which is the former RD 100, |
18 | | was underpopulated by over 8,800. It includes portions of |
19 | | Morgan, Schuyler, Brown and Adams counties along with all of |
20 | | Cass County. The western border of the district is the |
21 | | Missouri-Illinois state line with the western border following |
22 | | county lines. The southern and northern boundaries are largely |
23 | | along township lines. Proposed RD 99 only splits Versailles, |
24 | | Chapin, and Woodson townships for population purposes, but |
25 | | keeps together municipalities in those townships. This |
26 | | district was drawn to keep communities of similar economic |
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1 | | interest together. The median income for Jacksonville, Quincy |
2 | | and Beardstown is between $40,750 and $46,189. |
3 | | The total population of RD 99 is 108,582. The voting age |
4 | | population is 5.75% African American, 0.78% Asian, 3.98% |
5 | | Hispanic. |
6 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
7 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
8 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
9 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
10 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
11 | | of RD 100 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 105,106 |
12 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
13 | | by 3,475 people. |
14 | | Proposed Representative District 100 includes the parts of |
15 | | Adams, Brown, Morgan, Madison, and Macoupin counties, and |
16 | | includes all of Pike, Scott, Greene, Calhoun, and Jersey |
17 | | counties. Counties are split largely along township lines. |
18 | | Rural parts of Godfrey, Foster and Fort Russell townships in |
19 | | Madison County are in proposed RD 100 that are in current 111, |
20 | | this places them in a more rural district that better matches |
21 | | the needs of the areas than the more urban and industrial parts |
22 | | of current and proposed RD 111. The district boundaries follow |
23 | | the Missouri and Illinois borders and unite a plethora of |
24 | | Riverfront communities. |
25 | | The total population of RD 100 is 108,707. The voting age |
26 | | population is 1.11% African American, 0.38% Asian, 1.23% |
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1 | | Hispanic. |
2 | | Southern Illinois: The Southern Illinois region sustained |
3 | | some of the largest population losses in the State, and House |
4 | | districts required significant reconfiguration to create |
5 | | compact districts of substantially equal population. |
6 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
7 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
8 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
9 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
10 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
11 | | of RD 109 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 111,147 |
12 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was overpopulated by |
13 | | 2,566 people. |
14 | | Representative District 109 saw population loss of more |
15 | | than 4,400. The proposed district includes parts of Bond, |
16 | | Madison, Clinton, St. Clair, and Washington Counties. These |
17 | | counties are well-paired economically, with relatively |
18 | | consistent median household incomes throughout the group. |
19 | | Incomes range from $52,200 in Bond County to $63,900 in |
20 | | Clinton County. Townships and municipalities are largely kept |
21 | | intact with only Lebanon, O'Fallon, Collinsville, |
22 | | Fayetteville, and Fort Russell townships being split for the |
23 | | purposes of keeping substantially equal population. |
24 | | Proposed RD 109 also keeps all of Triad Community Unit |
25 | | School District 2 and Highland Community Unit School District |
26 | | 5 in the same district. The two schools compete in most school |
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1 | | sports and have a strong school rivalry that brings the two |
2 | | communities together for football and basketball games. |
3 | | The total population of RD 109 is 108,548. The voting age |
4 | | population is 2.30% African American, 0.70% Asian, 2.67% |
5 | | Hispanic. |
6 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
7 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
8 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
9 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
10 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
11 | | of RD 110 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 106,266 |
12 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
13 | | by 2,315 people. |
14 | | Representative District 110 was underpopulated by over |
15 | | 10,000. Proposed RD 110 includes all or portions of Marion, |
16 | | Clay, Richland, Fayette, Clinton, Bond, Montgomery, and |
17 | | Effingham counties. There are no split townships in proposed |
18 | | RD 110. Wamac is the only split municipality and is split along |
19 | | county lines. Proposed RD 110 keeps Centralia in one district |
20 | | where it is currently split. Proposed RD 110 is a largely rural |
21 | | district with mostly small farming towns. Proposed RD 110 also |
22 | | includes the entirety of Vandalia where the second, third, and |
23 | | fourth capitol buildings used by the Illinois General Assembly |
24 | | were located with the fourth capitol building still standing |
25 | | in Vandalia today. |
26 | | The total population of RD 110 is 108,564. The voting age |
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1 | | population is 3.36% African American, 0.69% Asian, 1.99% |
2 | | Hispanic. |
3 | | Rural areas in eastern and central Illinois lost large |
4 | | portions of population according to the 2020 census, this |
5 | | necessitated a larger reconfiguration of those districts. |
6 | | These areas were also generally overcounted in the 2015-2019 |
7 | | American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates. The configuration |
8 | | of RD 116 as enacted in Public Act 102-10 contained 106,482 |
9 | | people according to the 2020 Census. This was underpopulated |
10 | | by 2,099 people. |
11 | | Representative District 115 is the core of the current RD |
12 | | 116. The configuration of Representative District 116 as |
13 | | enacted in 2011 contained 104,205 people according to the 2020 |
14 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 4,376 people compared to |
15 | | target population. The configuration of RD 115 as enacted in |
16 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 105,955 people according to the |
17 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 2,626 people. |
18 | | The proposed district contains all of Monroe, Perry, and |
19 | | Randolph counties and portions of Jackson, St. Clair, and |
20 | | Washington counties, and the municipalities of Gorham, |
21 | | Murphysboro, Vergennes, Ava, Campbell Hill, Rockwood, Percy, |
22 | | Steeleville, Chester, Kaskaskia, Ellis Grove, Evansville, |
23 | | Ruma, Sparta, Coulterville, Tilden, Oakdale, Baldwin, Red Bud, |
24 | | Marissa, Lenzburg, Hecker, Maeystown, Valmeyer, Waterloo, and |
25 | | Columbia. Proposed RD 115 unites the city of Du Quoin, which is |
26 | | the home of the annual Du Quoin State Fair. Proposed RD 115 has |
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1 | | an agricultural community of interest and a recreational and |
2 | | tourism community of interest that includes Kinkaid Lake, Lake |
3 | | Murphysboro State Park, Middle Mississippi River National |
4 | | Wildlife Refuge, Piney Creek Ravine Nature Preserve, |
5 | | Kaskaskia, which was the first State capital of Illinois, |
6 | | Randolph County State Recreation Area, and Washington County |
7 | | State Recreation Area. Proposed RD 115 also contains the |
8 | | Misselhorn Art Gallery in Sparta, which occupies a former |
9 | | train depot used as a filming location in 1967's In The Heat of |
10 | | the Night, which the Library of Congress placed on the |
11 | | National Film Registry. Partisan advantage is largely the same |
12 | | as the current RD 115. |
13 | | The total population of RD 115 is 108,630. The voting age |
14 | | population is 5.49% African American, 0.45% Asian, 2.44% |
15 | | Hispanic. |
16 | | Representative District 116 is comprised of parts of |
17 | | former RDs 109, 115, 117, and 118. Proposed RD 116 contains all |
18 | | of Jefferson County, Wayne County, Edwards County, and Wabash |
19 | | County and while containing portions of White, Washington, |
20 | | Franklin, Hamilton, and Wayne counties. Within Washington |
21 | | County, DuBois Township is split along Random Road and County |
22 | | Highway 26 for population purposes. In Hamilton County, no |
23 | | townships are split, uniting McLeansboro Township which is |
24 | | currently split by RD 117 and RD 118. |
25 | | Partisan advantage is largely the same as the current RD |
26 | | 116. Areas in proposed RD 116 have largely similar |
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1 | | demographics, per capita income, rate of people living in |
2 | | poverty, average travel time to work, owner-occupied housing |
3 | | rates, mortgage costs, and rental housing costs according to |
4 | | American Community Survey data. Primary economic communities |
5 | | of interest include the agriculture industry and the energy |
6 | | industry. Counties in the proposed RD 116 have much higher |
7 | | average shares of workers in these industries compared to the |
8 | | rest of the State. Proposed RD 116 contains the following |
9 | | municipalities: Johnsonville, Cisne, Mount Erie, Fairfield, |
10 | | Jeffersonville, Golden Gate, West Salem, Bone Gap, Albion, |
11 | | Browns, Belmont, Keensburg, Mount Carmel Buckner, Christopher, |
12 | | North City, Valier, Sesser, Benton, West City, Ewing, |
13 | | Macedonia, Ina, Nason, Bonnie, Waltonville, Woodlawn, Mt. |
14 | | Vernon, Dix, Belle Rive, Dahlgren, Bluford, Keenes, Wayne |
15 | | City, Sims, Belle Prairie, McLeansboro, Enfield, Springerton, |
16 | | Mill Shoals, Burnt Prairie, Carmi, Phillipstown, Crossville, |
17 | | and Grayville. Cultural attractions include Rend Lake |
18 | | recreational areas, Mt. Vernon Game Propagation Center, and |
19 | | the Hamilton County State Fish & Wildlife Area. Proposed RD |
20 | | 116 unites McLeansboro. |
21 | | Following the release of the proposed legislative map on |
22 | | Friday, May 21, 2021, Republican state representatives made |
23 | | public comments criticizing the number of incumbent Republican |
24 | | state representatives whose primary residences were located in |
25 | | the same representative district as another incumbent |
26 | | Republican state representative. This new proposed district |
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1 | | boundary therefore changed boundaries from the original |
2 | | proposal district from Friday, May 21. Following the request |
3 | | of Republicans, RD 116 was reconfigured to put Representative |
4 | | Meier's home in RD 109, while keeping Representative Friess' |
5 | | home in 116. |
6 | | The total population of RD 116 is 108,536. The voting age |
7 | | population is 2.70% African American, 0.80% Asian, 1.45% |
8 | | Hispanic. |
9 | | The configuration of Representative District 117 as |
10 | | enacted in 2011 contained 107,660 people according to the 2020 |
11 | | Census. This was underpopulated by 921 people compared to |
12 | | target population. The configuration of RD 117 as enacted in |
13 | | Public Act 102-10 contained 107,649 people according to the |
14 | | 2020 Census. This was underpopulated by 932 people. Proposed |
15 | | RD 117 keeps Pope, Massac, Johnson, Hardin, Gallatin, and |
16 | | Saline Counties together. Split counties of Williamson, |
17 | | Franklin, White and Hamilton are mostly split along township |
18 | | lines keeping Six Mile, Denning, Indian Creek, Heralds |
19 | | Prairie, Emma, Eastern, Mayberry, Twigg, Cave, Frankfort, |
20 | | Southern, Flannigan, South Flannigan together. Frankfort, East |
21 | | Marion and Benton townships are the only split townships in |
22 | | proposed 117 to help ensure equal population. Most of these |
23 | | township splits are largely along current precinct lines. |
24 | | Benton Township is split along the Big Muddy River to ensure |
25 | | municipalities in the township remain whole. All of the |
26 | | counties in proposed 117 have similar median household incomes |
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1 | | with the counties ranging from $39k-$44k. Including places |
2 | | like Marion with median household income of $44.4k Proposed RD |
3 | | 117 includes mostly rural areas along with two of the larger |
4 | | population centers in Southern Illinois of Marion and |
5 | | Harrisburg. It also includes a large part of Shawnee National |
6 | | Forest and follows the Wabash and Ohio rivers that also make up |
7 | | the state's borders. |
8 | | The total population of RD 117 is 108,516. The voting age |
9 | | population is 3.87% African American, 0.35% Asian, 1.86% |
10 | | Hispanic. |
11 | | The configuration of Representative District 99 as enacted |
12 | | in 2011 contained 111,958 people according to the 2020 Census. |
13 | | This was underpopulated by 3,377 people compared to target |
14 | | population. The configuration of RD 99 as enacted in Public |
15 | | Act 102-10 contained 106,843 people according to the 2020 |
16 | | Census. This was underpopulated by -1,738 people. |
17 | | Proposed Representative District 118 contains parts of |
18 | | former RDs 115, 117, and 118. The proposed district includes |
19 | | the entirety of Pulaski, Alexander, and Union counties. |
20 | | Proposed RD 118 splits Jackson, and Williamson counties, |
21 | | largely keeping townships and municipalities together in |
22 | | whole. It contains all of Carbondale, Elk, De Soto, Makanda, |
23 | | Pomona, Grand Tower, Blairsville, Carterville, West Marion and |
24 | | Grassy townships, along with parts of Murphysboro and East |
25 | | Marion townships. Southern Illinois has a strong regional |
26 | | identity, driven in no small part by Southern Illinois |
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1 | | University in Carbondale. The University continues to be an |
2 | | economic engine as one of the leading research universities in |
3 | | the State and a major employer for the area. Proposed RD 118 |
4 | | unites the entirety of the City of Carbondale and Southern |
5 | | Illinois University Carbondale Campus into one Representative |
6 | | District where both are currently divided into two |
7 | | Representative Districts and two Legislative Districts. In |
8 | | addition to the University, Proposed RD 118 includes John A. |
9 | | Logan Community College whereas it is currently in a different |
10 | | district than the two districts including the University. |
11 | | Southern Illinois and proposed RD 118 has unique geography |
12 | | that is also a source of tourism. Proposed RD 118 includes |
13 | | Giant City State Park and parts of the Shawnee National |
14 | | Forest. There are also multiple manmade lakes in proposed RD |
15 | | 118 widely used for recreation in the region including Little |
16 | | Grassy Lake, Crab Orchard Lake, Devils Kitchen Lake, and Cedar |
17 | | Lake. Proposed RD 118 also includes all of the Shawnee Hills |
18 | | Wine Trail, a collection of local wineries attracting tourists |
19 | | from the State and spurring further economic development in |
20 | | the region. Proposed RD 118 unites Southern Illinois |
21 | | communities with larger minority populations such as Pulaski, |
22 | | Mounds, Cairo, Mound City, Tamms, Carbondale, Ullin, and |
23 | | Thebes. Uniting these communities and ending the split of |
24 | | Carbondale under the 2011 maps in order to protect the voting |
25 | | power of historically marginalized and disenfranchised |
26 | | citizens was requested by Dr. Linda Flowers, President of the |