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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, Under Article IV, Section 3 of the Illinois
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3 | | Constitution of 1970, in the year following each federal
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4 | | decennial census year, the General Assembly by law shall
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5 | | redistrict the Legislative Districts and the Representative
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6 | | Districts by June 30; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, The United States Census Bureau failed to deliver
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8 | | the 2020 Census Public Law 94-171 population data to the
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9 | | States, including Illinois, by March 31, 2021, as required by
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10 | | the federal Census Act; and
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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
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15 | | WHEREAS, On April 26, 2021, the United States Census
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16 | | Bureau released the 2020 Census apportionment data, which
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17 | | showed that the total resident population of Illinois as of
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18 | | April 1, 2020 was 12,812,508 according to the 2020 Census, a
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19 | | decrease of more than 18,000 people, or 0.14%, from the 2010
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20 | | Census; and
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21 | | WHEREAS, In addition to the decennial census, the United
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1 | | States Census Bureau conducts the American Community Survey, a
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2 | | nationwide, continuous survey that includes detailed questions
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3 | | about population and housing characteristics, and publishes
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4 | | the data on a 1-year and 5-year basis; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, State and federal courts across the country,
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6 | | including the United States District Court for the Northern
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7 | | District of Illinois, have recognized the American Community
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8 | | Survey 5-year data as a reliable population measure related to
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9 | | redistricting, particularly for compliance with the federal
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10 | | Voting Rights Act; and
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11 | | WHEREAS, The total resident population of Illinois
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12 | | according to the 2015-2019 American Community Survey data was
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13 | | 12,770,577, which is approximately 0.3% less than the total
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14 | | resident population from the 2020 Census; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois General Assembly conducted 59
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16 | | hearings on redistricting, resulting in hundreds of
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17 | | testimonials from the public; and
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18 | | WHEREAS, Staffs for the House and Senate reached out to
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19 | | more than 2,000 community groups, local leaders, and
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20 | | stakeholders in advance of these hearings; and |
21 | | WHEREAS, At those hearings, the Illinois General Assembly
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1 | | heard from experts in the area of redistricting, considered
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2 | | comments from public officials and members of the general
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3 | | public, and received proposals submitted by members of the
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4 | | public and stakeholder groups; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, The 2011 General Assembly Redistricting Plan has
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6 | | been a model for the nation, resulting in about a third of the
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7 | | members in the General Assembly being African American,
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8 | | Hispanic, or Asian, which reflects the minority voting
age |
9 | | population in the State; and |
10 | | WHEREAS, House Bill 2777 of the 102nd General Assembly was |
11 | | amended with legislative language creating the General |
12 | | Assembly Redistricting Act of 2021, which established the |
13 | | boundaries of all 59 Legislative Districts and 118 |
14 | | Representative Districts; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, The 59 Legislative Districts contained in House |
16 | | Bill 2777 ranged from the least populated Legislative |
17 | | District, Legislative District 32, with 216,082 persons to |
18 | | highest populated Legislative District, Legislative District |
19 | | 42, with 216,872 based on the population data which the |
20 | | districts were created with; and |
21 | | WHEREAS, The General Assembly passed House Bill 2777, in |
22 | | compliance with the requirements of Article VI, Section 8 of |
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1 | | the Illinois Constitution of 1970, on May 28, 2021; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, The redistricting plan set forth in House Bill |
3 | | 2777 was signed into law by the Governor as Public Act |
4 | | 102-0010, becoming effective on June 4, 2021 and fulfilling |
5 | | the General Assembly's mandate under Article IV, Section 3(b) |
6 | | of the Illinois Constitution of 1970; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, On August 12, 2021, the United States Census |
8 | | Bureau released the 2020 Census Public Law 94-171 population |
9 | | data to the States, including Illinois; and
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10 | | WHEREAS, The House and Senate Redistricting Committees |
11 | | conducted 9 hearings to receive public input on the 2020 |
12 | | Census data and Public Act 102-0010, including proposed |
13 | | adjustments to the enacted plan set forth in Public Act |
14 | | 102-0010; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, The Census Bureau's population data shows that 15 |
16 | | Illinois counties grew in population from the 2010 Census; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, The Census Bureau's population data shows that |
18 | | the counties of Carroll (2.0%), Champaign (2.4%), Cook (1.6%), |
19 | | DuPage (1.7%), Effingham (1.2%), Grundy (4.9%), Johnson |
20 | | (5.8%), Kane (0.2%), Kendall (14.9%), Lake (1.5%), McHenry |
21 | | (0.5%), McLean (0.8%), Monroe (6.1%), Will (2.8%) and |
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1 | | Williamson (5.8%) gained population from the 2010 Census; and |
2 | | WHEREAS, The Census Bureau's population data shows Cook |
3 | | County had the State's largest population growth with 80,866 |
4 | | additional people from the 2010 Census; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, These 15 counties grew by a total population of |
6 | | 159,253 from 2010 Census; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, The Census Bureau's population data shows that 87 |
8 | | Illinois counties lost population from the 2010 Census; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, The Census Bureau's population data shows that |
10 | | St, Clair County lost the highest number of people, 12,656 or - |
11 | | 4.7%, while Alexander County lost the greatest percentage of |
12 | | its population, -36.4% or 2,998 people; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, These 87 counties lost by a total population of |
14 | | 177,377 from 2010 Census; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois General Assembly has drafted a plan
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16 | | for redistricting the Legislative Districts and the
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17 | | Representative Districts (the "2021 General Assembly
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18 | | Redistricting Plan"); therefore, be it
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19 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL |
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1 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that in establishing |
2 | | boundaries for Illinois Legislative and Representative |
3 | | Districts ("Districts"), the following redistricting |
4 | | principles were taken into account: |
5 | | (i) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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6 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be
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7 | | substantially equal in population; |
8 | | (ii) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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9 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be
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10 | | consistent with the United States Constitution; |
11 | | (iii) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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12 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be
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13 | | consistent with the federal Voting Rights Act, where
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14 | | applicable; |
15 | | (iv) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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16 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be
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17 | | compact and contiguous, as required by the Illinois
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18 | | Constitution; |
19 | | (v) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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20 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to be
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21 | | consistent with the Illinois Voting Rights Act of 2011,
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22 | | where applicable; and |
23 | | (vi) each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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24 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn taking into
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25 | | account the partisan composition of the District and of
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26 | | the Plan itself; and be it further
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1 | | RESOLVED, That in addition to the foregoing redistricting
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2 | | principles, each of the Districts contained in the 2021
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3 | | General Assembly Redistricting Plan was drawn to reflect a
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4 | | balance of the following redistricting principles: the
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5 | | preservation of the core or boundaries of the existing
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6 | | Districts; the preservation of communities of interest;
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7 | | respect for county, township, municipal, ward, and other
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8 | | political subdivision boundaries; the maintenance of
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9 | | incumbent-constituent relationships and tracking of population
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10 | | migration; proposals or other input submitted by members of
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11 | | the public and stakeholder groups; public hearing testimony;
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12 | | respect for geographic features and natural or logical
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13 | | boundaries; and other redistricting principles recognized by
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14 | | State and federal court decisions; and be it further
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15 | | RESOLVED, That the Senate used 2020 Census Public Law |
16 | | 94-171 population data made available and downloaded on August |
17 | | 12, 2021 and other publicly available data, and public input |
18 | | to establish the boundaries for the 2021 General Assembly |
19 | | Redistricting Plan; and be it further |
20 | | RESOLVED, That the Senate hereby adopts and incorporates
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21 | | by reference all information received by the House
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22 | | Redistricting Committee or the Senate Redistricting Committee
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23 | | and the Senate Redistricting Subcommittees that was submitted
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1 | | by the general public and stakeholders in person or remotely
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2 | | at the hearings; by email; by U.S. mail; by facsimile; or via
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3 | | the public portal on the House and Senate Democratic
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4 | | redistricting websites; and be it further |
5 | | RESOLVED, That the Senate further adopts and incorporates
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6 | | by reference transcripts of proceedings for all of the
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7 | | redistricting hearings conducted by either the House or Senate
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8 | | or both; and be it further |
9 | | RESOLVED, That the Legislative Districts proposed in the
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10 | | 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are substantially
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11 | | equal in population, with the largest deviation being
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12 | | 0.19%/-0.18% or +409/-390 people, from the target population |
13 | | of 217,161;
and be it further |
14 | | RESOLVED, That the Legislative Districts proposed in the
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15 | | 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are as compact
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16 | | overall as the existing Legislative Districts adopted in 2011;
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17 | | and be it further |
18 | | RESOLVED, That the Legislative Districts proposed in the
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19 | | 2021 General Assembly Redistricting Plan are contiguous; and
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20 | | be it further |
21 | | RESOLVED, That the following summary describes the general
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1 | | characteristics of each Legislative District and makes
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2 | | reference to some but not all of the redistricting principles
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3 | | that were considered in drawing that District. The term |
4 | | "Proposed Legislative District", followed by a number, will |
5 | | refer to the Legislative District proposed in the 2021 General |
6 | | Assembly Redistricting Plan set forth in Senate Bill 927 of |
7 | | the 102nd General Assembly, "Enacted Legislative District", |
8 | | followed by a number, will refer to the Legislative District |
9 | | enacted in the Public Act 102-0010, and the term "Current |
10 | | Legislative District", followed by a number, will refer to the |
11 | | Legislative District under the plan adopted in 2011 as Public |
12 | | Act 97-0006: |
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 1 |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 1 is located on the
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15 | | southwest side of Chicago into the immediate southwestern Cook
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16 | | County suburbs. Current Legislative District 1 saw a decrease
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17 | | of 389 in population which is 82 under the ideal
population |
18 | | target. Enacted Legislative District 1 with the 2020 Census |
19 | | data has a total population of 225,299 which is 8,138 over the |
20 | | ideal population target. To account for population increases |
21 | | and shifts in the surrounding districts,
Legislative District |
22 | | 1 has been reconfigured.
The northern
boundary of proposed |
23 | | Legislative District 1 is generally
Roosevelt Road, the |
24 | | western boundary is generally Kemman
Avenue, the eastern |
25 | | boundary is generally South Wallace
Street, and the most |
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1 | | southern boundary is generally Marquette
Road. |
2 | | The proposed district includes portions of Wards 11, 14,
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3 | | 15, 16, 22, and 23, including the Chicago
neighborhoods of |
4 | | Gage Park, Back of the Yards, and Archer
Heights. The proposed |
5 | | district includes portions of Cicero,
Berwyn, Riverside, |
6 | | McCook, Brookfield, Lyons, Stickney, and
Forest View. |
7 | | The Stevenson Expressway Interstate 55 runs east to west
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8 | | through the center of the proposed Legislative District and
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9 | | serves as a major thoroughfare, as do Ogden, Archer, Harlem,
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10 | | and Cicero Avenue. Chicago Transit Authority bus and rail
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11 | | lines (Orange line) also serve portions of the district on the
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12 | | southwest side of Chicago. Metra also provides transportation
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13 | | services with the BNSF Railway route to Aurora which has had
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14 | | some of the busiest stations in the Chicagoland area for more
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15 | | than a decade. Proposed Legislative District 1 is drawn along
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16 | | precinct lines, streets and rail lines along Archer Avenue on
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17 | | the south. Proposed Legislative District 1 strives to keep
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18 | | together several communities of interest and transportation
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19 | | hubs, including major roadways and railways. Portions of the
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20 | | Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal also run through the proposed
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21 | | district with the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of
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22 | | Greater Chicago maintaining waste treatment facilities in
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23 | | Stickney and Cicero. |
24 | | It contains predominantly working-class neighborhoods and
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25 | | suburbs located near industrial and commercial facilities. The
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26 | | areas located in Proposed Legislative District 1 share similar
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1 | | elementary (Berwyn South 100, Cicero 99, Lyons 103, Central
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2 | | Stickney, Summit 104 and Chicago Public Schools of Columbia
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3 | | Explorers, Edwards, Everett, and McClellan) and secondary (J.
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4 | | Sterling Morton 201, Reavis 220, Riverside Brookfield
Township |
5 | | 208, and Chicago Public Schools of Curie, Gage Park,
Infinity, |
6 | | Kelly, Kennedy, Richards, Solorio, and Tilden). |
7 | | The proposed district is
also home to the Brookfield Zoo, |
8 | | which spans approximately 216
acres through Brookfield and |
9 | | maintains about 370 full-time
employees while bringing on |
10 | | about 600-700 seasonal hires each
year. Also in the proposed |
11 | | district is Hawthorne Racecourse
and the presently developing |
12 | | Hawthorne Casino. The proposed
district is also home to Morton |
13 | | College, the second oldest
community college in the State, |
14 | | which reported 84% Hispanic
student population in the |
15 | | 2019-2020 academic year. Due to its overpopulation, Proposed |
16 | | Legislative District 1 sheds a few precincts in Berwyn and |
17 | | Riverside to the adjoining Legislative District 11 which also |
18 | | contains those municipalities. In addition, Proposed |
19 | | Legislative District 1 sheds some precincts in Chicago's 17th |
20 | | Ward to adjoining Proposed Legislative District 16 which |
21 | | contains portions of the bulk of the 17th Ward. These changes |
22 | | bring the district to 111 persons under the ideal target |
23 | | population while keeping more municipal and ward areas more |
24 | | together. |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 1 has a total population of |
26 | | 217,050 which is 111 or 0.05% under the ideal population. The |
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1 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 1 is |
2 | | 18.35% White, 4.24% Black, 2.21% Asian, and 73.70%
Hispanic. |
3 | | The total minority population is 81.65%. The total
voting age |
4 | | population is 21.44% White, 4.50% Black, 2.40%
Asian, and |
5 | | 70.27% Hispanic. The total minority voting
age population is |
6 | | 78.56%. Incumbent Senator Antonio
"Tony" Muñoz (D) resides |
7 | | within the proposed district. |
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 2 |
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 2 is located on the
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10 | | northwest side of Chicago. Current Legislative District 2 saw |
11 | | a decrease
of 1,848 in population which is 1,541 under the |
12 | | ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative District 2 with |
13 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 215,031 which is |
14 | | 2,130 under the ideal population target. To account for the |
15 | | population decrease in the district and increasing and |
16 | | shifting populations in the surrounding districts, Legislative |
17 | | District 2 has been reconfigured. |
18 | | The northern boundary is generally Addison Street. The |
19 | | western boundary is generally Harlem Avenue, while the eastern |
20 | | boundary is generally Ashland Ave. The southern boundary is |
21 | | generally W. Chicago Avenue and W. Hubbard Street, all in |
22 | | Chicago. |
23 | | The proposed district includes portions of Wards 1,
2, 26, |
24 | | 27, 30, 35, and 36. The district contains the
neighborhoods of |
25 | | Wicker Park, Montclare, Belmont Cragin, Schorsch Village, and |
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1 | | Humboldt Park. Major north-south
thoroughfares are Kedzie |
2 | | Avenue, Kimball, and Kostner Avenue;
major east-west |
3 | | thoroughfares are Division Street, North
Avenue, and Fullerton |
4 | | Avenue. |
5 | | The proposed Legislative District contains Humboldt Park
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6 | | and parts of the Hermosa neighborhood, which have a strong
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7 | | Puerto Rican presence and cultural impact. The National Museum
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8 | | of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture and the Puerto Rican Cultural
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9 | | Center is located within Humboldt Park and Paseo Boricua kicks
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10 | | off the Division Street Corridor which houses various Puerto
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11 | | Rican-owned businesses. Belmont Cragin has a large Latino
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12 | | community, with about 70% of the population speaking
Spanish |
13 | | at home, and is home to the Aguijón Theater, which
focuses on |
14 | | Spanish-language productions. Throughout the
district there is |
15 | | a range of Latino food offerings, including
Mexican, |
16 | | Venezuelan, and Honduran. The proposed district has
similar |
17 | | age and income demographics throughout, preserving
communities |
18 | | of interest. It is served by major Chicago
Public School high |
19 | | schools Roberto Clemente, North Grand,
Kelvyn Park, Schurz, |
20 | | Wells, and Steinmetz College Prep.
The entirety of the |
21 | | proposed district is located within
the City of Chicago. |
22 | | The
proposed Legislative District is serviced by public
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23 | | transportation including the Chicago Transit Authority bus and
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24 | | rail lines (Blue line) and the Metra Milwaukee District West
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25 | | line. Due to its underpopulation as well as population growth |
26 | | in surrounding districts, Proposed Legislative District 2 |
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1 | | expands south further into Chicago Wards 37 and 27. It also |
2 | | moves further west in the north into different parts of |
3 | | Chicago's 38th Ward while shedding other 38th Ward precincts |
4 | | to adjacent Proposed Legislative District 20. |
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 2 has a total population of |
6 | | 217,169 which is 8 or 0.00% over the ideal population. The |
7 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 2 has a |
8 | | total population
that is 29.24% White, 8.13% Black, 2.96% |
9 | | Asian, and 57.01%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
10 | | 70.76%. The total
voting age population is 32.95% White, 7.99% |
11 | | Black,
3.32% Asian, and 53.3% Hispanic. The total minority
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12 | | voting age population is 67.05%. Incumbent
Senator Omar Aquino |
13 | | (D) resides in the proposed district. |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 3 |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 3 is located in Chicago,
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16 | | primarily in the south side and downtown areas. Current |
17 | | Legislative District 3 saw an increase of 30,482 in population |
18 | | which is 30,175 over the ideal
population target. Enacted |
19 | | Legislative District 3 with the 2020 Census data has a total |
20 | | population of 243,894 which is 26,733 over the ideal |
21 | | population target. To account for population growth in the |
22 | | district and increasing and shifting populations in the |
23 | | surrounding districts,
Legislative District 3 has been |
24 | | reconfigured. |
25 | | The northern
boundary of proposed Legislative District 3 |
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1 | | is generally
W. Huron St.; the western boundary is generally |
2 | | the Chicago
River and the Chicago and Western Indiana Rail |
3 | | line. The eastern boundary is
generally Martin Luther King |
4 | | Drive. The southern boundary is
W. Marquette Rd. and the |
5 | | Chicago Skyway. The proposed district includes portions
of |
6 | | Wards 3, 15, 16, 20, and 42. Current Legislative
District 3 saw |
7 | | an increase of 2,137 in population which is
3,155 over the |
8 | | ideal population target. To account for these
population |
9 | | shifts, Legislative District 3 has been
reconfigured. |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 3 maintains a
similar shape |
11 | | to the 2002 and 2012 map iterations.
Proposed Legislative |
12 | | District 3 contains the vast majority
of the downtown Loop |
13 | | area, as well as portions of the River North, South Loop, and |
14 | | the Near South Side. |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District
3 also contains portions of |
16 | | the south side neighborhoods of
Bronzeville, Douglas, Grand |
17 | | Boulevard, Washington Park, Chicago Lawn, West
Englewood, |
18 | | Englewood, South Shore, and West Woodlawn. The south side
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19 | | community of Fuller Park is also located wholly within the
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20 | | district. The areas south of the downtown Loop area have seen a
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21 | | population decrease since the 2010 census and the 2008
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22 | | mortgage crisis. This is especially true in the West Englewood
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23 | | and Englewood areas where more than a quarter of all city-led
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24 | | demolitions from 2008 to 2018 have occurred due to rampant
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25 | | vacancies and expansion of the Norfolk Southern Railway but |
26 | | with
little to no new construction occurring in the area.
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1 | | Interstate 90/94 runs north to south through the core of
the |
2 | | district and Garfield Boulevard, 47th Street, and 59th
Street |
3 | | are major east to west thoroughfares. The district is
also |
4 | | accessible by public transportation via the Chicago
Transit |
5 | | Authority bus and rail lines (Red and Green Lines). |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 3 also contains much of |
7 | | downtown
Chicago's Loop business district. The Chicago Loop is |
8 | | the
historic commercial center of downtown Chicago. It is the |
9 | | seat
of government for Chicago and Cook County, and also |
10 | | contains
the historic theater and shopping districts.
The |
11 | | north central part of the
district continues to contain |
12 | | Guaranteed Rate Field, home of
the Chicago White Sox. On the |
13 | | eastern border of the Proposed
Legislative District near 63rd |
14 | | Street in Proposed Legislative
District 13; the construction |
15 | | of the Obama Presidential Center
is expected to bring |
16 | | thousands of visitors to the South Side,
which could infuse |
17 | | the area with new minority-owned businesses
consistent with |
18 | | the current demographics of the Proposed
Legislative District |
19 | | 3. Much of the
district is within attendance boundaries for |
20 | | Phillips High School, Hyde Park High School, Dyett High School |
21 | | for the Arts, Jones College Prep, Lindblom Math and Science |
22 | | Academy, and New Englewood STEM High School. Due to its |
23 | | overpopulation, Proposed Legislative District 3 does not |
24 | | contain as much population in the Near North Side as Enacted |
25 | | Legislative District 3 did. In the southwestern portion of the |
26 | | Proposed District, Proposed Legislative District 3 no linger |
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1 | | has some blocks in Chicago's 17th Ward which have been |
2 | | assigned to adjoining Proposed Legislative District 16 which |
3 | | contains portions of the bulk of the 17th Ward. In the |
4 | | Southeast, the Proposed District sheds precincts in Chicago's |
5 | | 8th Ward to adjacent Proposed District 17 which contains much |
6 | | of the 8th Ward under the Current and Enacted Legislative |
7 | | maps. These changes bring the district to 193 persons over the |
8 | | ideal target population while keeping ward areas more |
9 | | together.
Proposed Legislative District 3 has a total |
10 | | population of 217,354 which is 193 or 0.09% over the ideal |
11 | | population. The demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative |
12 | | District 3 has a total population
that is 21.27% White, 50.27% |
13 | | Black, 7.61% Asian, and 17.60%
Hispanic. The total minority |
14 | | population is 78.73%. The total
voting age population is |
15 | | 24.78% White, 48.36% Black,
8.60% Asian, and 15.19% Hispanic. |
16 | | The total minority
voting age population is 75.22%. |
17 | | Incumbent Senator
Mattie Hunter (D) resides within the |
18 | | proposed district. |
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 4 |
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 4 is located on the west
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21 | | side of Chicago into the immediate western suburbs of Cook and
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22 | | eastern suburbs of DuPage County. Current Legislative District
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23 | | 4 saw an increase of 1,780 in population which is 2,087 over
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24 | | the ideal population target. Enacted Legislative District 4 |
25 | | with the 2020 Census data has a total population of 221,220 |
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1 | | which is 4,059 over the ideal population target. To account |
2 | | for population growth in the district and increasing and |
3 | | shifting populations in the surrounding districts,
Legislative |
4 | | District 4 has been reconfigured. |
5 | | The core
of Current Legislative District 4 is maintained |
6 | | by continuing
to connect Chicago's Austin neighborhood with |
7 | | Proviso Township
municipalities which have been linked |
8 | | together for nearly two
decades in some instances. Due to |
9 | | population loss in the
present and surrounding districts, |
10 | | Proposed Legislative
District 4 continues the expansion |
11 | | started in the 2011
legislative map into the southwest suburbs |
12 | | of Cook County and
further west, now crossing into the near |
13 | | suburbs of DuPage
County.
The eastern boundary of proposed |
14 | | District 4 is generally
Cicero Avenue in the north and |
15 | | precinct boundaries in the
south. |
16 | | The northern boundary generally follows U.S. Highway
|
17 | | 20/Lake Street in the west and central parts of the district,
|
18 | | and Grand Avenue in the east. The western boundary is composed
|
19 | | of precinct boundaries in Western Springs, and La Grange, York |
20 | | Street throughout Elmhurst, IL-83 in
the central east, and the |
21 | | Eisenhower Expressway in the north.
The west suburban |
22 | | communities of Maywood, Hillside,
Broadview, Bellwood, |
23 | | Berkeley, and Westchester are entirely
within the proposed |
24 | | district, as well as portions of
Countryside, Western Springs, |
25 | | Berwyn, La
Grange, Hodgkins, and La Grange Park. A portion of |
26 | | Chicago's
Austin and The Island neighborhood, including |
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1 | | portions of the
28th, 29th, and 37th Chicago Wards, are also |
2 | | within the
proposed district. The communities of La Grange |
3 | | Park, and
Westchester, and Western Springs, are all located in |
4 | | southern
Proviso Township and share the Salt Creek Woods |
5 | | Nature
Preserve, and a nearby Metra line (BNSF Railway). The
|
6 | | communities of Elmhurst, Oak Brook, and Western Springs are
|
7 | | partially contained within the district and have similar
|
8 | | socioeconomic makeup, with an average household income of |
9 | | $137,276.
The district encompasses various outdoor interests, |
10 | | with
the Theodore Stone Forest in Hodgkins; the La Grange
|
11 | | Country Club; the Fresh Meadow Golf Club in Hillside; Chicago
|
12 | | Highlands Club, Meadowlark Golf Course, Wolf Road Prairie and
|
13 | | Bemis Woods in Westchester; the Oak Brook Golf Club, Butler
|
14 | | National Country Club, and the Oak Brook - Central Park in Oak
|
15 | | Brook; and Columbus Park, which includes the Columbus Park
|
16 | | Golf Course, in Chicago's Austin neighborhood. Salt Creek and
|
17 | | Addison Creek run throughout the district, as well as a
|
18 | | portion of the Des Plaines River. The proposed district
|
19 | | contains the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital and Loyola
|
20 | | University Medical Center. Access to major thoroughfares in
|
21 | | the proposed district includes the Eisenhower Expressway, the
|
22 | | Tri-State Tollway, Cermak Road, Roosevelt Road, Harlem Avenue,
|
23 | | and La Grange Road. The proposed district is also accessible
|
24 | | via public transportation, including Chicago Transit Authority
|
25 | | bus and rail lines (Blue and Green lines), as well as the Metra
|
26 | | Union Pacific West and Burlington Northern Santa Fe commuter
|
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1 | | rail lines. |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 4 has a total population of |
3 | | 217,144 which is 17 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
4 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 4 has a |
5 | | total population
that is 29.14% White, 44.82% Black, 2.19% |
6 | | Asian, and 21.10%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
7 | | 70.86%. The total
voting age population is 30.76% White, |
8 | | 45.86% Black,
2.30% Asian, and 18.89% Hispanic. The total |
9 | | minority
voting age population is 69.24%. Incumbent Senator |
10 | | Kimberly
A. Lightford (D) resides in the proposed district. |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 5 |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 5 is located on the west
|
13 | | side of Chicago. Current Legislative District 5 saw an
|
14 | | increase of 16,726 in population which is 17,033 over the |
15 | | ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative District 5 with |
16 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 230,785 which is |
17 | | 13,624 over the ideal population target. To account for |
18 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
19 | | populations in the surrounding districts,
Legislative District |
20 | | 5 has been reconfigured. |
21 | | The proposed
Legislative District 5 northern boundary is |
22 | | generally West
Grand Avenue and Fullerton Avenue, the western |
23 | | boundary is
generally Cicero Avenue, the eastern boundary is |
24 | | generally the
Chicago River, North Orleans Street and Fremont |
25 | | Street. The southern boundary generally follows the Chicago, |
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1 | | Burlington and Quincy Railroad. Proposed Legislative District |
2 | | 5
contains the entirety of Garfield Park, including East and |
3 | | West Garfield Park, Homan Square, and Fifth City, as well as a |
4 | | vast majority of the west side neighborhood of
North Lawndale. |
5 | | It also includes portions of
Humboldt Park, West Town, Near |
6 | | West
Side, West Loop, Goose Island, River West, Greektown,
|
7 | | Bucktown, Pulaski Park, and Cabrini Green neighborhoods. A |
8 | | majority of Proposed
Legislative District 5 is within the |
9 | | attendance boundaries of
Wells, Manley, Orr, Farragut, Lincoln |
10 | | Park, and Marshall High Schools in the Chicago Public
Schools |
11 | | system. Whitney Young Magnet School and George Westinghouse |
12 | | College Prep are also located within Proposed Legislative |
13 | | District 5. |
14 | | Interstate 290 and Interstate 90/94 are major
|
15 | | thoroughfares that are easily accessed in the district. The
|
16 | | proposed district is also serviced by public transportation,
|
17 | | including the Chicago Transit Authority bus and rail lines
|
18 | | (Green, Blue, and Pink lines). The proposed district includes
|
19 | | the University of Illinois at Chicago, Rush University and
|
20 | | Malcolm X College, as well as a large part of DePaul
|
21 | | University's Lincoln Park campus. The district contains the
|
22 | | Illinois Medical District, which includes the University of
|
23 | | Illinois at Chicago Medical Center, Stroger Hospital, Rush
|
24 | | University Medical Center, and Jesse Brown Veterans
|
25 | | Administration Medical Center. Mount Sinai Hospital and RML
|
26 | | Specialty Hospital are also located in the proposed
|
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1 | | Legislative District. The district also includes the United
|
2 | | Center and both Douglas and Garfield Park.
Due to the Enacted |
3 | | District's overpopulation and the population growth in the |
4 | | area, precincts in Chicago's 32nd Ward are moved from Enacted |
5 | | Legislative District 5 to adjacent Proposed District 20 and |
6 | | precincts in the 37th and 27th Wards are moved from Enacted |
7 | | Legislative District 5 to the adjoining Proposed Legislative |
8 | | District 2. These changes bring the district to 173 persons |
9 | | over the ideal target population while keeping the general |
10 | | cores of the Current and Enacted District.
Proposed |
11 | | Legislative District 5 has a total population of 217,334 which |
12 | | is 173 or 0.08% over the ideal population. The demographic |
13 | | makeup of Proposed Legislative District 5 has a total |
14 | | population
that is 33.86% White, 43.36% Black, 8.07% Asian, |
15 | | and 11.17%
Hispanic. The total minority population is 66.14%. |
16 | | The total
voting age population is 37.82% White, 39.76% Black,
|
17 | | 8.86% Asian, and 10.36% Hispanic. The total minority
voting |
18 | | age population is 62.18%. Incumbent Senator Patricia Van
Pelt |
19 | | resides in the proposed district. |
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 6 |
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 6 is located on the north
|
22 | | side of Chicago. The Current Legislative District 6 saw an
|
23 | | increase of 20,615 in population which is 20,922 over the
|
24 | | ideal population target. Enacted Legislative District 6 with |
25 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 219,970 which is |
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1 | | 2,809 over the ideal population target. To account for |
2 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
3 | | populations in the surrounding districts, Legislative District |
4 | | 6 has been reconfigured. |
5 | | The
proposed district is bounded on the east by Lake |
6 | | Michigan,
while the northern boundary is generally Montrose |
7 | | and Waveland
Avenues, and Lincoln Avenue. The southern and |
8 | | western boundaries
generally run along the north branch of the |
9 | | Chicago River,
Addison Street, and Fullerton, Sacramento |
10 | | Avenue,
Western, Damen and Greenview Avenues in Chicago. The |
11 | | southernmost point of
the district follows W. Huron Street and |
12 | | E. Delaware Place.
The proposed district includes portions of
|
13 | | Wards 43, 44, 46, and 47. The borders of the proposed
district |
14 | | generally adhere to existing precinct boundaries. |
15 | | Proposed District 6 contains portions of the Chicago
|
16 | | neighborhoods of Lincoln Park, Lakeview, Boystown, Old Town,
|
17 | | Ravenswood, Buena Park, Wrigleyville, North Center.
Proposed |
18 | | District 6 also includes one of the largest
|
19 | | lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender-queer communities in Chicago
|
20 | | and in the nation, North Halsted, formerly known as Boystown, |
21 | | which is the official home of the
Chicago Pride Parade. |
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 6 is home
to some of Chicago's |
23 | | most popular tourist destinations,
including Lincoln Park, the |
24 | | Lincoln Park Zoo, Wrigley Field,
and the Second City Theater. |
25 | | The proposed district includes
Chicago's Gold Coast |
26 | | neighborhood, particularly the Rush
Street triangle, with some |
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1 | | of Chicago's most famous
restaurants and bars. The proposed |
2 | | district includes a portion of downtown Chicago which is where |
3 | | many of the residents of the proposed district work. A |
4 | | majority of Proposed Legislative
District 6 is within the |
5 | | attendance boundaries of Lake View, Lincoln Park, and Amundsen |
6 | | High Schools in the Chicago Public Schools
system; Walter |
7 | | Payton College Prep is also located within Proposed |
8 | | Legislative District 6.
Proposed Legislative District 6 |
9 | | includes a thriving Jewish
community in Lakeview which |
10 | | includes a Modern Orthodox
synagogue, an Orthodox Chabad |
11 | | synagogue, one of the largest
Conservative congregations in |
12 | | North America, and a Reform
congregation. According to |
13 | | testimony received by the Senate
Redistricting Subcommittee on |
14 | | North Chicago, the mix of
different Jewish communities in this |
15 | | small geographic area is
unusual, but all of these Jewish |
16 | | institutions actively
cooperate and coordinate on a regular |
17 | | basis. The testimony
detailed an eruv, which is a physical |
18 | | installation that
encircles a defined perimeter that allows |
19 | | Orthodox Jews
certain flexibility in Sabbath observance that |
20 | | is rarely
available to them. For example, the eruv allows |
21 | | Orthodox Jews
to push a baby carriage to synagogue, allowing |
22 | | families to
attend Sabbath services together as opposed to |
23 | | leaving one
adult home to care for the children. The witness |
24 | | testified
that the Lakeview eruv is a major factor in drawing
|
25 | | Sabbath-observant Jews to the neighborhood. Lake Shore Drive
|
26 | | runs along the eastern border of the district, providing easy
|
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1 | | access to businesses and neighborhoods within the district.
|
2 | | Western Avenue runs through the district, in addition to
|
3 | | Lincoln Avenue and Clark Street. Chicago Transit Authority bus
|
4 | | and train lines (Red, Purple, and Brown Lines) also service
|
5 | | the proposed district.
Due to the overpopulation and the |
6 | | increased population in surrounding districts, Proposed |
7 | | Legislative District 6 moves further south into Chicago's |
8 | | downtown. The increased population from this necessitates that |
9 | | the district must shed precincts in Chicago's 44th and 46th |
10 | | Wards to the adjoining Legislative District 7. In addition, |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 6 sheds precincts at its western |
12 | | border to Proposed Legislative District 20. These changes |
13 | | bring the district to 288 persons over the ideal target |
14 | | population. |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 6 has a total population of |
16 | | 217,449 which is 288 or 0.13% over the ideal population. The |
17 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 6 has a |
18 | | total population
that is 75.67% White, 3.93% Black, 7.56% |
19 | | Asian, and 8.30%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
20 | | 24.33%. The total
voting age population is 76.76% White, 4.09% |
21 | | Black,
7.64% Asian, and 7.88% Hispanic. The total minority
|
22 | | voting age population is 23.24%. Incumbent Senator Sara
|
23 | | Feigenholtz (D) currently resides in the proposed district. |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 7 |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 7 is located on the north
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1 | | side of Chicago. Current Legislative District 7 saw an
|
2 | | increase of 2,718 in population which is 3,025 over the ideal
|
3 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 7 with the |
4 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 211,531 which is |
5 | | 5,630 under the ideal population target. To account for |
6 | | increasing and shifting populations in the surrounding |
7 | | districts, especially those to the south,
Legislative District |
8 | | 7 has been reconfigured. |
9 | | The eastern
border of the proposed district is Lake |
10 | | Michigan. The southern
border of the proposed district |
11 | | generally runs along Eastwood
Avenue (in the west), Montrose |
12 | | Avenue (in the east) and W. Waveland Avenue (centrally). The |
13 | | district's western border generally
runs along Lincoln Avenue |
14 | | and the Chicago River in the
southern part of the district; |
15 | | Ravenswood Avenue through the
central part of the district and |
16 | | Western Avenue in the
northern part of the district. The |
17 | | northern border of the
district runs along Howard Street and |
18 | | the boundary between the
City of Chicago and Evanston. |
19 | | Chicago wards contained in whole or in part within
|
20 | | proposed Legislative District 7 include the 49th, 48th, 40th,
|
21 | | 47th, 46th, 44th and 50th Wards. Major north-south |
22 | | thoroughfares
include Lake Shore Drive, Clark Avenue, |
23 | | Ravenswood Avenue,
Broadway, Sheridan Road and Western Avenue. |
24 | | There are a number
of east-west roads including Foster, |
25 | | Montrose, Devon, and
Touhy Avenues. The district is also |
26 | | served by the Chicago
Transit Authority bus and rail lines, |
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1 | | including the Red and
Purple lines. Also contained within the |
2 | | proposed district is
Loyola University Chicago.
|
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 7 contains a very culturally |
4 | | and ethnically diverse population. The proposed district
|
5 | | includes significant lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender-queer
|
6 | | neighborhood of Andersonville, as well as a significant
|
7 | | immigrant community in the northwestern part of the district.
|
8 | | Many immigrant advocacy organizations call the proposed
|
9 | | district home including the Ethiopian Community Association of
|
10 | | Chicago, the Korean-American Association of Chicago,
|
11 | | RefugeeOne, and Centro Romero. Other notable places include
|
12 | | Loyola University Chicago, Weiss Hospital, and Swedish
|
13 | | Covenant Hospital. A majority of Proposed Legislative District |
14 | | 7 is within the Chicago Public School system attendance |
15 | | boundaries for Amundsen, Lake View, Senn, and Sullivan High |
16 | | Schools.
|
17 | | Due to its overpopulation in districts to its south, |
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 7 moves further south into |
19 | | Chicago's 44th and 46th Wards. In order to handle the |
20 | | additional population, Proposed Legislative District 7 sheds |
21 | | some area in Chicago's 40th Ward. These changes bring the |
22 | | district to 64 persons over the ideal target population. |
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 7 has a total population of |
24 | | 217,225 which is 64 or 0.03% over the ideal population. The |
25 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 7 has a |
26 | | total population
that is 52.32% White, 15.54% Black, 10.14% |
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1 | | Asian, and 15.63%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
2 | | 47.68%. The total
voting age population is 54.98% White, |
3 | | 14.73% Black,
10.24% Asian, and 15.60% Hispanic. The total |
4 | | minority
voting age population is 45.02%. Incumbent Senator |
5 | | Mike Simmons
(D) currently resides in the proposed district.
|
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 8 |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 8 is located on the
|
8 | | northwest side of Chicago and the immediate northwestern Cook
|
9 | | County suburbs. The Current Legislative District 8 saw an
|
10 | | increase of 9,652 in population which is 9,960 over the ideal
|
11 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 8 with the |
12 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 219,612 which is |
13 | | 2,451 over the ideal population target. To account for |
14 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
15 | | populations in the surrounding districts, Legislative District |
16 | | 8 has been reconfigured.
The western border generally follows |
17 | | W. Elston and IL-43.
The proposed
district's southwestern |
18 | | boundary is generally along Milwaukee
and Elston Avenues. The |
19 | | southernmost boundary is generally
Montrose Avenue. The |
20 | | eastern boundary
generally runs along the Chicago/Northwestern |
21 | | Rail line and N. Glenwood Avenue. Generally, the northern |
22 | | border of the district
is Main Street in Skokie and Illinois |
23 | | State Route 58 (Golf Road) in Morton Grove.
Proposed |
24 | | Legislative District 8 includes portions of Maine
and Niles |
25 | | Townships, and portions of the communities of Park Ridge, |
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1 | | Morton
Grove, Skokie, Niles, and Lincolnwood. The district |
2 | | includes
all or significant parts of the Chicago neighborhoods |
3 | | of
Albany Park, Irving Park, Sauganash, North Park, Pulaski |
4 | | Park,
West Ridge, Little India, and Mayfair. Most of
Chicago's |
5 | | 50th and 39th Wards are included in the district
along with |
6 | | portions of the 40th, 48th and 41st Wards. Proposed
|
7 | | Legislative District 8 continues to contain the core
|
8 | | communities found in Current Legislative District 8 including
|
9 | | Lincolnwood, Skokie, Morton Grove, and Niles which are
|
10 | | combined with similar areas in northern Chicago.
The Proposed |
11 | | Legislative District is served by vital
north-south routes |
12 | | including Interstate 94 and 90, Lincoln,
Cicero, Milwaukee, |
13 | | Caldwell, and Lehigh Avenues. There are a
number of major |
14 | | east-west thoroughfares traversing the
district including |
15 | | Dempster, Touhy, Devon, and Foster Avenues.
Devon Avenue |
16 | | serves the southern portion of the district, thus
preserving |
17 | | ties to the current district's epicenter of
Indian American |
18 | | culture. Additionally, Chicago Transit
Authority bus and train |
19 | | lines (Blue and Yellow Lines) and
the Metra Milwaukee District |
20 | | West Commuter rail line are available
for use.
Due to the |
21 | | district's overpopulation and population growth to the east |
22 | | and south, Proposed Legislative District 8 contracts along its |
23 | | western and northern borders and extends further south in the |
24 | | east and west. A majority of Proposed Legislative District 8 |
25 | | is within the Chicago Public School system attendance |
26 | | boundaries for Mather, Senn, and Taft High Schools. |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 8 has a total population of |
2 | | 217,570 which is 409 or 0.19% over the ideal population. The |
3 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 8 has a |
4 | | total population that is 49.61% White, 6.01% Black, 24.76% |
5 | | Asian, and 15.63%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
6 | | 50.39%. The total
voting age population is 51.64% White, 5.62% |
7 | | Black,
25.11% Asian, and 14.45% Hispanic. The total minority
|
8 | | voting age population is 48.36%. Incumbent Senator Ram
|
9 | | Villivalam (D) currently resides in the proposed district.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 9
|
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 9 is located in northern
|
12 | | Cook County. The Current Legislative District 9 saw an
|
13 | | increase of 11,362 in population making it 11,669 over the |
14 | | ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative District 9 with |
15 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 225,272 which is |
16 | | 8,111 over the ideal population target. To account for |
17 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
18 | | populations in the surrounding districts,
Legislative District |
19 | | 9 has been reconfigured.
The northern boundary of Proposed |
20 | | Legislative District 9 generally follows Techny Rd. and Ivy |
21 | | Ln. The southern boundary generally follows Howard St. along |
22 | | the Chicago-Evanston municipal boundary, Main Street in Skokie |
23 | | and Illinois State Route 58 (Golf Road) in Morton Grove. The |
24 | | western boundary generally follows I-294. The eastern side of
|
25 | | the district is guided by Lake Michigan roughly from Calvary
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1 | | Cemetery in Evanston to Scott Avenue in Winnetka. The proposed
|
2 | | Legislative District includes the cities of Evanston,
|
3 | | Northbrook, Glenview, Golf, Winnetka, Wilmette and
Kenilworth.
|
4 | | The proposed district is very similar to the existing 9th
|
5 | | Legislative District and the 9th Legislative District enacted
|
6 | | from 2002 to 2012. In the 2011 map, in response to Evanston
|
7 | | residents, more of Evanston was added to the 9th Legislative
|
8 | | District. In 2021, Proposed Legislative District 9 now
|
9 | | includes the City of Evanston in its entirety based on
|
10 | | testimony. Northbrook, Glenview, Golf, Winnetka,
Wilmette, and |
11 | | Kenilworth are all encapsulated within the
district as well. |
12 | | The median income of Northbrook, Glenview,
Golf, Northfield, |
13 | | Winnetka, Wilmette and Kenilworth range from
$102,000 to |
14 | | $211,000.
Several major religious sites are located within the
|
15 | | proposed district and help preserve a diverse religious
|
16 | | community throughout the district. Religious landmarks include
|
17 | | the Baha'i Temple in Wilmette, Temple Jeremiah in
Northfield, |
18 | | Beth Emet Synagogue in Evanston, and the Unitarian
Church of |
19 | | Evanston. A large Jewish community resides within
the |
20 | | district, and the proposed boundaries dip slightly into
|
21 | | Chicago's 50th Ward in order to bring another significant and
|
22 | | historic Jewish population into Proposed Legislative District |
23 | | 9.
Population increases in the northern suburbs have made
|
24 | | transportation a vital issue for residents, making commuters a
|
25 | | community of interest in the suburbs. The proposed district is
|
26 | | served by the Milwaukee District North and Union Pacific North
|
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1 | | Metra Rail Lines, which both provide important public
|
2 | | transportation providing residents the ability to commute to
|
3 | | Chicago. Interstate 94 and State Highway 43 traverse through
|
4 | | the heart of the district, while Sheridan Road runs the
|
5 | | entirety of the district's eastern border.
|
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 9 has a total population of |
7 | | 216,771 which is 390 or 0.18% under the ideal population. Due |
8 | | to population growth in the district and districts to the |
9 | | south, Proposed Legislative District 9 moves further in both |
10 | | its northern and southern borders. Proposed Legislative |
11 | | District 9 has a total population
that is 63.51% White, 8.16% |
12 | | Black, 14.45% Asian, and 8.98%
Hispanic. The total minority |
13 | | population is 36.5%. The total
voting age population is 65.22% |
14 | | White, 8.23% Black,
15% Asian, and 7.92% Hispanic. The total |
15 | | minority
voting age population is 34.78%. Incumbent Senator |
16 | | Laura
Fine (D) resides in the proposed district.
|
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 10 |
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 10 is located on the
|
19 | | northwest side of Chicago into the immediate northwestern Cook
|
20 | | County suburbs. The Current Legislative District 10 saw an
|
21 | | increase of 5,961 in population which is 6,268 over the ideal
|
22 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 10 with the |
23 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 217,772 which is 611 |
24 | | over the ideal population target. To account for population |
25 | | growth in the district and increasing and shifting populations |
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1 | | in the surrounding districts,
Legislative District 10 has been |
2 | | reconfigured.
The northern boundary generally follows W. |
3 | | Howard Street. The eastern boundary generally follows N. |
4 | | Elston Avenue and N. Central Park Avenue. The southern |
5 | | boundary generally follows W. Addison St. and Grand Avenue. |
6 | | The western boundary generally follows U.S. Highway 12.
The |
7 | | proposed legislative
district contains the municipalities of |
8 | | Rosemont, Schiller
Park, Franklin Park, River Grove, Norridge,
|
9 | | Harwood Heights, Elmwood Park, and Chicago. The district
|
10 | | wholly contains Harwood Heights, Norridge, and Schiller Park.
|
11 | | The district contains parts of
Chicago Ward 38, Ward 39, Ward |
12 | | 45, Ward 36, Ward 29, Ward 30, and Ward 41.
Running east and |
13 | | west through the district is Interstate
90. Interstate 294 |
14 | | also runs through the northwestern corner
of the district. |
15 | | Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) bus and rail
lines (Blue line) |
16 | | as well as the Metra commuter rail lines
(North Central |
17 | | Service and Union Pacific North West lines)
also service the |
18 | | proposed district, providing accessible travel
throughout the |
19 | | district and the great Chicagoland area. The
district contains |
20 | | the hospital AMITA Health Resurrection
Medical Center. This |
21 | | hospital provides accessible healthcare
and a plethora of |
22 | | economic opportunities and jobs. The academic
medical center |
23 | | has a 337-bed capacity. Historic colleges in
the district |
24 | | include Wilbur Wright College. The Des Plaines
River runs |
25 | | through the entirety of the district going north
and south.
|
26 | | The Chicago neighborhoods of Jefferson Park, Portage Park,
Big |
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1 | | Oaks, Union Ridge, Oriel Park, Old Irving Park, and Forest |
2 | | Glen have
similar housing stock and socioeconomic status.
The |
3 | | majority of the High School
students in the district attend |
4 | | William Howard Taft High
School, Steinmetz College Prep, and |
5 | | Schurz High School.
Due to population growth in the district |
6 | | and to districts east of it, Proposed Legislative District 10 |
7 | | moves southeast further into Chicago and out of some suburban |
8 | | territory. Proposed Legislative District 10 has a total |
9 | | population of 217,169 which is 8 or 0.00% over the ideal |
10 | | population. The demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative |
11 | | District 10 has a total population
that is 63.19% White, 1.67% |
12 | | Black, 6.53% Asian, and 25.64%
Hispanic. The total minority |
13 | | population is 36.81%. The total
voting age population is |
14 | | 66.05% White, 1.68% Black,
6.69% Asian, and 23.18% Hispanic. |
15 | | The total minority
voting age population is 33.95%. Incumbent |
16 | | Senator
Robert F. Martwick, Jr. resides within the proposed |
17 | | 10th
Legislative District.
|
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 11 |
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 11 is located on the
|
20 | | southwest side of Chicago into the immediate southwestern Cook
|
21 | | County suburbs. Current Legislative District 12, which |
22 | | contains a substantial portion of Proposed Legislative |
23 | | District 11, saw an increase
of 2,851 in population which is |
24 | | 3,158 over the ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative |
25 | | District 11 with the 2020 Census data has a total population of |
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1 | | 219,413 which is 2,252 over the ideal population target. To |
2 | | account for population growth in the district and increasing |
3 | | and shifting populations in the surrounding districts,
|
4 | | Legislative District 11 has been reconfigured.
The northern |
5 | | boundary generally follows 13th St and 22nd St. in Cicero and |
6 | | Berwyn. The eastern boundary generally follows Grand Trunk |
7 | | Western Rail line. The most southern boundary generally |
8 | | follows 83rd St. in Justice, Bridgeview, and Burbank. The |
9 | | western boundary generally follows 7th Ave. and Forest Road in |
10 | | LaGrange and LaGrange Park.
|
11 | | Proposed
Legislative District 11 contains most of |
12 | | Chicago's 23rd Ward,
all of the 13th Ward and a portion of the |
13 | | 18th Ward as well as
portions of the southwestern suburban |
14 | | communities of
Bridgeview, Burbank, Justice, Berwyn, Cicero, |
15 | | McCook,
Hodgkins, La Grange, La Grange Park, Riverside, and |
16 | | North
Riverside.
|
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 11 pulls together
|
18 | | communities of interest in the areas of Berwyn along Cermak |
19 | | Road and the southwest portions of neighborhoods around Midway
|
20 | | International Airport, both predominantly working-class.
The |
21 | | Stevenson Expressway Interstate 55 (I-55), Harlem
Avenue, and |
22 | | Cicero Avenue are major thoroughfares through the
proposed |
23 | | district uniting the south and north ends. Chicago
Transit |
24 | | Authority bus and rail lines (Orange) and the Metra
Burlington |
25 | | Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) commuter rail lines also
serve the |
26 | | proposed district. Proposed District 11 is a
significant |
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1 | | transportation center containing Midway
International Airport, |
2 | | I-55, and the CSX-Bedford Park Rail
Facility. The |
3 | | transportation industry dominates the area with
many local |
4 | | residents finding employment at the airport,
businesses |
5 | | providing services connected to airport operations,
or the |
6 | | local rail yards. The proposed district is also dotted
with |
7 | | working-class communities containing similar housing
stock |
8 | | integrated with industrial facilities much like its
|
9 | | neighboring district, Proposed Legislative District 12.
Due to |
10 | | population losses in districts south of the proposed |
11 | | legislative district, Proposed Legislative District 11 sheds |
12 | | precincts in Justice to Proposed Legislative District 16. |
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 11 has a total population of |
14 | | 217,299 which is 138 or 0.06% over the ideal population. The |
15 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 11 has a |
16 | | total population that is 31.12% White, 4.07% Black, 1.72% |
17 | | Asian, and 61.36%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
18 | | 68.88%. The total
voting age population is 35.14% White, 4.18% |
19 | | Black,
1.94% Asian, and 57.26% Hispanic. The total minority
|
20 | | voting age population is 64.86%. Incumbent Senator Steven
|
21 | | Landek (D) resides within the proposed district.
|
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 12 |
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 12 is located on the
|
24 | | southwest side of Chicago. Current Legislative District 11, |
25 | | which contains a substantial portion of Proposed Legislative |
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1 | | District 12,
saw a decrease of 4,966 in population which is |
2 | | 4,659 under the
ideal population target. Enacted Legislative |
3 | | District 12 with the 2020 Census data has a total population of |
4 | | 217,115 which is 46 under the ideal population target. To |
5 | | account for population shifts in the surrounding districts,
|
6 | | Legislative District 12 has been reconfigured.
Cermak
Road and |
7 | | 16th Street in Chicago generally form the northern
border of |
8 | | the district. Proposed Legislative District 12 runs
south to |
9 | | 47th Street with the Chicago Belt Railroad running
along the |
10 | | west border and the New York, Chicago and St. Louis
Railroad on |
11 | | the east border. The proposed district encompasses
Chicago |
12 | | Wards 22, 12, 15, 25, and 11. Proposed Legislative
District 12 |
13 | | is different in shape from the current district
due, in part, |
14 | | to population shifts and now is more compact with
boundaries |
15 | | that follow major thoroughfares or are bound by
railroads. |
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 12 contains Latino
|
17 | | communities Pilsen, Little Village, McKinley Park, and
|
18 | | Brighton Park. These working-class neighborhoods contain
|
19 | | similar housing stock integrated with industrial facilities. |
20 | | The residents of the proposed district are generally first |
21 | | and
second-generation immigrants who share a common need for
|
22 | | social services and patronize locally owned businesses
|
23 | | catering to the cultural tastes and customs of the
|
24 | | communities. The proposed district contains the National
|
25 | | Museum of Mexican Art which is home to one of the country's
|
26 | | largest Mexican art collections, including more than 7,000
|
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1 | | pieces from ancient Mexico to the present. The Little Village
|
2 | | neighborhood is known for having the largest foreign-born
|
3 | | Mexican population in Chicago. The community also maintains a
|
4 | | major commercial district along 26th Street, which is the
|
5 | | second highest grossing shopping district in the city.
|
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 12 also contains virtually
all |
7 | | of the south side community of Chinatown and the racially
|
8 | | diverse Bridgeport neighborhood on the City's south side. Over
|
9 | | a third of Chicago's Chinese population resides in Chinatown
|
10 | | with almost 90% of the community being of Chinese descent. The
|
11 | | community shares many common interests as a growing community
|
12 | | with students, parents, and elders in need of culturally and
|
13 | | linguistically sensitive social services, according to
|
14 | | testimony submitted to the Senate Redistricting Committee.
|
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 12 has a total population of |
16 | | 217,115 which is 46 or 0.02% under the ideal population. The |
17 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 12 has a |
18 | | total population
that is 10.32% White, 4.63% Black, 14.66% |
19 | | Asian, and 68.99%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
20 | | 89.68%. The total
voting age population is 12.20% White, 5.19% |
21 | | Black,
15.68% Asian, and 65.63% Hispanic. The total minority
|
22 | | voting age population is 87.80%. Incumbent Senator Celina
|
23 | | Villanueva (D) resides within the proposed district.
|
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 13 |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 13 is located on the south
|
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1 | | side of Chicago into the immediate southern Cook County
|
2 | | suburbs. The Current Legislative District 13 saw an increase
|
3 | | of 16,071 in population which is 16,378 over the ideal
|
4 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 13 with the |
5 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 221,967 which is |
6 | | 4,806 over the ideal population target. To account for |
7 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
8 | | populations in the surrounding districts, Legislative District |
9 | | 13 has been reconfigured.
|
10 | | Proposed
Legislative District 13 begins in the north at |
11 | | East Walton
Street and continues southeast along Lake Michigan |
12 | | to the
Illinois-Indiana state line. The western boundary runs |
13 | | along
State Street in downtown Chicago, generally Martin |
14 | | Luther King Drive through the center of the district and
|
15 | | follows the existing precinct lines and roadways near the
|
16 | | Chicago Skyway in the south. The proposed district is
|
17 | | accessible via Lake Shore Drive, which runs through the
|
18 | | majority of the district, as well as Chicago Transit Authority
|
19 | | bus lines. This lakefront district contains many popular |
20 | | travel destinations that form the heart of Chicago's tourism
|
21 | | industry.
Proposed Legislative District 13 contains a portion |
22 | | of the
downtown Loop area, as well as portions of the Near |
23 | | North Side
and Near South Side communities. The proposed |
24 | | Legislative
District 13 also contains portions of the south |
25 | | side
neighborhoods of Douglas, Washington Park, Bronzeville, |
26 | | and Grand Boulevard. The proposed Legislative District |
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1 | | includes
neighborhoods with a historic Black presence, like
|
2 | | Bronzeville, which was known as the city's "Black Metropolis"
|
3 | | in the 1920s and still maintains an arts and culture scene. The
|
4 | | south side communities of Hyde Park, Kenwood, and Oakland are
|
5 | | entirely within the proposed district. The Museum of Science
|
6 | | and Industry, Jackson Park, the Field Museum, Soldier Field,
|
7 | | the John G. Shedd Aquarium, Adler Planetarium, The Art
|
8 | | Institute of Chicago, Northerly Island, Grant Park, Millennium
|
9 | | Park, Washington Park and Navy Pier are all contained within
|
10 | | the district. Proposed Legislative District 13 also contains
|
11 | | the University of Chicago in Hyde Park and has various beach
|
12 | | locations stretching down the south shore, such as the 57th
|
13 | | Street, 63rd Street, and South Shore Beach. In addition to
|
14 | | cultural sites of interest, the proposed Legislative District
|
15 | | also houses McCormick Place convention center. In 2021,
|
16 | | construction began on the Obama Presidential Center in Jackson
|
17 | | Park, which will offer a new Chicago Public Library location
|
18 | | and aims to serve as a neighborhood center for the south side
|
19 | | of Chicago. The proposed district includes the residential
|
20 | | portions of Chicago Ward 10, and includes portions of the 2nd,
|
21 | | 4th, 5th, 7th, 20th, and 42nd Wards.
|
22 | | Due to population growth in surrounding districts, |
23 | | population at the northernmost point of Enacted Legislative |
24 | | District 13 has been reassigned to adjacent districts. |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 13 has a total population of |
26 | | 217,228 which is 67 or 0.03% over the ideal population. The |
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1 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 13 has a |
2 | | total population
that is 23.53% White, 52.01% Black, 7.85% |
3 | | Asian, and 12.76%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
4 | | 76.47%. The total
voting age population is 26.33% White, |
5 | | 49.76% Black, 8.73% Asian, and 11.67% Hispanic. The total |
6 | | minority
voting age population is 73.67%. Incumbent
Senator |
7 | | Robert Peters (D) resides in the proposed district.
|
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 14 |
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 14 is mainly located in |
10 | | southern
Cook County. Current Legislative District 14 saw a |
11 | | decrease of
14,466 in population which is 14,159 under the |
12 | | ideal population
target. Enacted Legislative District 14 with |
13 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 211,083 which is |
14 | | 6,078 under the ideal population target. To account for a |
15 | | population decrease in the district and the increasing |
16 | | populations in the districts to the east and west,
Legislative
|
17 | | District 14 has been reconfigured.
|
18 | | The northern boundary generally follows W. 127th St. and |
19 | | W. 84th St. in Chicago. While the eastern boundary generally |
20 | | follows S. State St. on the south side of Chicago, the southern |
21 | | boundary generally follows the southern boundary of Riverdale |
22 | | on the east and various major thoroughfares in Orland Park and |
23 | | Orland Hills in the west. The western boundary generally |
24 | | follows S. Bell Rd. in Homer Glen.
The proposed Legislative |
25 | | District includes the bulk of the
34th Chicago Ward, which has |
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1 | | long been the anchor of the 14th
Legislative District, and |
2 | | portions of the 21st, 19th, and 9th
Ward. Portions of the south |
3 | | side neighborhoods of Auburn Gresham, Beverly, Chatham,
Morgan |
4 | | Park, West Pullman, and Washington Heights are contained
in |
5 | | the district. It contains the majority of the suburban
|
6 | | communities of Blue Island and Crestwood, as well as portions
|
7 | | of Orland Park, Tinley Park, Oak Forest, Dolton, Homer Glen, |
8 | | and Posen.
|
9 | | The proposed district contains all of Calumet Park, |
10 | | Robbins,
and Riverdale. Access to several major thoroughfares |
11 | | are in
the district, including the Dan Ryan Expressway, |
12 | | Western
Avenue, Cicero Avenue, and Harlem Avenue. Public
|
13 | | transportation, including the Chicago Transit Authority bus
|
14 | | and rail lines (Red Line) and Metra rail lines (Rock Island
|
15 | | District Line) service the district. The Missouri Pacific
|
16 | | Railroad runs through the eastern part of the district and
|
17 | | connects with the Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad in the
|
18 | | northern part of the district. The Penn Central Railroad and
|
19 | | the Illinois Central Railroad and the Soo Line Railroad, and
|
20 | | the Norfolk and Southern Railway all run through the district
|
21 | | as well. The proposed Legislative District continues to unite
|
22 | | suburban communities with the City of Chicago, like the
|
23 | | Current 14th Legislative District. |
24 | | The proposed district
maintains that same general shape of |
25 | | the district as drawn in
2001 and 2011. Population losses in |
26 | | the district coupled with population losses south of the |
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1 | | district and population gains to its north and west has caused |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 14 to continue moving southwest |
3 | | through the suburbs as prior versions of the district did in |
4 | | 2001 and 2011, Proposed Legislative District 14 has a total |
5 | | population of 217,162 which is 1 or 0.00% over the ideal |
6 | | population. The demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative |
7 | | District 14 has a total population
that is 34.33% White, |
8 | | 48.83% Black, 1.71% Asian, and 12.61%
Hispanic. The total |
9 | | minority population is 65.67%. The total
voting age population |
10 | | is 36.46% White, 48.65% Black (however the Black Combination |
11 | | VAP is 50.09%),
1.74% Asian, and 10.93% Hispanic. The total |
12 | | minority
voting age population is 63.54%. Incumbent Senator |
13 | | Emil Jones III (D) resides in the proposed district. |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 15 |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 15 is located in southern
|
16 | | Cook County, eastern Will County, and north central Kankakee
|
17 | | County. The Current Legislative District 15 saw a decrease of
|
18 | | 12,797 in population which is 12,490 under the ideal |
19 | | population
target. Enacted Legislative District 15 with the |
20 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 208,335 which is |
21 | | 8,826 under the ideal population target. To account for |
22 | | population loss in the district and increasing populations to |
23 | | the north and west,
Legislative
District 15 has been |
24 | | reconfigured.
The northern boundary generally follows E. 143rd |
25 | | St. and S. Cottage Grove Ave. in Chicago. The eastern boundary |
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1 | | generally follows I-394 and S. Stony Island Ave. The southern |
2 | | boundary generally follows the Kankakee River and Grinnell Rd. |
3 | | in Kankakee County. |
4 | | The proposed district
unites the southwestern portion of |
5 | | Chicago's 9th Ward with
south suburban communities in Olympia |
6 | | Fields, Flossmoor, Tinley Park, and Ford Heights.
Portions of |
7 | | the south suburban communities of Dolton, South
Holland, |
8 | | Markham, Glenwood, Oak Forest, Harvey,
Posen, Midlothian, |
9 | | Dixmoor, Sauk Village, Thornton, East Hazel
Crest, Homewood, |
10 | | South Chicago Heights, Ford Heights, Crete,
Steger, and |
11 | | University Park are located within the
district. In addition, |
12 | | the shape of proposed District 15
generally resembles the |
13 | | shape of the district over the last
two decades. |
14 | | The communities throughout proposed District 15 share
|
15 | | similar housing stock, with a majority of families in this
|
16 | | district residing in single-family homes. These communities
|
17 | | generally all contain well-established neighborhoods developed
|
18 | | in the same period (between 1940 and 1980). The median
|
19 | | household income ranges from $38,353 to $83,358. Three major
|
20 | | interstate highways run through the district: Interstates 94,
|
21 | | 57, and 80. Interstate 94 is a major thoroughfare connecting
|
22 | | the southern part of the proposed district to the City of
|
23 | | Chicago. The proposed district is also serviced by public
|
24 | | transportation, including the Chicago Transit Authority bus
|
25 | | routes and Metra rail lines (Rock Island and Electric District
|
26 | | lines).
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 15 has a total population of |
2 | | 217,045 which is 116 or 0.05% under the ideal population. The |
3 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 15 has a |
4 | | total population
that is 28.16% White, 54.69% Black, 1.09% |
5 | | Asian, and 12.85%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
6 | | 71.84%. The total
voting age population is 31.06% White, |
7 | | 54.16% Black,
1.12% Asian, and 10.92% Hispanic. The total |
8 | | minority
voting age population is 68.94%. The proposed |
9 | | district
maintains that same general shape of the district as |
10 | | drawn in
2011. Incumbent Senator Napoleon Harris, III (D) |
11 | | resides in
the proposed district.
|
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 16 |
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 16 is located on the
|
14 | | southwest side of Chicago into the immediate southwestern Cook
|
15 | | County suburbs. The Current Legislative District 16 saw a
|
16 | | decrease of 5,814 in population which is 5,507 under the ideal
|
17 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 16 with the |
18 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 218,008 which is 847 |
19 | | over the ideal population target. To account for population |
20 | | loss in the current district and increasing and shifting |
21 | | populations in the surrounding districts,
Legislative District |
22 | | 16 has been reconfigured.
The northern boundary generally |
23 | | follows W. 63rd St. in Chicago and W. 83rd Street in Bridgeview |
24 | | and Burbank. The eastern boundary generally follows I-90 in |
25 | | Chicago. The southern boundary generally follows W. 87th |
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1 | | Street in Chicago and 103rd Street in the suburbs. The western |
2 | | boundary generally follows Cork Road in Justice and Hickory |
3 | | Hills.
|
4 | | The majority of the population of Proposed Legislative
|
5 | | District 16 resides in the City of Chicago, primarily in the
|
6 | | neighborhoods of Greater Grand Crossing, Englewood, West
|
7 | | Englewood, Auburn Gresham, Chicago Lawn, and Ashburn. It also
|
8 | | encompasses portions of Chicago Wards 6, 16, 17, 18, 19, and |
9 | | 21. The
proposed district also contains portions of the |
10 | | suburban
communities of Chicago Ridge, Burbank, Hickory Hills, |
11 | | Palos
Hills, Oak Lawn, Bridgeview, Hometown, and
Justice. The |
12 | | present district boundaries also unite the
communities of |
13 | | Hometown, Oak Lawn, Burbank, Hickory Hills,
Bridgeview and |
14 | | Justice with the City of Chicago. On the north central border
|
15 | | of the district is Marquette (Jacques) Park, the largest park
|
16 | | on the southwest side of Chicago at 323 acres located in the
|
17 | | Chicago Lawn neighborhood.
Proposed Legislative District 16 is |
18 | | comprised primarily of
economically diverse, working-class |
19 | | communities with median
yearly household incomes between |
20 | | $34,000 to $84,000. All
communities within the proposed |
21 | | district share a very diverse
labor force, with no one |
22 | | industry employing more than 20% of
any given community. |
23 | | Transportation routes serving the
district include the Dan |
24 | | Ryan Expressway in the east and
I-294 in the west. Western, |
25 | | Cicero,
and Harlem Avenues are also major transportation |
26 | | arteries in
the proposed district. Proposed Legislative |
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1 | | District 16 is
also serviced by public transportation, |
2 | | including Chicago
Transit Authority bus and rail lines (Red |
3 | | Line), as well as the
Metra Southwest Service and Rock Island |
4 | | District commuter rail
lines, which transport commuters from |
5 | | the proposed district to
downtown Chicago daily. Proposed |
6 | | District 16 preserves 68.6% of the core of the present |
7 | | district to provide
continuity for the existing incumbent |
8 | | constituency relations
and allows the formation of new |
9 | | relationships. |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 16 has a total population of |
11 | | 217,174 which is 13 or 0.01% over the ideal population. The |
12 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 16 has a |
13 | | total population
that is 23.11% White, 49.97% Black, 1.0% |
14 | | Asian, and 23.62%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
15 | | 76.89%. The total
voting age population is 24.57% White, |
16 | | 51.20% Black,
1.03% Asian, and 21% Hispanic. The total |
17 | | minority
voting age population is 75.43%. In order to attain |
18 | | the
ideal population, the proposed district expands on the |
19 | | south
side in Chicago. The proposed district maintains that |
20 | | same
general shape of the district as drawn in 2011. Incumbent
|
21 | | Senator Jacqueline Collins (D) resides in the proposed
|
22 | | district. |
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 17 |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 17 is located on the south
|
25 | | side of Chicago into southern Cook County, eastern Will
|
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1 | | County, and eastern Kankakee County. The Current Legislative
|
2 | | District 17 saw a decrease of 5,239 in population which is
|
3 | | 4,932 under the ideal population target. Enacted Legislative |
4 | | District 17 with the 2020 Census data has a total population of |
5 | | 214,414 which is 2,747 under the ideal population target. To |
6 | | account for population loss in the district,
Legislative |
7 | | District 17 has been
reconfigured.
|
8 | | Proposed District 17 begins at East 72nd Street
in Chicago |
9 | | and includes portions of Chicago Wards 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and |
10 | | 21. It then follows a southeasterly path to the
|
11 | | Illinois-Indiana border. The border continues south along the
|
12 | | Indiana state line to Momence Township in Kankakee County. The
|
13 | | southern border extends from the Indiana state line to just
|
14 | | past St. Anne and Pembroke Township in Kankakee County. The
|
15 | | western boundary runs generally along I-94 in Cook County and
|
16 | | the Bishop Ford Expressway in Will County. The proposed
|
17 | | Legislative District 17 includes the south suburban
|
18 | | municipalities of Burnham, Calumet, Lansing, Lynwood, Ford
|
19 | | Heights, and Sauk Village.
Major transportation routes through |
20 | | the district are I-90,
I-94, I-80, I-57 and Dixie Highway. |
21 | | Torrence Avenue runs north
to south through the length of the |
22 | | district to the Cook County
line. Chicago Transit Authority |
23 | | bus and rail lines (Red Line),
as well as the Metra Electric |
24 | | District commuter line, also
serve the district, transporting |
25 | | residents to and from
downtown Chicago. |
26 | | The proposed district boundaries were extended south in
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|
1 | | order to respect the configurations of districts adjacent to
|
2 | | it. The proposed district accordingly picks up similar south
|
3 | | suburban communities in Cook, Will, and Kankakee counties,
|
4 | | which is not without historical precedent. Under the 2001
|
5 | | configuration, many of these south suburban communities were
|
6 | | included together in Legislative District 40. The
|
7 | | manufacturing industry is a key employer in communities
|
8 | | throughout this district, with almost 10% of the workforce
|
9 | | employed in manufacturing. The proposed Legislative District
|
10 | | includes a number of manufacturing facilities, including Ford
|
11 | | Motor Company's Chicago plant, that provide jobs to Chicago
|
12 | | and south suburban residents. The proposed district also
|
13 | | includes part of the Illinois International Port District
|
14 | | which links inland canal and river systems in the Midwestern
|
15 | | United States to the Great Lakes, providing for global
|
16 | | shipping market access. The population of the proposed
|
17 | | district is primarily working-class, with a median household
|
18 | | income of between $40,000 to $65,000 for the majority of the
|
19 | | community.
|
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 17 has a total population of |
21 | | 217,053 which is 108 or 0.05% under the ideal population. The |
22 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 17 has a |
23 | | total population
that is 15.79% White, 64.2% Black, 0.32% |
24 | | Asian, and 16.78%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
25 | | 84.21%. The total
voting age population is 17.71% White, |
26 | | 64.62% Black,
0.32% Asian, and 14.66% Hispanic. The total |
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1 | | minority
voting age population is 82.29%. The proposed |
2 | | district
maintains that same general shape of the district as |
3 | | drawn in
2011. Incumbent Senator Elgie R. Sims, Jr. (D) |
4 | | resides in the
proposed district.
|
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 18 |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 18 is located on the
|
7 | | southwest side of Chicago into the immediate southwestern Cook
|
8 | | County suburbs. The Current Legislative District 18 saw an |
9 | | increase of 1,186 in population which is 1,493 over the ideal
|
10 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 18 with the |
11 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 217,691 which is 530 |
12 | | over the ideal population target. To account for shifting |
13 | | populations in the surrounding districts, Legislative District |
14 | | 18 has been reconfigured.
The northern boundary generally |
15 | | follows W. 87th, 93rd and 103rd Streets. The eastern boundary |
16 | | generally follows S. Vincennes Ave. The southern boundary |
17 | | generally follows 127th, 135th, and 147th Streets. The western |
18 | | boundary generally follows Wolf Road. |
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 18 includes portions of the
|
20 | | City of Chicago Wards 18, 19, and 21. The proposed district
|
21 | | includes more of the 19th Ward in the district than the
|
22 | | existing 18th District. The district continues west into
|
23 | | Evergreen Park, Oak Lawn, Chicago Ridge, and Palos Park. The
|
24 | | proposed Legislative District contains the vast majority of
|
25 | | Evergreen Park and portions of Merrionette Park, Alsip,
|
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1 | | Chicago Ridge, Oak Lawn, Palos Hills, and Palos Park. The
|
2 | | 1991, 2001, and 2011 configurations of the district linked the
|
3 | | southwestern Chicago neighborhoods with similar suburbs, and
|
4 | | Proposed Legislative District 18 continues to do so.
|
5 | | Interstate 294 runs through much of the proposed district, as
|
6 | | do Southwest Highway/Illinois-7 and South Western Avenue. The
|
7 | | district is also serviced by public transportation, including
|
8 | | the Chicago Transit Authority bus lines as well as the Metra
|
9 | | Southwest Service commuter rail line. The proposed legislative
|
10 | | district contains Trinity Christian College, Saint Xavier
|
11 | | University, and Moraine Valley Community College. The proposed
|
12 | | district includes various nature attractions, including Orland
|
13 | | Grove Forest Preserve, the Tampier Slough Woods, Lake
|
14 | | Katherine Nature Center and Botanic Gardens, and portions of
|
15 | | the Burr Oak Woods. The Little Calumet River runs through the |
16 | | center of the district. |
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 18 has a total population of |
18 | | 217,318 which is 157 or 0.07% over the ideal population. The |
19 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 18 has a |
20 | | total population
that is 64.99% White, 16.74% Black, 1.98% |
21 | | Asian, and 13.29%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
22 | | 35.01%. The total
voting age population is 66.93% White, |
23 | | 17.12% Black,
2.07% Asian, and 11.39% Hispanic. The total |
24 | | minority
voting age population is 33.07%. The proposed |
25 | | district
maintains that same general shape of the district as |
26 | | drawn in
2001 and 2011. Incumbent Senator Bill Cunningham (D) |
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1 | | resides
in the proposed district. |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 19 |
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 19 is located in
|
4 | | southwestern Cook County and east central Will County. The
|
5 | | Current Legislative District 19 saw an increase of 1,714 in
|
6 | | population which is 2,021 over the ideal population target. |
7 | | Enacted Legislative District 19 with the 2020 Census data has |
8 | | a total population of 215,817 which is 1,344 under the ideal |
9 | | population target. To account for shifting populations in the |
10 | | area,
Legislative District 19
has been reconfigured.
The |
11 | | northern border of the proposed
district mainly follows along |
12 | | street lines, particularly 167th Street, and railroads
except |
13 | | when population adjustments were necessary. The
proposed |
14 | | northern border had to be brought slightly south in
some |
15 | | areas, like Tinley Park, because of the population shifts
|
16 | | south from the City of Chicago. The eastern boundary runs from
|
17 | | 167th Street south to Steger Road, with the most eastern part
|
18 | | of the district reaching the municipality of Olympia Fields. |
19 | | The southern border runs almost entirely along Steger Road
|
20 | | between the municipalities of Richton Park and New Lenox. The
|
21 | | western border runs mainly on Farrell and Cherry Hill Roads
|
22 | | between 163rd Street and West Illinois Highway Road.
The |
23 | | proposed 19th Legislative District is connected by
Interstate |
24 | | 80 from east to west and major thoroughfares like
LaGrange |
25 | | Road and Harlem Avenue north and south. The district
is also |
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1 | | connected by the Rock Island Metra and Metra Electric
lines, |
2 | | providing the proposed district with accessible
transportation |
3 | | throughout the district and into the City of
Chicago. All or |
4 | | part of the municipalities of Hazel Crest,
Olympia Fields, |
5 | | Matteson, Country Club Hills, Frankfort,
Orland Park, Mokena, |
6 | | Orland Hills, New Lenox, Lockport, Homer Glen, and
Joliet are |
7 | | in the proposed legislative district. These
municipalities are |
8 | | very similar in socioeconomic status and
housing stock, |
9 | | keeping together working-class families of the
south suburbs.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 19 contains the school
|
11 | | districts of Consolidated School District 230, Lincoln-Way
|
12 | | School District 210, and Rich Township District 227. This
|
13 | | keeps together three proud school districts that have a long
|
14 | | history of collaboration and competition because of the
|
15 | | similarity in socioeconomic status but also because of the
|
16 | | easy transportation across the district through Interstate 80
|
17 | | and Route 30. Whether it is organizing community activities
|
18 | | like craft shows to allow small businesses in the community to
|
19 | | showcase themselves, or providing edge-of-your-seat
|
20 | | entertainment on Friday nights on the football field, these
|
21 | | communities have a deep connection through their school
|
22 | | districts and they have been kept together in the proposed
|
23 | | district.
|
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 19 has a total population of |
25 | | 217,176 which is 15 or 0.01% over the ideal population. The |
26 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 19 has a |
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1 | | total population
that is 62.47% White, 24.95% Black, 2.33% |
2 | | Asian, and 7.28%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
3 | | 37.53%. The total
voting age population is 64.54% White, |
4 | | 24.59% Black,
2.07% Asian, and 6.11% Hispanic. The total |
5 | | minority
voting age population is 35.46%. The proposed |
6 | | district maintains that same general
shape of the district as |
7 | | drawn in 2011. Incumbent Senator Michael E. Hastings resides |
8 | | within the proposed legislative
district. |
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 20 |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 20 is located on the
|
11 | | northwest side of Chicago. The Current Legislative District 20
|
12 | | saw a decrease of 8,868 in population which is 8,561 under the
|
13 | | ideal population target. |
14 | | Enacted Legislative District 20 with the 2020 Census data |
15 | | has a total population of 211,957 which is 5,204 under the |
16 | | ideal population target. To account for population loss in the |
17 | | district and increasing populations in the surrounding |
18 | | districts,
Legislative District 20 has been reconfigured. |
19 | | Generally, the proposed district is bounded on the south |
20 | | by
Armitage and Fullerton Streets, and on the north
by Argyle |
21 | | Street and Foster Avenue in the east and generally along |
22 | | Addison in the west. It is bordered on the west
by North |
23 | | Central Austin Avenue
and North Long Avenue, and on the east by |
24 | | North Greenview
Avenue continuing northwest generally along |
25 | | the north branch of the Chicago River. |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 20 contains a
|
2 | | well-established Latino community, however, issues of
|
3 | | gentrification and shifting population have occurred in
|
4 | | neighborhoods like Logan Square and Avondale. |
5 | | The proposed legislative
district partially contains the |
6 | | following Chicago City Wards:
1st, 30th, 31st, 32nd, 33rd, and |
7 | | 45th. Major north-south thoroughfares
are Pulaski Road, |
8 | | Kimball, and Cicero Avenue; east-west
thoroughfares include |
9 | | Diversey Avenue, Belmont Avenue, Addison
Street, and Irving |
10 | | Park Road. The Kennedy Expressway and North
Milwaukee Avenue |
11 | | run from the northwest to the southeast
through the district. |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 20 is also
served by public |
13 | | transportation, including the Chicago Transit
Authority bus |
14 | | and rail lines (Blue Line and Brown Line) and the Metra
|
15 | | Milwaukee District West and Union Pacific Northwest lines. The
|
16 | | proposed Legislative District includes Irving Park, Avondale
|
17 | | and includes portions of Bucktown, West Lakeview, and West |
18 | | DePaul.
Portions of Albany Park are contained within the north |
19 | | end of the proposed district, which is historically an |
20 | | immigrant community and remains one of Chicago's more diverse |
21 | | communities today. |
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 20 has a total population of |
23 | | 217,094 which is 67 or 0.03% under the ideal population. The |
24 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 20 has a |
25 | | total population
that is 36.24%
White, 3.55% Black, 6.34% |
26 | | Asian, and 50.47% Hispanic. The
total minority population is |
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1 | | 63.76%. The total voting
age population is 39.54% White, 3.60% |
2 | | Black, 6.79% Asian, and
47.19% Hispanic. The total minority |
3 | | voting age population
is 60.46%. |
4 | | The proposed district maintains that same
general shape of |
5 | | the district as drawn in 2001 and 2011.
Incumbent Senator |
6 | | Cristina Pacione-Zayas (D) resides in the
proposed district.
|
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 |
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 is located in central and
|
9 | | southern DuPage County and northern Will County. The Current
|
10 | | Legislative District 21 saw an increase of 3,489 in population
|
11 | | which is 3,797 over the ideal population target. |
12 | | Enacted Legislative District 21 with the 2020 Census data |
13 | | has a total population of 217,101 which is 60 under the ideal |
14 | | population target. To account for population growth in the |
15 | | district and increasing and shifting populations in the |
16 | | surrounding districts, Proposed Legislative District 21
has |
17 | | been reconfigured. |
18 | | The boundary of the proposed district
largely follows |
19 | | municipal boundaries and street lines. The
most southern part |
20 | | of the proposed district reaches into Will
County to the |
21 | | southern edge of the City of Naperville.
Naperville, Lombard, |
22 | | Glen Ellyn, and Lisle make up a majority
of the proposed |
23 | | Legislative District. |
24 | | The boundary of the
proposed district largely follows |
25 | | municipal boundaries and
street lines. The most southern part |
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1 | | of the proposed district
reaches into Will County to the |
2 | | southern edge of the City of
Naperville. The overall goal with |
3 | | the proposed boundaries was
to keep the municipalities as |
4 | | whole as the population data
would allow so that these |
5 | | like-minded communities could be
represented by a singular |
6 | | voice in the General Assembly. |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 is connected by two major
|
8 | | thoroughfares, Interstate 355 and Interstate 88. The proposed
|
9 | | district also has the BNSF Metra line, providing accessible
|
10 | | transportation around the district and the surrounding areas. |
11 | | The proposed legislative district aims to keep the |
12 | | affluent,
upper-middle class municipalities of Naperville, |
13 | | Glen Ellyn,
and Lombard together so that their like-minded |
14 | | communities can
be represented by one voice. These communities |
15 | | and their
community organizations share an enthusiasm for |
16 | | protecting and
building on their extensive parks and park |
17 | | districts.
|
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 also contains a large
|
19 | | portion of the Illinois Technology and Research Corridor. The
|
20 | | corridor is home to many major companies specializing in
|
21 | | research, logistics, and technology. The municipalities of
|
22 | | Naperville, Glen Ellyn, and Lombard make up a major part of the
|
23 | | corridor. Naperville is considered the home of the Technology
|
24 | | and Research Corridor with the development beginning back in
|
25 | | 1962 when Northern Illinois Gas (now Nicor) created a presence
|
26 | | in the city. They were quickly followed by Bell Laboratories
|
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1 | | and Amoco Research Center (now BP) and the Illinois Technology
|
2 | | Research Corridor was created. These major companies bring
|
3 | | along with them economic opportunity in the retail, dining,
|
4 | | lodging, and entertainment sectors that provide another layer
|
5 | | of employment and leisure to the district. Keeping these major
|
6 | | municipalities inside the Technology and Research Corridor
|
7 | | allows them the focused representation they need.
|
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 allows the school
|
9 | | districts of Naperville, Glen Ellyn, and Lombard to be housed
|
10 | | in the same district. These school districts are composed of
|
11 | | families with similar socioeconomic status and neighborhoods
|
12 | | with comparable housing stock. Providing a unified voice for
|
13 | | these districts that collaborate and depend on one another for
|
14 | | their success.
|
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 21 has a total population of |
16 | | 217,256 which is 95 or 0.04% over the ideal population. The |
17 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 21 has a |
18 | | total population
that is 68.12% White, 4.93% Black, 13.85% |
19 | | Asian, and 8.96%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
20 | | 31.88%. The total
voting age population is 70.99% White, 4.91% |
21 | | Black,
13.28% Asian, and 7.80% Hispanic. The total minority
|
22 | | voting age population is 29.01%. Incumbent Senator
Laura |
23 | | Ellman resides within the proposed district. |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 22 |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 22 is located in
|
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1 | | northwestern Cook County and northeastern Kane County. The
|
2 | | Current Legislative District 22 saw a decrease of 289 in
|
3 | | population which is 18 over the ideal population target. |
4 | | Enacted Legislative District 22 with the 2020 Census data has |
5 | | a total population of 217,903 which is 742 over the ideal |
6 | | population target. To account for shifting populations in the |
7 | | surrounding districts,
Proposed Legislative
District 22 has |
8 | | been slightly reconfigured.
The main northern border of the
|
9 | | proposed district runs almost entirely along Interstate 90
|
10 | | with the exception of a small strip of land that heads
north at |
11 | | the Kane County border. |
12 | | The western border runs along
existing street lines and |
13 | | precinct boundaries, making
adjustments for population shifts |
14 | | when compared to the current
legislative boundaries. |
15 | | The southern border runs mostly
along precinct lines and |
16 | | the Elgin Bypass. The eastern border mainly runs along street
|
17 | | lines and precinct boundaries in Schaumburg.
|
18 | | Proposed Legislative
District 22 contains most of the |
19 | | municipality of
Streamwood, along with parts of the |
20 | | municipalities of Elgin,
Hoffman Estates, East Dundee, |
21 | | Carpentersville, Hanover
Park, and Schaumburg. These |
22 | | municipalities have similar housing stock and are
kept |
23 | | together in the proposed district so that these similar
|
24 | | municipalities can have focused representation of their unique
|
25 | | needs. |
26 | | The eastern half of the proposed district has West
Irving |
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1 | | Park Road, West Golf Road, and West Higgins Road for
travel |
2 | | east and west across the district. The western half of
the |
3 | | district is mainly made up of the municipality of Elgin
with |
4 | | U.S. Route 20 to travel east and west across the district.
The |
5 | | Fox River also travels through the western part of the
|
6 | | proposed district. The Fox River cuts through the heart of
|
7 | | Elgin and is the focal point of the city. Allowing this
|
8 | | community to have singular representation on the State level,
|
9 | | advocating for the health and preservation of the river, is
|
10 | | key for the stability of the city.
|
11 | | Due to its population losses in adjacent districts to the |
12 | | south and population gains to the east, Proposed Legislative |
13 | | District 22 sheds precincts in Elgin and South Elgin to |
14 | | adjoining Proposed Legislative District 25. To make up for the |
15 | | population lost by shedding some of Elgin and South Elgin to |
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 25 and to absorb eastern |
17 | | population gains, Proposed Legislative District 22 moves east |
18 | | into the Village of Schaumburg. |
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 22 has a total population of |
20 | | 217,131 which is 30 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
21 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 22 has a |
22 | | total population
that is 34.84% White, 5.84% Black, 13.07% |
23 | | Asian, and 43.31%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
24 | | 65.16%. The total
voting age population is 39.60% White, 5.46% |
25 | | Black, 13.66%
Asian, and 38.78% Hispanic. The total minority |
26 | | voting
age population is 60.40%. The
proposed district |
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|
1 | | maintains that same general shape of the
district as drawn in |
2 | | 2001 and 2011. Incumbent Senator
Christina Castro resides in |
3 | | the proposed 22nd Legislative
District. |
4 | | Proposed Legislative District 23 |
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 23 is located in northern |
6 | | and eastern
DuPage County. The Current Legislative Districts |
7 | | 23 and 24, which account for a substantial majority of |
8 | | proposed Legislative District 23, saw
increases of 1,106 and |
9 | | 7,725 respectively. Enacted Legislative District 23 with the |
10 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 215,578 which is |
11 | | 2,068 under the ideal population target. To account for |
12 | | population growth and shifting populations in the surrounding |
13 | | districts,
Legislative District 23 has been reconfigured. |
14 | | The eastern
border of the proposed district is generally |
15 | | along the DuPage
and Cook County border while also following |
16 | | Interstate 88 at
points to adjust for population shifts. |
17 | | The northern border
mainly follows street lines with the |
18 | | most northern part of the
district at U.S. Highway 20. The |
19 | | municipalities of Glendale
Heights, Westmont, Villa Park, |
20 | | Elmhurst, Addison, Oakbrook
Terrace, Oak Brook, Westmont, |
21 | | Hinsdale, Clarendon Hills, and
Darien are in the proposed |
22 | | Legislative District.
Interstate 355, Interstate 290, and |
23 | | Interstate 88 provide
easy transportation throughout the |
24 | | district, connecting all
areas of the district to one another. |
25 | | Metra also provides
service to the majority of the proposed |
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1 | | district through its
Union Pacific/West Line. Due to urban |
2 | | sprawl, communities have
moved out to the western suburbs and |
3 | | the proposed 23rd
District keeps these blue-collar, working |
4 | | communities together
in their new home. The Proposed |
5 | | Legislative District includes municipalities like Villa Park, |
6 | | Glendale
Heights, and Westmont which have similar housing |
7 | | stock and
socioeconomic status. Shaping the western border as |
8 | | it is
proposed allows similar middle class, blue-collar |
9 | | communities
to be represented in one legislative district. |
10 | | The southern
border of Proposed Legislative District 23 |
11 | | mainly follows
along precinct and street lines, with the most |
12 | | southern part
of the proposed district being the municipality |
13 | | of Darien. |
14 | | The proposed district also keeps together the school
|
15 | | districts of Elmhurst, Villa Park, Addison, and Glendale
|
16 | | Heights. This keeps together school districts that have
|
17 | | similar populations and that interact and compete with each
|
18 | | other through school functions. The northeastern part of
|
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 23 is anchored by Elmhurst
|
20 | | University which houses over 3,000 total students while
|
21 | | providing jobs, services, and development to the community.
|
22 | | Keeping the majority of the City of Elmhurst and all of the
|
23 | | University in the same Legislative District allows this |
24 | | community to have a singular voice
representing their needs in |
25 | | the General Assembly.
|
26 | | Proposed Legislative District 23 has a total population of |
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1 | | 217,147 which is 14 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
2 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 23 has a |
3 | | total population
that is 59.56% White, 4.4% Black, 13.54% |
4 | | Asian, and 19.06%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
5 | | 40.44%. The total
voting age population is 62.73% White, 4.29% |
6 | | Black,
13.50% Asian, and 16.91% Hispanic. The total minority
|
7 | | voting age population is 37.27%. |
8 | | Incumbent Senator Tom
Cullerton (D) and Incumbent Senator |
9 | | Suzy Glowiak Hilton (D)
reside in the proposed district. |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 24 |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 24 is located in central and
|
12 | | northern DuPage County and northwestern Cook County. The |
13 | | Current Legislative District 23, which makes up a substantial |
14 | | portion of proposed Legislative District 24,
saw an increase |
15 | | of 798 in population which is 1,106 over the
ideal population |
16 | | target. Enacted Legislative District 24 with the 2020 Census |
17 | | data has a total population of 216,786 which is 375 over the |
18 | | ideal population target. To account for population growth in |
19 | | the district and increasing and shifting populations in the |
20 | | surrounding districts,
Proposed Legislative District 24 has |
21 | | been
reconfigured. |
22 | | The proposed district's northern boundary
generally runs |
23 | | along precinct lines in Elk Grove Village and the DuPage |
24 | | County and Cook County line. |
25 | | The northeastern district line generally runs along |
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1 | | Illinois 83. The lines then follow main thoroughfare
IL-20 |
2 | | running west and generally along precinct and township
lines |
3 | | and the common travel route of Army Trail Road. The
district's |
4 | | central and southeastern border runs along township
and |
5 | | precinct lines down into Naperville and Warrenville. The |
6 | | southern border
runs along main thoroughfares and municipality |
7 | | lines. |
8 | | The
western border of the district runs along precinct and
|
9 | | municipality lines up to the DuPage County line. Wayne,
|
10 | | Bloomingdale, Addison, Winfield, Milton, Lisle, and Naperville
|
11 | | Townships are included in the proposed district. |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 24 keeps the vast majority
|
13 | | of Wheaton whole. The district pairs socioeconomically similar
|
14 | | towns of Wheaton, Addison, and Itasca. The seven townships in
|
15 | | this district have socioeconomic conditions that resemble that
|
16 | | of the rest of DuPage County. This proposed district is
|
17 | | located in the affluent western suburbs of Chicago. The Union
|
18 | | Pacific Railroad line runs through the southern anchor of the
|
19 | | district. |
20 | | The Canadian National Illinois Central Railway runs
|
21 | | through the district. The tri-anchored cities of the district
|
22 | | include Wheaton, Itasca, and Bartlett. Bartlett village is in
|
23 | | the northwestern corner of the district. Wheaton is in the
|
24 | | southern central portion of the district. Itasca is in the
|
25 | | northeastern section of the district.
|
26 | | The southern and western portions of the proposed district
|
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1 | | contain high schools that often compete in sporting events.
|
2 | | Wheaton North, Bartlett, Streamwood, and Glenbard North in |
3 | | Carol Stream,
Streamwood, and Lake Park in Roselle often |
4 | | travel to face off
in a variety of sporting events each year. |
5 | | The consistent
competition and travel to the different high |
6 | | school
gymnasiums, diamonds, and courts over the years has led |
7 | | the
different areas in the district to be familiar with one
|
8 | | another. |
9 | | International Corporations like Hancock, Rogers
|
10 | | Corporation, and Omnitronix Corporation exist in the proposed
|
11 | | Legislative District. The district employment is dominated by
|
12 | | management, administrative, and sales positions that are
|
13 | | commonly referred to as white collar work. This trend can be
|
14 | | found throughout the different sections of the proposed
|
15 | | district. |
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 24 has a total population of |
17 | | 217,189 which is 28 or 0.01% over the ideal population. The |
18 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 24 has a |
19 | | total population
that is 71.22% White, 2.95% Black, 10.66% |
20 | | Asian, and 11.66%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
21 | | 28.78%. The total
voting age population is 73.82% White, 2.81% |
22 | | Black,
10.59% Asian, and 10.1% Hispanic. The total minority
|
23 | | voting age population is 26.18%. |
24 | | There is no Senator
in the proposed Legislative District. |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 25 |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 25 is located in
|
2 | | northeastern Illinois, primarily in Kane County and DuPage
|
3 | | with a small portion in Cook County. The
Current Legislative |
4 | | District 25 and Current Legislative District 42, which |
5 | | comprise the bulk of the proposed Legislative District 25, saw |
6 | | an increase of 11,630 and decrease of 12,361 respectively. |
7 | | Enacted Legislative District 42, which Proposed Legislative |
8 | | District is based on, with the 2020 Census data has a total |
9 | | population of 199,912 which is 17,249 under the ideal |
10 | | population target. To account for shifting populations, |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 25 has been reconfigured. |
12 | | The Kane County portion of the district
contains the |
13 | | townships of Aurora, Batavia, Geneva,
Elgin, and South Elgin. |
14 | | The DuPage County portion of the
district contains the |
15 | | townships of Naperville, Winfield, and
Wayne. The Cook County |
16 | | portion of the district contains
Hanover Township. Portions of |
17 | | the municipalities of Aurora,
North Aurora, Batavia, Geneva, |
18 | | West Chicago,
Bartlett, Warrenville, and Naperville. |
19 | | The proposed Legislative District includes well-traveled
|
20 | | thoroughfares, including Interstate 88, Illinois 56, Illinois
|
21 | | 64, Illinois 38, Illinois 25, and Illinois 59. Another common
|
22 | | form of transportation for district residents is the Aurora
|
23 | | Metra Line. The Aurora Metra Station is served by the BNSF
|
24 | | Railway, which provides residents an opportunity to travel to
|
25 | | downtown Chicago or any of their favorite towns along the way. |
26 | | The Brewster Creek Industrial Park is located on the north
|
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1 | | end of the district in Bartlett. A large population of
|
2 | | residents in the northern region of the district work or are
|
3 | | neighbors with someone who works at the Brewster Creek
|
4 | | Industrial Park. The Illinois Technology and Research Corridor
|
5 | | is located along I-88 and is home to logistics centers,
|
6 | | including the Libbey West Chicago Distribution Center. |
7 | | The
proposed Legislative District pairs the blue-collar |
8 | | workers in
the Illinois Technology and Research Corridor and |
9 | | the Brewster
Creek Industrial Park. Another major economic |
10 | | driver in the
heart of the district is the DuPage Airport. The |
11 | | airport
provides jobs and travel opportunities to the |
12 | | residents of the
district. |
13 | | Large Forest Preserve areas throughout the entire district
|
14 | | include Pratts Wayne Woods County Forest Preserve, West
|
15 | | Chicago Prairie County Forest Preserve, and DuPage County Big
|
16 | | Woods Forest Preserve. The district boasts a plethora of large
|
17 | | green space opportunities for residents throughout the
|
18 | | district. The Prairie Trail and Fox River Trail run along the
|
19 | | Des Plaines River to connect South Elgin and Aurora. |
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 25 has a total population of |
21 | | 217,413 which is 252 or 0.12% over the ideal population. The |
22 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 25 has a |
23 | | total population
that is 41.95% White, 5.93% Black, 9.11% |
24 | | Asian, and 40.11%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
25 | | 58.05%. The total
voting age population is 46.44% White, 5.85% |
26 | | Black,
9.19% Asian, and 36.10% Hispanic. The total minority
|
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1 | | voting age population is 53.56%. Incumbent Senator Karina
|
2 | | Villa (D) resides within the proposed district.
|
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 26 |
4 | | Proposed Legislative District 26 is located in
|
5 | | southwestern Lake County and northwestern Cook County. The
|
6 | | Current Legislative District 26 saw an increase of 2,914 in
|
7 | | population which is 3,222 over the ideal population target. |
8 | | Enacted Legislative District 26 with the 2020 Census data has |
9 | | a total population of 217,161 which is 2,733 over the ideal |
10 | | population target. To account for population growth in the |
11 | | district and shifting populations,
Proposed Legislative
|
12 | | District 26 has been reconfigured. |
13 | | The southern boundary of
the proposed district runs mainly |
14 | | along the northern border of
Cook County except when it |
15 | | extends south to West Central Road
between North Roselle Road |
16 | | and Commonwealth Drive. |
17 | | The
western border of the proposed district travels north |
18 | | along
street lines and precinct boundaries. The northern |
19 | | border also
runs mainly along street lines and precinct |
20 | | boundaries with
the most northern part of the proposed |
21 | | district reaching West
Casey Road. The eastern part of the |
22 | | proposed district travels
along street and precinct |
23 | | boundaries. |
24 | | The proposed district
contains the entirety of the |
25 | | municipalities of Lake Zurich,
Lake Barrington, Tower Lakes, |
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1 | | Inverness, and Fox River Grove. The
municipalities of |
2 | | Libertyville, Long Grove, Hawthorn Woods,
Forest Lake, |
3 | | Kildeer, Palatine, Barrington, South Barrington,
Algonquin, |
4 | | Oakwood Hills, Prairie Grove, Trout Valley, Wauconda and Cary |
5 | | are all partially in Proposed Legislative
District 26. |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 26 has West Algonquin Road,
|
7 | | South Northwest Highway, South Rand Road, and North Illinois
|
8 | | Route 83 providing transportation across the district. The
|
9 | | proposed district is serviced by the Union Pacific Northwest
|
10 | | Metra line which provides accessible transportation around the
|
11 | | district and into the City of Chicago on a daily basis. |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 26 keeps the municipalities
|
13 | | of Lake Zurich, Barrington, and Fox River together in the same
|
14 | | Legislative District to allow these upper-middle class
|
15 | | municipalities with similar housing stock to have singular
|
16 | | representation to advocate for their unique needs. The
|
17 | | communities have a history of being in the same legislative
|
18 | | district and that continues in the proposed district. |
19 | | The proposed district is home to an abundance of rivers
|
20 | | and lakes throughout the district. The Fox River runs through
|
21 | | the center of the district providing shipping, transportation
|
22 | | and entertainment to the district. Along with the Fox River
|
23 | | the proposed district is home to many large lakes. |
24 | | The
proposed district has numerous outdoor activities |
25 | | including
Crabtree Lake in the southern part,
Bangs Lake in |
26 | | the northern part, Countryside Lake in the
eastern part, and |
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1 | | the many lakes in between. The municipalities
that are home to |
2 | | these beautiful aquatic areas need focused
representation to |
3 | | advocate on their behalf to maintain and
preserve their |
4 | | essential wildlife.
|
5 | | Due to population growth to the southeast of Current |
6 | | Legislative District 26, Proposed Legislative District 26 |
7 | | moves southeast into Inverness and Palatine. |
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 26 has a total population of |
9 | | 217,136 which is 25 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
10 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 26 has a |
11 | | total population
that is 74.59% White, 1.34% Black, 11.23% |
12 | | Asian, and 9.24%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
13 | | 25.41%. The total
voting age population is 77.51% White, 1.28% |
14 | | Black,
10.7% Asian, and 7.91% Hispanic. The total minority
|
15 | | voting age population is 22.49%. |
16 | | Incumbent Senator Dan
McConchie resides in the proposed |
17 | | district. |
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 27 |
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 27 is located in
|
20 | | northwestern Cook County. The Current Legislative District 27
|
21 | | saw an increase of 5,144 in population which is 5,452 over the |
22 | | ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative District 5 with |
23 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 221,741 which is |
24 | | 4,293 over the ideal population target. To account for |
25 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
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1 | | populations in the surrounding districts,
Proposed Legislative |
2 | | District 27 has been reconfigured. |
3 | | The
southern border runs along I-90 between North Roselle |
4 | | Road and
South Mt. Prospect Road with the eastern half heading |
5 | | slightly
north to Dempster Street. The
eastern boundary then |
6 | | runs
along major streets and rail lines in Buffalo Grove, |
7 | | Prospect Heights and Mount Prospect. |
8 | | The northern
boundary is also formed along precinct lines, |
9 | | with the most
northern point of the district being Lake Cook |
10 | | Road. The western boundary is bordered by major roads such as |
11 | | Highway 53 and Hicks Road. The
proposed district includes the |
12 | | municipalities of
Arlington Heights and Mount Prospect. |
13 | | The majority of Rolling
Meadows, Buffalo Grove, Palatine, |
14 | | and Prospect Heights are located in the proposed
district as |
15 | | well, along with portions of Des Plaines and
Schaumburg. |
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 27 is home to Harper College |
17 | | and
historic Arlington International Racecourse. There are
|
18 | | discussions about redeveloping the Racecourse, which will have
|
19 | | substantial economic effects on the area. |
20 | | Due to population growth east and south of Current |
21 | | Legislative District 27, Proposed District 27 moves south and |
22 | | east to absorb the population growth in adjacent districts. |
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 27 has a total population of |
24 | | 217,152 which is 9 or 0.00% under the ideal population. The |
25 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 27 has a |
26 | | total population that is 65.73% White, 2.55% Black, 12.21% |
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1 | | Asian, and 16.52%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
2 | | 34.27%. The total
voting age population is 69.05% White, 2.47% |
3 | | Black,
12.1% Asian, and 14.11% Hispanic. The total minority
|
4 | | voting age population is 30.95%. Incumbent Senator Ann
|
5 | | Gillespie resides within the proposed district. |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 28 |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 28 is located in
|
8 | | northwestern Cook County. The Current Legislative District 28
|
9 | | saw an increase of 8,340 in population which is 8,648 over the |
10 | | ideal
population target. Enacted Legislative District 28 with |
11 | | the 2020 Census data has a total population of 224,680 which is |
12 | | 7,519 over the ideal population target. To account for |
13 | | population growth in the district and increasing and shifting |
14 | | populations in the surrounding districts,
Proposed Legislative |
15 | | District 28 has been reconfigured. |
16 | | The
southern border of the proposed district mainly runs |
17 | | along the
northern DuPage County line, precinct lines in Elk |
18 | | Grove Village and roads in Hanover Park. The district |
19 | | stretches east to
west from Park Ridge to Schaumburg and |
20 | | Hanover Park. The
northern border of the proposed district |
21 | | generally follows
major thoroughfares and streets, using |
22 | | Interstate 90, West
Dempster Street, and West Central Road to |
23 | | form almost the
entirety of the northern border.
|
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 28 is drawn very similarly
|
25 | | to the current district including many of the municipalities
|
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1 | | in the current 28th District. The municipalities of Park
|
2 | | Ridge, Des Plaines, Niles, Elk Grove Village, Schaumburg, |
3 | | Morton Grove, Hoffman Estates, and
Hanover Park are at least |
4 | | partially included in the proposed
district. Interstate 90, |
5 | | Interstate 290, and Interstate 294
provide transportation |
6 | | north and south across the proposed
district. Interstate 14, |
7 | | West Devon Avenue, West Wise
Road, and West Schaumburg Road |
8 | | provide transportation east and
west across the district. The |
9 | | Union Pacific Northwest Metra
line and the Milwaukee District |
10 | | West provide accessible public
transportation around the |
11 | | district and into the City of
Chicago.
|
12 | | The proposed district combines these municipalities
|
13 | | because of their similar housing stock and socioeconomic
|
14 | | status. This allows these like-minded municipalities to be
|
15 | | represented by a singular voice in the General Assembly |
16 | | allowing
that voice to advocate directly for the community's |
17 | | needs.
Proposed Legislative District 28 also mostly keeps |
18 | | together
the school districts of Des Plaines School District |
19 | | 62,
Schaumburg School District 211, and Maine School District |
20 | | 207.
Keeping these school districts as whole as the population |
21 | | data
would allow is important because these schools have a |
22 | | long
history of sports competitions and academic |
23 | | collaboration.
Keeping these school districts as together as |
24 | | possible allows
them to have a unified voice for their unique |
25 | | needs.
|
26 | | Proposed Legislative District 28 has a total population of |
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1 | | 217,099 which is 62 or 0.03% under the ideal population. The |
2 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 28 has a |
3 | | total population
that is 58.84% White, 3.10% Black, 18.49% |
4 | | Asian, and 16.6%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
5 | | 41.16%. The total
voting age population is 61.79% White, 2.95% |
6 | | Black,
18.44% Asian, and 14.47% Hispanic. The total minority
|
7 | | voting age population is 38.21%. Incumbent Senator
Laura |
8 | | Murphy resides in the proposed district.
|
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 29 |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 29 is located in northern
|
11 | | Cook County and southeastern Lake County. Current Legislative
|
12 | | District 29 saw an increased population of 1,720 which is |
13 | | 2,028
over the ideal population target. Enacted Legislative |
14 | | District 29 with the 2020 Census data has a total population of |
15 | | 219,603 which is 2,442 over the ideal population target. To |
16 | | account for population growth in the district and increasing |
17 | | and shifting populations in the surrounding districts, |
18 | | particularly districts to the south,
Proposed Legislative |
19 | | District 29 has been
reconfigured.
|
20 | | The eastern border of the proposed district runs
|
21 | | unobstructed along Lake Michigan from Glencoe north to
North |
22 | | Chicago. The most northern part of the proposed 29th
|
23 | | Legislative District reaches Cluverius Avenue in North |
24 | | Chicago. The western boundary of
the proposed district mainly |
25 | | follows
North St. Mary's Road, to the Des Plaines River, and |
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1 | | into IL Route 45 also known as Milwaukee Avenue. The southern |
2 | | border
of Proposed Legislative District 29 tries to follow
|
3 | | municipal boundaries as close as possible, making slight
|
4 | | adjustments when the population data required it.
The proposed |
5 | | district contains the entirety of Highland
Park, Highwood, |
6 | | Deerfield, Lake Forest, and Lake Bluff
municipalities. The |
7 | | municipalities of Northbrook, Northfield, Knollwood, Mettawa,
|
8 | | Lincolnshire, Riverwoods, Wheeling, Glenview, and Buffalo
|
9 | | Grove are all partially in the proposed district. The proposed
|
10 | | district has Sheridan Road, IL Route 41, South Waukegan Road,
|
11 | | and Interstate 94 providing ample transportation north and
|
12 | | south throughout the district. Proposed Legislative District
|
13 | | 29 is also serviced by the Milwaukee District/North Metra line
|
14 | | and the Union Pacific North Metra line providing accessible
|
15 | | transportation throughout the district and into the City of
|
16 | | Chicago.
|
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 29 keeps the shoreline
|
18 | | municipalities of Glencoe, Highland Park, Highwood, Lake
|
19 | | Forest, and Lake Bluff whole and together in the same district
|
20 | | as to not split up these shoreline municipalities. Each of
|
21 | | these municipalities has at least one public beach with Lake
|
22 | | Forest having two. Keeping the municipalities together allows
|
23 | | them the focused representation they need for their unique
|
24 | | situation. The beaches require special services and
|
25 | | maintenance to keep them in operation and having a singular
|
26 | | voice of representation allows them a straight route to those
|
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1 | | resources.
|
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 29 also keeps municipalities
|
3 | | with similar housing stock in the same district. The
|
4 | | municipalities of Lake Forest, Highland Park, Glencoe,
|
5 | | Northbrook, and Deerfield all have similar housing stock, |
6 | | keeping
these upper-middle class communities in the same |
7 | | proposed
district. The proposed district is made up of mainly |
8 | | white
collar families, with many of them commuting into the |
9 | | Loop for
work on a daily basis. |
10 | | Due to population growth in districts to the south of |
11 | | Current Legislative District 29, Proposed Legislative District |
12 | | 29 moves south to absorb the population growth. Proposed |
13 | | Legislative District 29 has a total population of 216,815 |
14 | | which is 346 or 0.16% under the ideal population. The |
15 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 29 has a |
16 | | total population
that is 70.25% White, 2.52% Black, 10.49% |
17 | | Asian, and 13.34%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
18 | | 29.75%. The total
voting age population is 72.36% White, 2.71% |
19 | | Black,
10.49% Asian, and 11.93% Hispanic. The total minority
|
20 | | voting age population is 27.64%. The proposed district
|
21 | | maintains that same general shape of the district as drawn in
|
22 | | 2001 and 2011. Incumbent Senator Julie Morrison
resides within |
23 | | the proposed district.
|
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 is located in central and
|
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1 | | eastern Lake County. The Current Legislative District 30 saw |
2 | | an
increased population of 4,757 which is 5,064 over the ideal
|
3 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 30 with the |
4 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 221,454 which is |
5 | | 4,580 over the ideal population target. To account for |
6 | | population growth and shifts,
Proposed Legislative District 30 |
7 | | has been reconfigured.
|
8 | | The
boundary of the proposed district mainly follows |
9 | | street lines
and natural borders. The eastern boundary runs |
10 | | along North
Milwaukee Avenue, the Des Plaines River, North St. |
11 | | Mary's
Road, and the eastern border of the township of |
12 | | Libertyville.
The northwestern border runs along the coast of |
13 | | Lake Michigan
north to the northern edge of Waukegan Township. |
14 | | The northern
boundary to proposed Legislative District 30 |
15 | | mainly runs
along street and township lines, with the most |
16 | | northern part
of the district reaching the municipality of |
17 | | Wadsworth. The
western boundary also travels mainly along |
18 | | existing street and
precinct lines, trying to keep the shape |
19 | | of the existing 30th
district. Proposed Legislative District |
20 | | 30 contains at
least parts of the municipalities of Wadsworth, |
21 | | Gurnee, Park
City, North Chicago, Green Oaks, Mundelein, |
22 | | Vernon Hills, and
Indian Creek.
|
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 has U.S. Highway 45,
|
24 | | North Milwaukee Avenue, Interstate 94, and Sheridan Road
|
25 | | providing travel north and south across the district. The
|
26 | | district is also serviced by the North Central Service Metra
|
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1 | | line and the Union Pacific North Metra line providing the
|
2 | | proposed district with accessible transportation throughout
|
3 | | the district and into the City of Chicago to which a large |
4 | | portion
of the district commutes for work on a daily basis. |
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 contains at least parts of
|
6 | | the municipalities of Wadsworth, Gurnee, Park City, North
|
7 | | Chicago, Green Oaks, Mundelein, Vernon Hills, and Indian
|
8 | | Creek. Again, the proposed district's shape is drawn to
|
9 | | resemble the current district as much as the population data
|
10 | | would allow.
|
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 is home to the vacation
|
12 | | destination Six Flags Great America - Gurnee. The amusement
|
13 | | park is one of the top 20 most visited parks in the country,
|
14 | | with over 3 million guests in 2017. This thriving amusement
|
15 | | park brings hundreds of seasonal jobs to the area and spurs
|
16 | | local development in the food, retail, and entertainment
|
17 | | industries like the recent $100,000,000 investment in Gurnee's
|
18 | | Great Wolf Lodge. With the surrounding community being so
|
19 | | dependent on the success of Six Flags Great America - Gurnee it
|
20 | | is important that they have a singular voice representing them
|
21 | | in the Senate.
|
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 30 has a total population of |
23 | | 217,254 which is 93 or 0.04% over the ideal population. The |
24 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 30 has a |
25 | | total population
that is 35.31% White, 10.37% Black, 13.17% |
26 | | Asian, and 37.93%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
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1 | | 64.69%. The total
voting age population is 39.74% White, |
2 | | 10.50% Black,
12.61% Asian, and 34.41% Hispanic. The total |
3 | | minority
voting age population is 60.26%. The proposed |
4 | | district maintains that
same general shape of the district as |
5 | | drawn in 2011. Incumbent
Senator Adriane Johnson resides |
6 | | within the proposed district.
|
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 31 |
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 31 is located in
|
9 | | northeastern Lake County. Current Legislative District 31 saw
|
10 | | a population increase of 96 persons which is 403 over the
ideal |
11 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 31 with the |
12 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 219,603 which is |
13 | | 2,635 over the ideal population target. To account for these |
14 | | population
shifts, Legislative District 31 has been |
15 | | reconfigured.
|
16 | | The
northern border of the proposed district runs along |
17 | | the
Illinois and Wisconsin border west until it reaches North |
18 | | U.S.
Highway 45. The western border of the proposed districts |
19 | | runs
mainly along street and precinct lines. The proposed |
20 | | district
goes as far south as the municipality of |
21 | | Libertyville. The
eastern boundary of the proposed Legislative |
22 | | District reaches
Lake Michigan at the southern border of |
23 | | Benton Township and
goes north until it reaches the Illinois |
24 | | and Wisconsin border.
Proposed Legislative District 31 |
25 | | contains the entirety of
the municipalities of Winthrop |
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1 | | Harbor, Zion City, Beach Park,
Old Mill Creek, and Grayslake. |
2 | | The proposed district contains
at least portions of the |
3 | | municipalities of Round Lake, Long
Lake, Libertyville, Gages |
4 | | Lake, Gurnee, Grandwood, Third Lake,
Venetian Village, |
5 | | Lindenhurst, and Green Oaks. The proposed
31st Legislative |
6 | | District has the major thoroughfares
Interstate 94 and U.S. |
7 | | Route 45 providing transportation north
and south across the |
8 | | district. The proposed district is also
serviced by the |
9 | | Milwaukee District North Metra line along with
the North |
10 | | Central Services Metra line, providing accessible
|
11 | | transportation around the district and into the City of
|
12 | | Chicago.
|
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 31 is anchored in the
|
14 | | northern part by the Waukegan National Airport, located just
|
15 | | north of West York House Road and between the Des Plaines
River |
16 | | and Lake Michigan. The airport provides 318 jobs, spends
|
17 | | $28.95 million in payroll, and has an economic output of
|
18 | | $87.49 million annually. The airport also provides growing
|
19 | | economic opportunity to the surrounding communities,
|
20 | | specifically in the food, hospitality, and entertainment
|
21 | | sectors. Having the Waukegan Regional National in the proposed
|
22 | | 31st Legislative District keeps it within the same boundaries
|
23 | | of the communities that it depends on for success and allows
|
24 | | these communities to have focused representation to advocate
|
25 | | for the airport that they so heavily depend on for their
|
26 | | success as well.
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 31 is split down the middle
|
2 | | by the Des Plaines River keeping the surrounding communities
|
3 | | as whole as the population data would allow. The communities
|
4 | | along the Des Plaines River need focused representation to
|
5 | | advocate for the preservation and restoration of the river and
|
6 | | surrounding areas. Along with these communities along the Des
|
7 | | Plaines River the proposed district is also home to many
|
8 | | sprawling forest preserves throughout the entirety of the
|
9 | | district. From Van Patten Woods Forest Preserve in the north,
|
10 | | Rollins Savanna Forest Preserve in the west, Independence
|
11 | | Grove Forest Preserve in the south, or the Spring Bluff Forest
|
12 | | Preserve in the east, the district is filled with wonderful
|
13 | | trails and wildlife. These forest preserves need unified
|
14 | | representation to ensure their stability and beauty continue
|
15 | | to be preserved.
|
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 31 has a total population of |
17 | | 217,217 which is 56 or 0.03% over the ideal population. The |
18 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 31 has a |
19 | | total population
that is 52.24% White, 8.39% Black, 6.31% |
20 | | Asian, and 28.63%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
21 | | 47.76%. The total
voting age population is 56.66% White, 7.91% |
22 | | Black,
6.57% Asian, and 25.26% Hispanic. The total minority
|
23 | | voting age population is 43.34%. Incumbent Senator Melinda
|
24 | | Bush resides in the proposed 31st district.
|
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 32 |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 32 is located in
|
2 | | northeastern McHenry County and northwestern Lake County.
|
3 | | Current Legislative District 32 saw a population increase of |
4 | | 2,429
which is 2,736 over the ideal population target. Enacted |
5 | | Legislative District 32 with the 2020 Census data has a total |
6 | | population of 221,183 which is 4,022 over the ideal population |
7 | | target. To account for these population
shifts, Legislative |
8 | | District 32 has been reconfigured. |
9 | | The northern border of the proposed
district runs entirely |
10 | | along the Illinois and Wisconsin border. The
western border of |
11 | | the proposed district runs along
major roads such as Illinois |
12 | | Route 31 and Franklinville Road and precinct lines. The |
13 | | southernmost border of the proposed
district flows along the |
14 | | Fox River. The southern border of the
proposed district runs |
15 | | along existing street lines, precinct
boundaries, and rivers. |
16 | | The eastern border runs along existing
street lines, precinct |
17 | | boundaries, and lakes until it reaches
the Illinois and |
18 | | Wisconsin border. The proposed 32nd
Legislative District |
19 | | contains the entire townships of
Dorr, Richmond, and Burton |
20 | | inside McHenry County. The townships of Greenwood, Algonquin, |
21 | | McHenry
and Nunda are partially in the proposed district. In |
22 | | Lake
County the townships of Grant, Lake Villa, and
Antioch |
23 | | are partially in the proposed district.
The district has U.S. |
24 | | Route 47 and U.S. Route 12
providing transportation north and |
25 | | south across the district.
Illinois Route 120 and Illinois |
26 | | Route 173 provide
transportation east and west across the |
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1 | | district. The district
is also serviced by the North Central |
2 | | Service Metra line and
the Union Pacific Northwest Metra line |
3 | | providing accessible
transportation around the district and |
4 | | into the City of
Chicago on a daily basis.
|
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 32 contains Fox Lake, Fox
|
6 | | River, and the surrounding expansive natural bodies of water.
|
7 | | The community of Fox Lake and the surrounding areas are kept
|
8 | | whole in the district, to allow them unified leadership that
|
9 | | will advocate for the resources and preservation of the
|
10 | | wildlife and communities needed to continue growing and
|
11 | | maintaining these historic bodies of water.
Like other |
12 | | suburban districts, Proposed Legislative District 32 moves |
13 | | south and east to absorb population growth. Proposed |
14 | | Legislative District 32 has a total population of 217,104 |
15 | | which is 57 or 0.03% under the ideal population. |
16 | | The demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 32 |
17 | | has a total population that is 78.73% White, 1.52% Black, |
18 | | 2.04% Asian, and 13.69%
Hispanic. The total minority |
19 | | population is 21.27%. The total
voting age population is |
20 | | 81.86% White, 1.34% Black,
2.1% Asian, and 11.39% Hispanic. |
21 | | The total minority
voting age population is 18.14%. Incumbent
|
22 | | Senator Craig Wilcox resides in the proposed district.
|
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 33 |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 33 is located in central
|
25 | | Kane County. Current Legislative District 33 saw an increase
|
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1 | | of 19,825 in population which is 20,133 over the ideal
|
2 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 33 with the |
3 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 217,161 which is 196 |
4 | | over the ideal population target. To account for this |
5 | | population growth in the east and population loss in the |
6 | | south, Legislative District 33 has been reconfigured.
|
7 | | To account for these population shifts,
Legislative |
8 | | District 33 has been reconfigured.
The proposed Legislative |
9 | | District is located in the western suburbs of
Chicago. The |
10 | | district wholly contains Sleepy Hollow, West
Dundee, and |
11 | | Campton Hills. Campton and Plato Townships are wholly
included |
12 | | in the district, as are the majorities of Blackberry,
St. |
13 | | Charles, and Dundee Townships. |
14 | | The Milwaukee District West Metra Line and the Union
|
15 | | Pacific Northwest Line provide accessible transportation
|
16 | | throughout the proposed district and into the City of Chicago
|
17 | | on a daily basis. The district contains a large number of
|
18 | | commuters that travel to the City of Chicago for work every
|
19 | | day. There is similar housing stock throughout the entirety of
|
20 | | the district. Similar economic outcomes for the residents of
|
21 | | Crystal Lake, West Dundee, and Elgin. The proposed district |
22 | | keeps together a good portion of the
affluent townships in |
23 | | Kane County, including Plato, Campton,
and Blackberry |
24 | | Townships. The average household
income for these townships is |
25 | | $110,000.
The proposed district contains Randall Oaks Zoo in |
26 | | West
Dundee. This serves as a tourism destination and a place |
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1 | | for
working families to enjoy during their leisure time. The
|
2 | | Randall Oaks Zoo location tracks with the pattern of forest
|
3 | | preserve and outdoor hubs for families to enjoy throughout the
|
4 | | entirety of the district.
|
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 33 has a total population of |
6 | | 217,187 which is 26 or 0.01% over the ideal population. The |
7 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 33 has a |
8 | | total population
that is 71.44% White, 2.57% Black, 6.4% |
9 | | Asian, and 15.64%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
10 | | 28.56%. The total
voting age population is 74.71% White, 2.49% |
11 | | Black,
6.37% Asian, and 13.40% Hispanic. The total minority
|
12 | | voting age population is 25.29%. Incumbent
Senator Don DeWitte |
13 | | resides in the proposed district.
|
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 34 |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 34 is located in the City of
|
16 | | Rockford and western Boone County. Current Legislative
|
17 | | District 34 saw a decrease of 8,598 in population which is
|
18 | | 8,290 under the ideal population target. Enacted Legislative |
19 | | District 34 with the 2020 Census data has a total population of |
20 | | 215,918 which is 1,243 the ideal population target. To account |
21 | | for these
population shifts, Legislative District 34 has been
|
22 | | reconfigured. |
23 | | The district's eastern border runs generally
along the |
24 | | county line separating Winnebago and Boone Counties,
along the |
25 | | eastern border of the City of Belvidere, and along
precinct |
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1 | | lines in the cities of Rockford and Loves Park. The
district's |
2 | | northern boundary runs generally along Harlem Road,
the Rock |
3 | | River, North Riverside Boulevard, and Kilburn Avenue.
To the |
4 | | west, the district's border runs along Rockton Avenue,
the |
5 | | boundary of the City of Rockford, U.S. Highway 20, and
|
6 | | Meridian Road. The southern border of the district runs along
|
7 | | the City of Rockford's boundary and the Jane Addams Memorial
|
8 | | Tollway. Most of the cities of Rockford and Belvidere are |
9 | | located in the
proposed Legislative District.
Other
|
10 | | municipalities in this district include portions of Cherry
|
11 | | Valley, Loves Park, and Machesney Park.
Major employers within |
12 | | the district include Rockford
Memorial Hospital, St. Anthony's |
13 | | Medical Center,
Swedish-American Hospital, and Chrysler's |
14 | | Belvidere Assembly
Plant. The Rockford-Chicago International |
15 | | Airport, a major
transportation hub for products, is within |
16 | | the proposed
district, as are several manufacturing |
17 | | facilities. The
proposed district includes parts of the |
18 | | Rockford, Harlem, and
Belvidere school districts. Rockford |
19 | | University and Rock
Valley College are also located within the |
20 | | proposed district.
Rockford and Belvidere have numerous |
21 | | connections including
that Rockford and Belvidere schools play |
22 | | in the same sports
conference, the Northern Illinois |
23 | | Conference, and the Rockford
Mass Transit District connects |
24 | | downtown Rockford and
Belvidere.
|
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 2 has a total population of |
26 | | 216,908 which is 253 or 0.12% under the ideal population. The |
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1 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 34 has a |
2 | | total population
that is 55.19% White, 16.54% Black, 2.9% |
3 | | Asian, and 20.15%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
4 | | 44.81%. The total
voting age population is 61.16% White, 14.9% |
5 | | Black,
2.92% Asian, and 17.01% Hispanic. The total minority
|
6 | | voting age population is 38.84%. The proposed district
|
7 | | maintains that same general shape of the district as drawn in
|
8 | | 2011. Incumbent Senator Steve Stadelman (D) resides within the
|
9 | | proposed district.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 35 |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 35 is located in parts of |
12 | | Winnebago, Boone, McHenry, Kane, and DeKalb Counties. |
13 | | Current Legislative District 35 saw a decreased population |
14 | | of 4,383 which is 4,075 under the ideal population target. |
15 | | Enacted Legislative District 35 with the 2020 Census data has |
16 | | a total population of 218,571 which is 1,410 above the ideal |
17 | | population target. To
account for this population growth in |
18 | | the east, Legislative District 35
has been reconfigured.
|
19 | | The northern boundary is the Illinois and Wisconsin |
20 | | border. The eastern boundary generally follows township and |
21 | | precinct lines east of IL-47. The southern boundary generally |
22 | | follows the southern boundaries of Squaw Grove and Big Rock |
23 | | Townships. The western boundary generally follows the western |
24 | | boundaries of townships in Boone and DeKalb Counties and |
25 | | precinct lines in Rockford. |
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1 | | The proposed
Legislative District includes the majority of |
2 | | Boone County.
The district includes portions of Winnebago, |
3 | | McHenry, Kane, and Winnebago, Counties. The northern
region of |
4 | | the district contains Lawrence, Harvard, Capron,
Caledonia, |
5 | | Marengo, and a small amount of Rockford. The
central and |
6 | | southern portions of the district contain
Sycamore, Big Rock, |
7 | | Earlville, and Steward.
|
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 35 has a total population of |
9 | | 217,127 which is 34 or 0.03% under the ideal population. The |
10 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 35 has a |
11 | | total population that is 77.26% White, 1.9% Black, 3.41% |
12 | | Asian, and 13.48%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
13 | | 22.74%. The total
voting age population is 80.53% White, 1.74% |
14 | | Black,
3.42% Asian, and 11.24% Hispanic. The total minority
|
15 | | voting age population is 19.47%. Incumbent Senator
Dave |
16 | | Syverson (R) resides within the proposed district.
|
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 36 |
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 36 is located in west
|
19 | | central Illinois. Current Legislative District 36 saw a
|
20 | | decrease of 5,099 in population which is 4,791 under the ideal
|
21 | | population target. Enacted Legislative District 36 with the |
22 | | 2020 Census data has a total population of 214,223 which is |
23 | | 2,938 under the ideal population target. To account for these |
24 | | population shifts,
Legislative District 36 has been |
25 | | reconfigured. The district is
bordered to the north by the |
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1 | | Mississippi River, to the west by
U.S. Route 67 and county |
2 | | highways in Mercer, Warren, and
McDonough Counties, to the |
3 | | east by county highways in Henry
and Knox Counties, and to the |
4 | | south by State Route 136. The
proposed district contains urban |
5 | | portions of Rock Island
County along the Mississippi River, |
6 | | the eastern portion of
Mercer County, a western portion of |
7 | | Henry County, a majority
of Warren County, an urban portion of |
8 | | Knox County, and most of
northern McDonough County.
|
9 | | The predominant urban centers of the district are Rock
|
10 | | Island, Moline, East Moline, Milan, Galesburg, Monmouth, and
|
11 | | Macomb. The area has historically been a hub for
|
12 | | transportation, manufacturing, and higher education. The
|
13 | | district serves as a transportation center throughout, linking
|
14 | | the Mississippi River with rail lines and major highways such
|
15 | | as Interstates 80, 88, 74, and 280 and Illinois Routes 67, 150,
|
16 | | and 34. Major employers include John Deere, Rock Island
|
17 | | Arsenal, Modern Woodmen of America, BNSF Railway, and OSF St.
|
18 | | Mary's Medical Center.
|
19 | | Proposed Legislative District 36 is also home to a major
|
20 | | employer in Western Illinois University with campuses in
|
21 | | Macomb and Moline; in addition, the proposed district is home
|
22 | | to three historic private colleges in Knox College in
|
23 | | Galesburg, Monmouth College in Monmouth, and Augustana College
|
24 | | in Rock Island. Two of these schools, Knox and Monmouth, have
|
25 | | met on the gridiron over 100 times since 1881, making their
|
26 | | annual competition for the Bronze Turkey a storied rivalry
|
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1 | | game in college football.
|
2 | | Major school districts serving residents of the district
|
3 | | include Rock Island 41, Moline 40, United Township 30, East
|
4 | | Moline 37, Monmouth-Roseville 238, Galesburg 205, and Macomb
|
5 | | 185. Rock Island High School,
Moline High School, United |
6 | | Township High School, and Galesburg
High School are founding |
7 | | members of one of the state's oldest
athletic conferences, the |
8 | | Western Big Six, and have competed
against one another for |
9 | | generations. |
10 | | The proposed district sheds rural portions of Rock Island,
|
11 | | Whiteside, and Carroll Counties and expands south to join
|
12 | | communities linked through similar housing markets, downstate
|
13 | | urban makeup, and a shared history in the manufacturing and
|
14 | | educational sectors. This shift creates a district which
|
15 | | results in the inclusion of the entire municipalities of
|
16 | | Galesburg, Monmouth, Rock Island, and Moline.
|
17 | | Proposed Legislative District 36 has a total population of |
18 | | 217,315 which is 154 or 0.07% over the ideal population. The |
19 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 36 has a |
20 | | total population
that is 70.58%
white, 10.33% Black, 2.38% |
21 | | Asian, and 11.76% Hispanic. The
total minority population is |
22 | | 29.42%. The total voting
age population is 74.84% White, 9.31% |
23 | | Black, 2.18% Asian, and
9.86% Hispanic. The total minority |
24 | | citizen voting age
population is 25.16%. No incumbent Senator |
25 | | currently
resides in the proposed district. |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 37 |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 37 is located in northwest |
3 | | and west central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 37 |
4 | | saw a population
decrease of 1,514 which is 1,206 under the |
5 | | ideal
population target; however, population losses in |
6 | | downstate districts to the north, south, east, and west of |
7 | | Legislative District 37 combined with population growth in |
8 | | Cook and the collar counties necessitated various district |
9 | | reconfigurations, including Legislative District 37. |
10 | | The proposed legislative district 37 begins along the |
11 | | Mississippi River at its most eastern boundary, the district |
12 | | line travels east along the Whiteside County line and then |
13 | | generally follows the Ogle and Lee County line to Flag |
14 | | Township's eastern boundary and travels north to White Rock |
15 | | Township's most southern boundary. |
16 | | The proposed legislative district 37 continues east along |
17 | | White Rock's, Lynnville's, South Grove's and Mayfield's |
18 | | southern township lines. |
19 | | The proposed district then travels south around the City |
20 | | of DeKalb and then generally Waterman Road south to IL Route |
21 | | 34. |
22 | | The proposed district then follows IL Route 34 to Adams |
23 | | Township's most western boundary and follows Adams, Serena, |
24 | | and Dayton's most western township boundary. |
25 | | The proposed district then generally follows I-80 west |
26 | | then south down I-180 to the Iowa Railroad. |
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1 | | The proposed district then generally runs along the Iowa |
2 | | Railroad to the most eastern boundary of Arispie Township. |
3 | | The proposed district then runs south down Arispie, |
4 | | Wheatland, Whitefield, and Steuben's most western township |
5 | | boundary. |
6 | | The proposed district then follows the north side of |
7 | | Chillicothe to the Illinois River. |
8 | | The proposed district generally follows the Illinois River |
9 | | to its most southern boundary in North Peoria. The proposed |
10 | | district then generally runs north along the eastern boundary |
11 | | of Jubilee's, Princeville's, Essex's, Toulon's and Elmira's |
12 | | township lines. The proposed district then runs along the |
13 | | northern Stark County line to the western Bureau County line. |
14 | | It then travels north up the Bureau County line to Annawan's |
15 | | northern township line. |
16 | | The proposed district then runs along Annawan's, |
17 | | Cornwall's and Munson's northern township boundary, and then |
18 | | follows Edford and Hannah easternmost township boundaries |
19 | | north to the Henry County border and then goes east generally |
20 | | along I-88 to the Mississippi River. |
21 | | The
proposed legislative district contains all of |
22 | | Whiteside and Lee and portions of Ogle, DeKalb, LaSalle, |
23 | | Marshall,
Peoria, Stark, Bureau, Henry, and Rock Island |
24 | | Counties. Villages and cities in the district include |
25 | | Germantown Hills,
Kewanee, Geneseo, Fulton, Princeton, Dixon, |
26 | | Rochelle, Shabbona, Sterling, Rock Falls, and Mendota.
|
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1 | | The growth in the geographical district size is due to the
|
2 | | general population loss of west central and northwestern
|
3 | | Illinois. |
4 | | The proposed district has regional coherence and pairs
|
5 | | rural areas outside of urban centers. Major interstate travel
|
6 | | options, including I-88, I-80, I-39, Route 52, and Route 30,
|
7 | | all run through large sections of the district. This district
|
8 | | is largely agricultural. All sections of the proposed
|
9 | | Legislative District are easily within reach of the abundance
|
10 | | of interstates, and long drives for the rural community are
|
11 | | commonplace.
|
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 37 has a total population of |
13 | | 217,029, which is 132 or 0.06% under the ideal population. The |
14 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 37 has a |
15 | | total population
that is 82.91% White, 2.06% Black, 2.19% |
16 | | Asian, and 9.04%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
17 | | 17.09%. The total
voting age population is 85.44% White, 2.07% |
18 | | Black,
1.99% Asian, and 7.5% Hispanic. The total minority
|
19 | | voting age population is 14.56%.
Incumbent Senator Win
Stoller |
20 | | (R) resides in the proposed district. |
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 38 |
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 38 is located at the
|
23 | | crossroads of Kendall, Grundy, DeKalb, and LaSalle Counties. |
24 | | The
Current Legislative District 38 saw an increase of 4,045 |
25 | | in
population, which is 4,353 over the ideal population |
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1 | | target. To
account for these population shifts, Legislative |
2 | | District 38
has been reconfigured.
|
3 | | The northern boundary follows along
existing major roads, |
4 | | interstates, and precinct lines. The
eastern border generally |
5 | | runs along the Grundy and Kendall
County border with Will |
6 | | County. The southern border runs along
township lines and the |
7 | | Illinois River. The western border of
the proposed district |
8 | | runs along existing township lines. The district
contains the |
9 | | majority of the municipalities of Yorkville,
Minooka, Ottawa, |
10 | | Peru, LaSalle, and DeKalb.
|
11 | | The northern part of the district is anchored by Northern
|
12 | | Illinois University in DeKalb. The University provides a
|
13 | | higher educational opportunity, while also providing
immense |
14 | | economic support for the surrounding communities. The
|
15 | | University brings direct economic benefits to the district
|
16 | | through stable jobs and economic opportunity in the food,
|
17 | | hospitality, and entertainment sectors. Northern Illinois
|
18 | | University and DeKalb were previously paired with the
|
19 | | LaSalle-Peru-Illinois River Valley area in the legislative map
|
20 | | from 1982 to 1992.
|
21 | | The proposed district contains Starved Rock State Park and
|
22 | | Buffalo Rock State Park, two historic Illinois State Parks.
|
23 | | Starved Rock State Park hosts over 2 million visitors |
24 | | annually. These parks are home to an expansive list of |
25 | | wildlife
and natural waterways, all of which need preservation |
26 | | and
restoration to ensure their stability. Keeping these parks
|
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1 | | together in the same Legislative District allows them to have
|
2 | | focused advocacy to ensure their stability and growth.
|
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 38 has a total population of |
4 | | 217,281 which is 120 or 0.06% over the ideal population. The |
5 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 38 has a |
6 | | total population
that is 73.69% White, 6.07% Black, 1.81% |
7 | | Asian, and 14.19%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
8 | | 26.31%. The total
voting age population is 77.0% White, 5.69% |
9 | | Black,
1.93% Asian, and 11.98% Hispanic. The total minority
|
10 | | voting age population is 23.0%. Incumbent Senator Sue
Rezin |
11 | | (R) resides within the proposed district.
|
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 39 |
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 39 is located on the west
|
14 | | side of Chicago into the immediate western Cook County suburbs
|
15 | | and eastern DuPage County. The Current Legislative District 39
|
16 | | saw a population decrease of 705, which is 398 under the
ideal |
17 | | population target. To account for these population
shifts and |
18 | | population growth to the east, Legislative District 39 has |
19 | | been reconfigured.
|
20 | | The
proposed district begins in the Austin neighborhood, |
21 | | in
Chicago's 29th Ward. It continues west to the western |
22 | | suburb
of Addison. The southern boundary of proposed District |
23 | | 39
generally follows Lake Street, North Avenue, and the
|
24 | | Eisenhower Expressway. The northern boundary generally follows
|
25 | | Grand Avenue on the east and O'Hare Airport in the west. The
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1 | | borders of the proposed district generally adhere to existing
|
2 | | precinct boundaries.
|
3 | | The proposed district includes portions of Oak Park,
|
4 | | Proviso, and Leyden Townships in Cook County and Addison
|
5 | | Township in DuPage County. The proposed district includes the
|
6 | | entirety of Stone Park as well as
portions of Oak Park, River |
7 | | Forest, River Grove, Elmwood Park,
Elmhurst, Melrose Park, |
8 | | Northlake, Franklin Park, Bensenville,
Villa Park and Addison. |
9 | | The inclusion of suburban communities
and the City of Chicago |
10 | | in the proposed district is not without
historical precedent. |
11 | | Since 2001, the 39th district has united
Chicago's Austin |
12 | | neighborhood and Oak Park with other western suburbs such as |
13 | | River Forest,
Elmwood Park, River Grove, Franklin Park, |
14 | | Melrose Park, Stone
Park, Northlake, Rosemont, and |
15 | | Bensenville.
|
16 | | The proposed district
is ethnically diverse and represents |
17 | | a vibrant melting pot.
The west end of the proposed district is |
18 | | substantially similar
to a map proposal submitted to the |
19 | | Senate Redistricting
Committee from the Latino Policy Forum. |
20 | | The mean household
income for most communities in the district |
21 | | falls between
$50,000 to $65,000 with areas like River Forest |
22 | | and Oak Park as
high as $91,000 to $121,000. All communities |
23 | | have a
significant population of renters at almost 40% in the
|
24 | | proposed district with the median monthly rent across most
|
25 | | communities around $925. The communities of the proposed
|
26 | | district also share an older housing stock, with 29.4% of
|
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1 | | housing units built in 1939 or earlier.
|
2 | | The communities within the proposed district are tied
|
3 | | economically to O'Hare Airport and the extensive network of
|
4 | | freight train lines and roadways that run through the area,
|
5 | | such as Interstates 90, 290, and 294. Businesses that have
|
6 | | developed around O'Hare rely on these different methods of
|
7 | | transportation to move their goods, creating a commercial
|
8 | | community of interest that is preserved by the proposed
|
9 | | district. Major transportation routes through the proposed
|
10 | | district include North Avenue, Mannheim Road, and Interstate
|
11 | | 294. Residents of the proposed district are closely connected
|
12 | | to Chicago, as they are served by Chicago Transit Authority
|
13 | | bus and rail lines (Blue and Green Lines) and Metra commuter
|
14 | | rail lines (Union Pacific West, Milwaukee District West, and
|
15 | | North Central Service lines).
|
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 39 has a total population of |
17 | | 217,119 which is 42 or 0.02% under the ideal population. The |
18 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 39 has a |
19 | | total population
that is 39.88% White, 16.25% Black, 3.63% |
20 | | Asian, and
37.23% Hispanic. The total minority population is |
21 | | 60.12%. The
total voting age population is 43.08% White, |
22 | | 17.04%
Black, 3.95% Asian, and 33.56% Hispanic. The total |
23 | | minority
voting age population is 56.92%. The proposed
|
24 | | district maintains that same general shape of the district as
|
25 | | drawn in 2001 and 2011. Incumbent Senator Don Harmon (D)
|
26 | | resides in the proposed district.
|
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 40 |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 40 is located in southern
|
3 | | Cook County, Will County, and Kankakee County. The Current
|
4 | | Legislative District 40 saw a population decrease of 3,393
|
5 | | which is 3,086 over the ideal population target. To account |
6 | | for
these population shifts, Legislative District 40 has been
|
7 | | reconfigured. |
8 | | The southern border of the district runs along
Round |
9 | | Grove, Norton, and Pilot Township lines. The district
contains |
10 | | the majority of the Kankakee Metropolitan area. The
eastern |
11 | | border follows along I-57, up into Rich and Bloom
townships. |
12 | | The northern border of the district runs along
township lines |
13 | | from Richton Park to New Lenox. The western
borders of the |
14 | | district follow various rural routes. The
Kankakee River, a |
15 | | major watershed for the area, flows through
the south central |
16 | | part of the proposed district. |
17 | | Major municipalities within the district include Kankakee,
|
18 | | Bourbonnais, Manhattan, Chicago Heights, Park Forest,
|
19 | | University Park, Bradley, and Wilmington. As
under Current |
20 | | Legislative District 40, Proposed Legislative
District 40 |
21 | | continues to include portions of Will and
Washington Townships |
22 | | in Will County that contain the proposed
site of the South |
23 | | Suburban Airport. The western portion of the
district contains |
24 | | the Braidwood Nuclear Station. A major
employer in the |
25 | | Kankakee County portion of the district is CSL
Behring, which |
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1 | | manufactures biotheropedics. The healthcare
industry is also a |
2 | | large employer in the district, which includes Shapiro
|
3 | | Developmental Center, Riverside, and St. Mary's hospital.
|
4 | | Colleges include Kankakee Community College and Olivet
|
5 | | Nazarene University.
|
6 | | The Southwest Service on the Metra runs in Manhattan,
|
7 | | through New Lenox up to downtown Chicago. Municipalities in
|
8 | | the northeastern portion of the proposed district are served
|
9 | | by the Metra Electric District and South West Service commuter
|
10 | | rail lines.
|
11 | | The South Suburban and Kankakee relationship is preserved
|
12 | | in the proposed district as it has been for the last 20 years.
|
13 | | Crete and Monee were drawn into the district to maintain an
|
14 | | extremely close relationship between Crete, Monee, and
|
15 | | University Park. The students in this area all attend the same
|
16 | | high school. The Chicago Heights, South Chicago Heights, and
|
17 | | Steger communities are brought together in this district as
|
18 | | they look extremely similar socioeconomically. The portions of
|
19 | | Richton Park are added to bridge the already close
|
20 | | relationship between Richton Park and Park Forest communities.
|
21 | | The western portion of the district, including western
|
22 | | Kankakee County and Grundy County, below the river, are
|
23 | | connected, as they have always been, via blue-collar jobs and
|
24 | | community understanding. The Central Eight Football conference
|
25 | | now has six of the eight schools in and around the district
|
26 | | boundaries. Major interstates and roads include, Interstate
|
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1 | | 57, Interstate 55, Route 17, Wilmington Peotone Road, Route
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2 | | 45/52, Route 47, and Highway 30. |
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 40 has a total population of |
4 | | 217,318 which is 157 or 0.07% over the ideal population. The |
5 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 40 has a |
6 | | total population
that is 54.87% White, 25.94% Black, 0.85% |
7 | | Asian, and 14.29% Hispanic. The total minority population is |
8 | | 45.13%. The total
voting age population is 58.35% White, |
9 | | 25.23% Black,
0.92% Asian, and 12.07% Hispanic. The total |
10 | | minority
voting age population is 41.65%.
Incumbent Senator |
11 | | Patrick
Joyce (D) resides in the proposed district. |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 41 |
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 41 is mainly located in |
14 | | southern
DuPage County and southwestern Cook County. The |
15 | | Current
Legislative District 41 saw a population increase of |
16 | | 5,715 which is 6,023 over the ideal population target. To |
17 | | account
for these population shifts, Legislative District 41 |
18 | | has been
reconfigured. |
19 | | The southern border of the district runs
generally along |
20 | | the border between DuPage and Will Counties in
the western |
21 | | part of the district and the Cook-Will County line in the |
22 | | central part of the district. The western border of the
|
23 | | district runs generally along Interstate 355 and the boundary
|
24 | | of Will County. The eastern border of the
district runs |
25 | | generally along Wolf Road, Willow Springs Road and 88th |
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1 | | Avenue.
The district's northern border runs generally along |
2 | | Ogden Avenue in the east,
along 63rd Street in the central part |
3 | | of the
district, and along Illinois Route 34 and Chicago |
4 | | Avenue in
the western part of the district. The proposed |
5 | | district
includes all or portions of Lemont, Darien,
|
6 | | Woodridge, Downers Grove, Willowbrook, Burr Ridge, Homer Glen,
|
7 | | Willow Springs, and Palos Park.
|
8 | | Interstates 55, 294, and 335 as well as Illinois Routes 7
|
9 | | and 83 traverse the district. The Metra Heritage Corridor
|
10 | | commuter rail line provides the residents of proposed
|
11 | | Legislative District 41 with transportation to and from the
|
12 | | City of Chicago. The Des Plaines River and the Illinois and
|
13 | | Michigan Canal, which connects the Great Lakes to the
|
14 | | Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico, flow through the
|
15 | | middle of the district. Argonne National Laboratory, an
|
16 | | important national research facility, is located within the
|
17 | | proposed district.
|
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 41 has a total population of |
19 | | 217,150 which is 11 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
20 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 41 has a |
21 | | total population
that is 74.61% White, 3.91% Black, 9.78% |
22 | | Asian, and 8.36%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
23 | | 25.39%. The total
voting age population is 76.84% White, 3.68% |
24 | | Black,
9.89% Asian, and 7.16% Hispanic. The total minority
|
25 | | voting age population is 23.16%.
The proposed district
|
26 | | maintains that same general shape of the district as drawn in
|
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1 | | 2011. Incumbent Senator John Curran (R) resides within the
|
2 | | proposed district. |
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 42 |
4 | | Proposed Legislative District 42 is located at the
|
5 | | crossroads of DuPage, Kane, Kendall, and Will Counties. The
|
6 | | Current Legislative District 25 and Current Legislative |
7 | | District 42, which comprise the bulk of the proposed 42nd |
8 | | Legislative District, saw an increase of 11,630 and decrease |
9 | | of 12,361 respectively. Enacted Legislative District 25, which |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 42 is based on, with the 2020 |
11 | | Census data has a total population of 215,578 which is 1,583 |
12 | | under the ideal population target. To account for shifting |
13 | | populations, Legislative District 42 has been reconfigured. |
14 | | The southern border of the
proposed district runs mainly |
15 | | along existing street lines,
precinct boundaries, and rivers. |
16 | | The eastern border of the
proposed district generally follows |
17 | | existing precinct
boundaries and street lines. The eastern |
18 | | boundary runs between
103rd Street north to North Aurora Road. |
19 | | The southwestern
border running north primarily follows |
20 | | existing township,
precinct, and municipal lines and the Fox |
21 | | River. The boundary of
the proposed district then runs back |
22 | | east along municipal
lines and main thoroughfares until the |
23 | | Elgin Joliet and
Eastern Railway. The Kane County portion of |
24 | | the district
contains the townships of Aurora, Batavia, |
25 | | Geneva, and St.
Charles. The DuPage County portion of the
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1 | | district contains a portion of Naperville township. The |
2 | | Kendall County portion of the district contains portions of |
3 | | the township of Oswego. Portions of the municipalities of |
4 | | Aurora,
North Aurora, Batavia, Geneva, St. Charles, Yorkville, |
5 | | Oswego, Boulder Hill, Montgomery, and Naperville are inside |
6 | | the proposed
Legislative District. |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 42 has U.S. Highway 34, U.S.
|
8 | | Highway 30, and Galena Road providing ample transportation
|
9 | | across the district, connecting the district east and west.
|
10 | | The district is also serviced by the BNSF Metra line and the
|
11 | | Union Pacific West Metra line providing accessible
|
12 | | transportation around the district and into the City of
|
13 | | Chicago on a daily basis.
|
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 42 has a total population of |
15 | | 217,158 which is 3 or 0.00% under the ideal population. The |
16 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 42 has a |
17 | | total population
that is 54.43 White, 8.45% Black, 10.9% |
18 | | Asian, and 22.11%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
19 | | 45.57%. The total
voting age population is 58.4% White, 8.33% |
20 | | Black,
10.5% Asian, and 19.68% Hispanic. The total minority
|
21 | | voting age population is 41.6%. Incumbent Senator
Linda Holmes |
22 | | (D) resides in the proposed Legislative District. |
23 | | Proposed Legislative District 43 |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 43 is located in central and
|
25 | | northern Will County and southern DuPage County. The Current |
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1 | | Legislative District 43 saw
a decrease of 4,132 in population, |
2 | | which is 3,824 under the
ideal population target. To account |
3 | | for these population
shifts, Legislative District 43 has been |
4 | | reconfigured. |
5 | | The
district is anchored by the core of the City of Joliet; |
6 | | it also
includes the municipalities of Romeoville, |
7 | | Bolingbrook,
Elwood, Channahon, and Lockport. The eastern |
8 | | boundary of the
district consists of Jackson, Joliet, |
9 | | Lockport, Lisle, and
DuPage Township lines. The western |
10 | | boundary runs generally
along precinct boundaries in Will and |
11 | | DuPage counties. |
12 | | The
northern border runs along precinct lines in DuPage |
13 | | County,
and the southern border runs along the township |
14 | | boundaries of
Channahon and Jackson Townships. The borders of |
15 | | the proposed
district generally adhere to existing precinct |
16 | | boundaries.
Proposed Legislative District 43 is mainly |
17 | | blue-collar
working families in Lockport, Joliet, Troy, and |
18 | | DuPage
Townships. Jackson Township is more agricultural and |
19 | | rural,
except for the municipality of Elwood in the southwest |
20 | | corner
of the township. Lisle and Channahon Townships, |
21 | | although on
opposite ends of the district, share a similar |
22 | | socioeconomic
status. |
23 | | The proposed district includes major employers such as
|
24 | | ExxonMobil, AMITA Health Saint Joseph Medical Center, and
|
25 | | Joliet Junior College. The district is a transportation hub,
|
26 | | with Interstates 55 and 80, and Illinois Route 53 running
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1 | | through the district, as well as the CenterPoint Intermodal
|
2 | | Center and the BNSF Logistics Park, both located in Elwood. |
3 | | The proposed Legislative District is also supported by a
|
4 | | thriving railroad industry, with several Amtrak and Metra
|
5 | | passenger lines servicing the core of the district. The Des
|
6 | | Plaines River runs from the northeastern corner down the
|
7 | | southwestern corner of the district. |
8 | | Other district points of interest: Lewis University,
|
9 | | Stateville Correctional Facility, the Promenade Bolingbrook (a
|
10 | | major shopping and entertainment center), Pelican Harbor
|
11 | | Indoor/Outdoor Aquatic Park, Chicago Speedway, Rialto Theatre,
|
12 | | and Route 66 Raceway. The areas contained in the proposed
|
13 | | district are commonly referred to as the "crossroads of
|
14 | | America", with Amazon currently owning four warehouses in the
|
15 | | district. Will County is the largest inland container port in
|
16 | | the country. Proposed Legislative District 43 sits in the
|
17 | | heart of Will County. Will County's prominent position as a
|
18 | | container port makes it even more appealing to businesses
|
19 | | seeking to reduce transportation costs, improve supply chain
|
20 | | diversification and profit from easy connections to foreign
|
21 | | markets. |
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 43 has a total population of |
23 | | 216,956 which is 205 or 0.09% under the ideal population. The |
24 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 43 has a |
25 | | total population that is 46.65% White, 15.24% Black, 3.79% |
26 | | Asian, and 30.83%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
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1 | | 53.35%. The total
voting age population is 51.14% White, |
2 | | 15.25% Black,
3.98% Asian, and 26.79% Hispanic. The total |
3 | | minority
voting age population is 48.86%. The proposed |
4 | | district
maintains that same general shape of the district as |
5 | | drawn in
2001 and 2011. Incumbent Senator John Connor (D) |
6 | | resides
within the proposed district. |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District 44 |
8 | | Proposed Legislative District 44 is located in Central
|
9 | | Illinois. The Current Legislative District 44 saw a decrease
|
10 | | of 5,309 in population which is 5,002 under the ideal
|
11 | | population target. To account for these population shifts in |
12 | | the district and surrounding downstate districts,
Legislative |
13 | | District 44 has been reconfigured. |
14 | | The southern
border of the district runs generally the |
15 | | Sangamon River and Interstate 72. The eastern border of the |
16 | | district runs
along the boundaries separating Piatt and |
17 | | Champaign Counties
from McLean and Ford Counties. The |
18 | | district's northern border
runs generally along Interstate 55 |
19 | | and Interstate 74. The western border of the proposed
district |
20 | | runs generally township lines in Tazewell County and the |
21 | | Logan-Mason County line.
|
22 | | The proposed Legislative District
contains all of Logan, |
23 | | DeWitt, and Piatt Counties and portions
of Sangamon, Macon, |
24 | | McLean, Livingston, and Tazewell Counties. This mainly
rural |
25 | | district encompasses much of the central part of the
State |
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1 | | between the major communities of Springfield, Peoria,
and |
2 | | Bloomington.
Interstate 55 runs southwest to northeast through |
3 | | much of
this district, with Interstate 155 running north to |
4 | | south
through the northwestern part of the district. |
5 | | Interstate 72
runs east to west through the southwest corner |
6 | | of the
district. The economy of the district is largely |
7 | | centered
around agriculture, with healthcare and manufacturing |
8 | | being
other economic drivers, particularly around the |
9 | | district's
population centers.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 44 has a total population of |
11 | | 217,163 which is 2 or 0.00% over the ideal population. The |
12 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 44 has a |
13 | | total population
that is 87.14% White, 3.06% Black, 2.70% |
14 | | Asian, and 3.09%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
15 | | 12.86%. The total
voting age population is 88.81% White, 3.0% |
16 | | Black,
2.5% Asian, and 2.51% Hispanic. The total minority
|
17 | | voting age population is 11.19%.
|
18 | | Incumbent Senator Sally Turner (R) resides within the |
19 | | proposed district.
|
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 45 |
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 45 is located in northwest
|
22 | | Illinois. The Current Legislative District 45 saw a decline in |
23 | | population of 8,852, which is 8,545 under the ideal
population |
24 | | target. To account for the district's population loss and |
25 | | population loss in other downstate districts,
Legislative |
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1 | | District 45 has been reconfigured.
|
2 | | The northern
border of the district is the |
3 | | Illinois-Wisconsin state line,
and the western border is the |
4 | | Mississippi River. The southern
border of the proposed |
5 | | district runs along county and township lines. The
district's |
6 | | eastern border runs along the township and precinct lines in |
7 | | Boone and DeKalb Counties. The proposed district includes
all |
8 | | of Jo Daviess, Stephenson, Carroll, and Ogle Counties and
|
9 | | parts of Winnebago, Boone, and DeKalb Counties.
Major cities |
10 | | located wholly or partially within Proposed
Legislative |
11 | | District 45 include Galena, Freeport, Byron,
South Beloit, |
12 | | Rockton, Roscoe, and Machesney Park. Many major
thoroughfares, |
13 | | including U.S. Routes 20 and 52 and Interstates
39 and 88, |
14 | | traverse through the proposed district. While the
district has |
15 | | a strong agricultural base, it also contains
numerous natural |
16 | | areas, tourist attractions and State parks
such as Apple River |
17 | | Canyon, Castle Rock, Lake Le-Aqua-Na, Rock
Cut, Lowden, and |
18 | | the Mississippi Palisades. |
19 | | Many historic towns remain in Proposed Legislative
|
20 | | District 45 such as Galena, where 85% of the buildings are on
|
21 | | the National Historic Register and is home to the last lead
|
22 | | mine shaft in Illinois, Freeport, where one of the six
|
23 | | historic Lincoln-Douglas debates were held and Byron, home to
|
24 | | the momentous Heritage Farm. Major employers in the proposed
|
25 | | district include Byron Generating Station, FHN, and Thomson
|
26 | | Correctional Facility, among many others.
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 45 has a total population of |
2 | | 217,091 which is 70 or 0.03% under the ideal population. The |
3 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 45 has a |
4 | | total population
that is 84.78% White, 3.74% Black, 0.95% |
5 | | Asian, and 6.07%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
6 | | 15.22%. The total
voting age population is 87.5% White, 3.44% |
7 | | Black,
0.96% Asian, and 4.77% Hispanic. The total minority
|
8 | | voting age population is 12.50%. Incumbent Senator Brian
|
9 | | Stewart (R) resides within the proposed district.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 46 |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 46 is located in the City of
|
12 | | Peoria, through Woodford County, and into the cities of
|
13 | | Bloomington-Normal. The Current Legislative District 46 saw a
|
14 | | population decline of 15,831 which is 15,523 under the ideal
|
15 | | population target. To account for the population decline and |
16 | | population decreases in other downstate districts,
Legislative |
17 | | District 46 has been reconfigured to become an urban district |
18 | | in central Illinois.
|
19 | | The western
border of the district runs along Bartonville |
20 | | and Peoria. U.S.
Route 74 generally guides the southern |
21 | | boundary of the
district, while the northern boundary roughly |
22 | | follows Illinois
Route 24. The district is bracketed on the |
23 | | east by Illinois
Route 51/U.S. Route 39. It contains the City |
24 | | of Peoria and
its suburbs, the historic core of |
25 | | Bloomington-Normal and a
swath of relatively rural area |
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1 | | between the two. Deer Creek,
Goodfield, Congerville, and |
2 | | Carlock villages are also located
in the proposed Legislative |
3 | | District.
|
4 | | The proposed district brings together two urban hubs of
|
5 | | central Illinois. The City of Peoria becomes more whole than
|
6 | | it had previously been as new district boundaries are closely
|
7 | | based on municipal lines. Furthermore, the proposed district
|
8 | | keeps Peoria's historic African American community together,
|
9 | | as requested in testimony before the Senate. In addition, the
|
10 | | proposed district keeps the majority of Bloomington-Normal
|
11 | | together, which attempts to address testimony received by the
|
12 | | Senate to keep Bloomington-Normal together in one district.
|
13 | | Illinois Central Community College East and North campuses
in |
14 | | Peoria are included within the proposed district, as well
as |
15 | | Heartland Community College in Bloomington. The district
also |
16 | | houses Illinois State University, which is one of the
only |
17 | | universities in Illinois with increasing enrollment, and
|
18 | | Bradley and Illinois Wesleyan Universities, two powerhouse
|
19 | | central Illinois private universities. The Peoria
|
20 | | International Airport is kept within the confines of the
|
21 | | district, which provides economic stability to the area. Based |
22 | | on written testimony offered by the Chairman of the |
23 | | Bloomington-Normal Airport Authority to the Senate |
24 | | Redistricting Committee and discussion during the Committee's |
25 | | Peoria hearing, the Central Illinois Regional Airport in |
26 | | Bloomington-Normal was added to Proposed Legislative District |
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1 | | 46 so that it could be in the same district as the majority of |
2 | | Bloomington-Normal.
The communities have many similarities, |
3 | | including
socioeconomic status and home and property value, as |
4 | | well as
comparable social experiences, such as significant |
5 | | community
college attendance, and a shared, widely attended |
6 | | State
university. Peoria and Bloomington-Normal both share |
7 | | interest
in the education and healthcare industries, resulting |
8 | | in a
district with common industrial goals. Bloomington-Normal |
9 | | and
Peoria also share a media market, consolidating much of |
10 | | the
retail and entertainment messaging in the region. |
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 46 has a total population of |
12 | | 216,987 which is 174 or 0.08% under the ideal population. The |
13 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 46 has a |
14 | | total population
that is 64.72% White, 19.94% Black, 2.68% |
15 | | Asian, and 6.99%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
16 | | 35.28%. The total
voting age population is 69.35% White, |
17 | | 17.53% Black,
2.83% Asian, and 5.99% Hispanic. The total |
18 | | minority
voting age population is 30.65%. Incumbent Senator
|
19 | | David Koehler (D) resides in the proposed district. |
20 | | Proposed Legislative District 47
|
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 47 is located in west
|
22 | | central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 47 saw a
|
23 | | decrease of 16,794 in population, which is 16,487 under the
|
24 | | ideal population target. Population losses in downstate |
25 | | districts combined with population growth in Cook and the |
26 | | collar counties necessitated various district |
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1 | | reconfigurations, including Legislative District 47. |
2 | | The proposed Legislative District 47 entire eastern |
3 | | boundary is the Mississippi River. The southeastern corner of |
4 | | the district begins at the Mississippi River and Ursa's |
5 | | northern township boundary. The proposed district then runs |
6 | | along the northern boundaries of Ursa, Mendon, Honey Creek, |
7 | | Camp Point, Clayton, Pea Ridge, and Missouri townships. The |
8 | | proposed district then follows the eastern boundary of Buena |
9 | | Vista Township north to Buena Vista's northern boundary, and |
10 | | then follows the northern boundaries of Buena Vista, |
11 | | Rushville, and Browning townships east to the Illinois River. |
12 | | The proposed legislative district then continues east along |
13 | | Cass and Menard County's northern boundaries to Logan County's |
14 | | western boundary. The proposed legislative district then |
15 | | continues north along the western boundaries of Sheridan, |
16 | | Prairie Creek, Delavan, Dillon, Elm Grove and Groveland. The |
17 | | proposed district then continues north generally along |
18 | | Bartonville and the City of Peoria's municipal boundaries. The |
19 | | proposed district then generally runs north along the eastern |
20 | | boundary of Jubilee's, Princeville's, Essex's, Toulon's and |
21 | | Elmira's township lines. The proposed district then runs along |
22 | | the northern Stark County line to the western Bureau County |
23 | | line. It then travels north up the Bureau County line to |
24 | | Annawan's northern Township line. The proposed district then |
25 | | runs along Annawan's, Cornwall's and Munson's northern |
26 | | Township boundary, and then follows Edford and Hannah |
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1 | | easternmost township boundaries north to the Henry County |
2 | | border. |
3 | | Proposed Legislative District 47 includes portions of Rock
|
4 | | Island, Mercer, Warren, McDonough, Knox, Adams, Schuyler, |
5 | | Peoria, Tazewell, Stark, and Henry
Counties, as well as the |
6 | | entirety of Hancock, Henderson,
Fulton, and Mason Counties. |
7 | | The
proposed district includes all of Canton, Carthage, |
8 | | Lewiston,
Stronghurst, Table Grove, Goofy Ridge, Rushville, |
9 | | Manito,
Astoria, Vermont, Cuba, London Mills, Farmington, |
10 | | Havana,
Industry, Dallas City, Nauvoo, Warsaw, Hamilton, West |
11 | | Point,
Tennessee, Colchester, Camden, Bath, and
Mason City, |
12 | | among others. The district brings together small,
somewhat |
13 | | rural communities that act as satellites for larger
cities |
14 | | located just outside its boundaries. Socioeconomic
status, as |
15 | | well as home and property values, are generally
consistent |
16 | | throughout the district, creating a residency
unified over |
17 | | shared social experiences and economic goals.
A great deal of |
18 | | the communities in the proposed district
have historic ties to |
19 | | the manufacturing industry, which boomed
in this area in the |
20 | | late 20th century, and the region has
strong union ties as |
21 | | well. The transportation industry is
vital to the proposed |
22 | | district as a great deal of working
adults commute to the |
23 | | larger, surrounding cities for work
through the week, creating |
24 | | a vested interest in reliable
infrastructure stretching across |
25 | | the entire district east and
west.
|
26 | | The proposed district includes a large amount of farmland
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1 | | throughout the region. Farmland in the district contains
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2 | | similar hydric soils because of the flood plain patterns along
|
3 | | the Mississippi. Estimated arsenic concentration in the
|
4 | | glacial aquifer system heatmap matches with the district
|
5 | | location. |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 47 is full of civic events
|
7 | | and recreation opportunities such as the Redneck Fishing
|
8 | | Tournament located in Bath, Smiles Day in Rushville, Nauvoo
|
9 | | Grape Festival, Art on Main Fine Arts Festival in Canton,
|
10 | | eagle watching near the Mississippi River Bridge in Hancock
|
11 | | County, Aledo Rhubarb Festival and the annual Dallas City
|
12 | | Celebration Parade. The proposed district pairs the Important
|
13 | | Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) along the Illinois River
|
14 | | with the IBAs along the Mississippi River.
|
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 47 has a total population of |
16 | | 217,288 which is 127 or 0.06% over the ideal population. The |
17 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 2 has a |
18 | | total population that is 90.98% White, 1.78% Black, 0.71% |
19 | | Asian, and 2.92%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
20 | | 9.02%. The total
voting age population is 92.14% White, 1.81% |
21 | | Black,
0.68% Asian, and 2.43% Hispanic. The total minority
|
22 | | voting age population is 7.86%. Incumbent Senator
Neil |
23 | | Anderson (R) resides in the proposed district.
|
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 48 |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 48 is located in the City of
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1 | | Springfield and stretches through Christian County and into
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2 | | the City of Decatur. Current Legislative District 48 saw a
|
3 | | decrease of 13,356 in population which is 13,049 under the
|
4 | | ideal population target. To account for these population
|
5 | | shifts, Legislative District 48 has been reconfigured.
In |
6 | | Macon County, the district's northern border generally follows
|
7 | | Interstate 72 north of Decatur. The proposed district's
|
8 | | western border generally follows Sangamon Valley Trail and the
|
9 | | boundaries of the City of Springfield as well as the boundary |
10 | | between Sangamon and Christian Counties. The southern border
|
11 | | of the district runs along precinct lines in Sangamon County
|
12 | | and along County Road 1200 North in Christian County. In Macon
|
13 | | County, the southern border of the district runs along
|
14 | | Mosquito Creek Road, County Highway 10, and Grove Road in
|
15 | | Decatur. The proposed district's eastern border runs along |
16 | | Christian County Road 2100 East, precinct lines in Decatur,
|
17 | | and along Lake Decatur. Proposed Legislative District 48
|
18 | | contains parts of Sangamon, Christian, and Macon Counties.
The |
19 | | proposed district contains the vast majority of the
|
20 | | significant population centers of Springfield and Decatur,
|
21 | | which are linked by Interstate 72. Proposed Legislative |
22 | | District 48 contains a larger percentage of Springfield than |
23 | | under the Current Legislative Redistricting Plan or the |
24 | | Enacted Legislative Redistricting Plan. The district also |
25 | | contains several small
communities, including Chatham, |
26 | | Rochester, Edinburg, Tovey,
Bulpitt, Kincaid, Jeisyville, |
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1 | | Stonington, Mount
Auburn and Boody. The economy of proposed |
2 | | District 48 is
largely driven by government, health care, |
3 | | manufacturing, and
agriculture. The proposed district includes |
4 | | numerous State and
federal employers, including the Illinois |
5 | | Department of
Transportation, Illinois Secretary of State, and |
6 | | various
offices of State agencies, as well as a correctional |
7 | | facility
in Decatur. It also contains several state-of-the-art |
8 | | medical
facilities including Southern Illinois University |
9 | | School of Medicine, the
Simmons Cancer Institute, Memorial |
10 | | Medical Center, and St.
John's Hospital in Springfield and |
11 | | Decatur Memorial Hospital
and St. Mary's Hospital in Decatur.
|
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 48 contains several
|
13 | | institutions of higher education, including Millikin
|
14 | | University and Richland Community College in Decatur and
|
15 | | Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, the
|
16 | | University of Illinois Springfield, and Lincoln Land Community
|
17 | | College in Springfield. The communities within the district
|
18 | | have a rich high school sports tradition. Many of the high
|
19 | | schools within the district compete in the Central State Eight
|
20 | | conference, which has many fierce rivalries. The proposed
|
21 | | district is located within one media market, which includes
|
22 | | television stations WICS, WAND, WCIA, and WRSP-TV and radio
|
23 | | stations WSMI, WTAX, and WSOY. |
24 | | Proposed Legislative District 48 has a total population of |
25 | | 217,156 which is 5 or 0.00% under the ideal population. The |
26 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 48 has a |
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1 | | total population
that is 69.29% White, 19.59% Black, 2.21% |
2 | | Asian, and 3.02%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
3 | | 30.71%. The total
voting age population is 73.72% White, |
4 | | 17.32% Black,
2.22% Asian, and 2.53% Hispanic. The total |
5 | | minority
voting age population is 26.28%. Proposed Legislative |
6 | | District
48 retains a similar shape to Current Representative |
7 | | District 96
except that it expands further into Springfield |
8 | | making the
district more urban and concentrating a greater |
9 | | part of
Springfield in the district, accomplishing the desire |
10 | | of some
to consolidate Springfield's legislative voice. |
11 | | Incumbent Senator Doris Turner (D) resides within the proposed
|
12 | | district.
|
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 49 |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 49 is located in Will
|
15 | | County. The Current Legislative District 49 saw an increase of
|
16 | | 13,927 in population which is 13,619 over the ideal population
|
17 | | target. To account for this population growth, Legislative
|
18 | | District 49 has been reconfigured by making the district more |
19 | | compact. |
20 | | The northwestern edge of
the district runs south along |
21 | | precinct and township lines. The
lines run back east to |
22 | | connect into Will County. The central
western border of the |
23 | | proposed district runs along county
lines until it reaches the |
24 | | main thoroughfare of Renwick Road.
The southwestern section of |
25 | | the district stretches across into
Kendall County. The |
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1 | | district's southern border runs along
major thoroughfares, |
2 | | including Route 52, into Joliet and parts
of Crest Hill. |
3 | | Plainfield Township is wholly contained within
the district. |
4 | | Portions of Joliet, Lockport, DuPage, Wheatland,
and Oswego |
5 | | Townships are also within the district lines.
The areas of |
6 | | Joliet, Crest Hill, Plainfield, and Shorewood
are extremely |
7 | | familiar with each other. They are
geographically and |
8 | | socioeconomically similar. Many of the
school districts and |
9 | | police districts overlap in the greater
Joliet metropolitan |
10 | | area. The northern border of the proposed
district runs along |
11 | | township and precinct lines. The northeast
corner of the |
12 | | district contains communities with similar
housing stock that |
13 | | share Valley View Community Unit School
District 365. The |
14 | | district contains a large majority of
Plainfield School |
15 | | District 202. The sprawled school district
lines helped |
16 | | determine the northeastern district boundaries
along the Des |
17 | | Plaines River. Major transportation routes in
the district |
18 | | include I-55 in the eastern section, Illinois
Route 59 running |
19 | | north to south, and U.S. 30 running from the
northwest to |
20 | | southeast. U.S. Route 52 and Weber Road are also
major |
21 | | transportation arteries for the area. |
22 | | The explosive growth, from 2010 to 2019, in the greater
|
23 | | Joliet metropolitan area include; Plainfield +11.6%, Shorewood
|
24 | | +12.0%, Oswego +19.0%, and Bolingbrook +1.6%. The increased
|
25 | | growth in the Plainfield and Shorewood areas allow for the
|
26 | | northwest corner of the proposed district to be trimmed to
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1 | | compact the district.
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2 | | Proposed Legislative District 49 has a total population of |
3 | | 217,224 which is 63 or 0.03% over the ideal population. The |
4 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 49 has a |
5 | | total population
that is 55.23% White, 11.65% Black, 7.63% |
6 | | Asian, and 21.57%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
7 | | 44.77%. The total
voting age population is 58.55% White, |
8 | | 11.41% Black,
7.68% Asian, and 19.32% Hispanic. Incumbent |
9 | | Senator Meg
Loughran Cappel (D) resides within the proposed |
10 | | district.
|
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 50 |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 50 is located in west
|
13 | | central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 50 saw a
|
14 | | decrease of 5,801 in population which is 5,494 under the ideal
|
15 | | population target. To account for these population declines |
16 | | and those in other downstate districts,
Legislative District |
17 | | 50 has been reconfigured.
The district is
bordered to the west |
18 | | by the Mississippi River. The southern
border mostly follows |
19 | | precinct lines in northwestern Madison
County. The eastern |
20 | | border follows precinct and township lines
in Madison and |
21 | | Macoupin Counties and county lines in Morgan
and Cass |
22 | | Counties. The northern border follows county lines in
Cass and |
23 | | Brown Counties, and township and county lines in
Adams and |
24 | | Schuyler Counties. Proposed Legislative District 50 contains |
25 | | most
of Adams County; the whole of Pike, Brown, Cass, Morgan,
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1 | | Scott, Calhoun, Jersey, Greene, and Morgan Counties, and
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2 | | portions of Schuyler, Macoupin, and Madison Counties.
Major |
3 | | thoroughfares include Interstate 72, which runs east
and west. |
4 | | U.S. Route 67 also runs north and south throughout
most of the |
5 | | western part of the district. The Great River Road
runs in the |
6 | | district from Quincy through Godfrey, providing
the district |
7 | | with additional tourism destinations along the
way. The |
8 | | socioeconomic demographics of the proposed district
are |
9 | | generally similar, with strong roots in the agriculture,
|
10 | | healthcare, manufacturing, and education sectors. The
|
11 | | Mississippi River has long played an important role in the
|
12 | | cultural and commercial aspects of this area. The proposed
|
13 | | Legislative District contains two institutions of higher
|
14 | | learning, including Quincy University and Illinois College in
|
15 | | Jacksonville.
|
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 50 has a total population of |
17 | | 217,289 which is 128 or 0.06% over the ideal population. The |
18 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 50 has a |
19 | | total population
that is 88.68% White, 3.5% Black, 0.59% |
20 | | Asian, and 3.14%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
21 | | 11.32%. The total
voting age population is 90.1% White, 3.43% |
22 | | Black,
0.58% Asian, and 2.6% Hispanic. |
23 | | Incumbent Senator Jil Tracy (R) resides in the proposed |
24 | | district. |
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 51
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 51 is located in east
|
2 | | central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 51 saw |
3 | | population decrease of 1,802 which is 1,495 over the ideal
|
4 | | population target. To account for population losses in the |
5 | | district and
other downstate Legislative Districts, |
6 | | Legislative District 51
has been reconfigured.
Much of |
7 | | Proposed Legislative District
51 was configured together in a |
8 | | similar design as the 55
Legislative District from 2002 to |
9 | | 2012. |
10 | | The northern border of
the district follows rural roads in |
11 | | Ford County and the northern border of Vermilion County, and |
12 | | the eastern border follows the
Illinois-Indiana state line. |
13 | | The southern border follows
county lines of Lawrence and |
14 | | Jasper Counties. |
15 | | The western
border generally follows county lines of |
16 | | Champaign, Douglas, Coles, Cumberland and
Jasper Counties |
17 | | except where it was necessary for population. The proposed |
18 | | district contains
portions of Champaign, Vermilion, |
19 | | Cumberland, and Moultrie Counties,
the whole of Douglas, |
20 | | Jasper, Edgar, Coles, Crawford,
Coles and Lawrence Counties. |
21 | | Municipalities in the
district include Mahomet, Mattoon, |
22 | | Charleston, and Paris.
The district is served by three major |
23 | | interstates in I-57
in the west, I-74 in the north, and I-70 in |
24 | | the south, in
addition to IL Route 36, 50, and 150. The |
25 | | district is rural and
driven primarily by agriculture bringing |
26 | | the socioeconomic
status of residents to a similar place. The |
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1 | | district now
includes Eastern Illinois University, which |
2 | | features one of
the state's top agriculture programs and could |
3 | | serve as a
feeder system to continue the district's |
4 | | agricultural based
economy. |
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 51 has a total population of |
6 | | 217,169 which is 8 or 0.00% over the ideal population. The |
7 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 51 has a |
8 | | total population
that is 90.09% White, 2.22% Black, 0.69% |
9 | | Asian, and 3.3%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
10 | | 9.91%. The total
voting age population is 90.94% White, 2.42% |
11 | | Black,
0.73% Asian, and 2.85% Hispanic. The total minority
|
12 | | voting age population is 9.06%. Incumbent Senator Chapin Rose |
13 | | (R) currently resides in the
proposed district. |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 52 |
15 | | Proposed Legislative District 52 is located in central
|
16 | | Champaign County and Vermilion County. The Current Legislative
|
17 | | District 52 saw a population decrease of 5,428 which is
5,121 |
18 | | under the ideal population target. To account for these
|
19 | | population shifts, Legislative District 52 has been
|
20 | | reconfigured. |
21 | | The district runs from the western outskirts of Champaign |
22 | | east to the Illinois-Indiana border. The district is entirely
|
23 | | contained within the counties of Champaign and Vermilion. From |
24 | | Rantoul to Danville, the district runs along rural roads on |
25 | | the northern edge and generally along
I-74 on the southern |
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1 | | edge. The rural portions of the district
are centrally located |
2 | | and typically use the same grain
elevators along I-74 when it |
3 | | is grain and soy harvesting
season. |
4 | | The eastern edge of the district is marked by the
Illinois |
5 | | and Indiana border.
The district contains the
entirety of the |
6 | | City of Danville. The district goes down south
of Danville to |
7 | | contain the like-minded towns of Tilton and
Westville, where |
8 | | residents commonly commute to Danville for
work. |
9 | | The proposed district now includes all of the City of
|
10 | | Champaign. The two cities of Danville and Rantoul are related
|
11 | | socioeconomically. Residents of both cities routinely travel
|
12 | | along I-74 and I-57 respectively to reach Urbana-Champaign and
|
13 | | commonly use these highways to reach regional airports in
|
14 | | Champaign and Vermilion Counties. The major population
|
15 | | townships of the district, including Rantoul Township,
|
16 | | Champaign City Township, Cunningham Township, and Danville
|
17 | | Township, have a similar socioeconomic status. Rantoul High
|
18 | | School is commonly a rival in sporting events against high
|
19 | | schools in the City of Champaign. I-57 connects
|
20 | | Champaign-Urbana to Rantoul. |
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 52 keeps similar economic
|
22 | | industries together, maintaining University of Illinois,
|
23 | | Danville Area Community College, Parkland Community College in
|
24 | | one district along with numerous healthcare employers Illiana
|
25 | | Healthcare System, Carle, Presence Health, and Christie
|
26 | | Clinic. |
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1 | | The proposed Legislative District is home to retail
and |
2 | | manufacturing employers such as Rantoul Foods, Kraft Foods
and |
3 | | several others. The Champaign News-Gazette serves the
|
4 | | Champaign-Urbana and Danville communities, as does a Champaign
|
5 | | CBS affiliate, WCIA. The Redistricting Subcommittee on East
|
6 | | Central and Southeastern Illinois received testimony
|
7 | | requesting the immigrant communities of Champaign County stay
|
8 | | together. The entirety of the cities of Champaign and Urbana
|
9 | | are included in the proposed district to accomplish the
|
10 | | request of the previously mentioned testimony. |
11 | | Due to the population growth in the areas of Champaign and
|
12 | | Urbana, the district was streamlined in order to preserve the
|
13 | | historical relationship between Champaign, Urbana, Danville,
|
14 | | and Rantoul. The similar urban centers are kept together in
|
15 | | this district. The boundaries of the district generally follow
|
16 | | the same principles and district shape of the previous 52nd
|
17 | | district. |
18 | | Proposed Legislative District 52 has a total population of |
19 | | 217,165 which is 4 or 0.00% over the ideal population. The |
20 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 52 has a |
21 | | total population
that is 57.31% White, 17.47% Black, 11.29% |
22 | | Asian, and 8.44%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
23 | | 42.69%. The total
voting age population is 60.68% White, 15.2% |
24 | | Black,
12.47% Asian, and 7.44% Hispanic. The total minority
|
25 | | voting age population is 39.32%. Incumbent Senator
Scott |
26 | | Bennett (D) resides within the proposed district. |
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 53 |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 53 is located in east
|
3 | | central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 53 saw a
|
4 | | decrease of 5,428 in population which is 4,454 under the ideal
|
5 | | population target. To account for these population losses and |
6 | | population losses in other downstate districts,
Legislative |
7 | | District 53 has been reconfigured. |
8 | | The proposed legislative district 53 most eastern boundary |
9 | | runs south down Arispie, Wheatland, Whitefield, and Steuben's |
10 | | most western township boundary. The proposed district then |
11 | | follows the north side of Chillicothe to the Illinois River, |
12 | | and generally continues south to IL-24. |
13 | | The proposed district then generally continues east down |
14 | | IL-24 to I-39 and then continues south to I-55 and then |
15 | | generally continues north up I-55 to McLean County. The |
16 | | proposed district then continues along the McLean and |
17 | | Livingston County border to the McLean and Ford County border |
18 | | and travels south to East 300 North Road. |
19 | | The proposed legislative district then generally continues |
20 | | east down East 200N Road to Stockholm Road. The proposed |
21 | | district then travels north on Stockholm Road to the Iroquois |
22 | | County line. |
23 | | The proposed district then continues along the Iroquois |
24 | | County line to the Illinois and Indiana border, then travels |
25 | | north along the Illinois and Indiana border to the Iroquois |
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1 | | and Kankakee County border and then travels west along the |
2 | | Iroquois and Kankakee County border. |
3 | | The proposed district then generally follows the Grundy |
4 | | and Will County border north to IL Route 6. The proposed |
5 | | district then generally follows Mazon River west until it |
6 | | reaches its western boundary. |
7 | | The proposed Legislative District includes all of
Iroquois |
8 | | and Putnam Counties, the majority of Livingston, Ford, Grundy, |
9 | | and Marshall Counties and parts of Champaign, McLean,
|
10 | | Woodford, LaSalle, Peoria, and Bureau Counties.
|
11 | | The following towns and cities are in the district in its
|
12 | | entirety: Gibson City, Pontiac, Dwight, Streator, Eureka,
|
13 | | Towanda, Paxton, El Paso and Lexington and parts
of |
14 | | Washington, Bloomington and Normal.
|
15 | | The district contains the 2016 top five corn and soy
|
16 | | producing counties in the State. |
17 | | Proposed Legislative District
53 is home to the Illinois |
18 | | State University Farm, which is
located in Lexington. Major |
19 | | employers in Proposed Legislative
District 53 include Pontiac |
20 | | Correctional Center, Gibson Area Hospital, Heartland Health |
21 | | Care Center, and
Iroquois Memorial Hospital. Ford County is |
22 | | the youngest county in the State of Illinois, formerly swamp
|
23 | | land that was transformed into prosperous farmland similar to
|
24 | | the land in Livingston and Iroquois Counties. Proposed
|
25 | | Legislative District 53 links the old mining towns of
|
26 | | Streator, Pontiac, and Paxton.
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1 | | Proposed Legislative District 53 includes transportation
|
2 | | infrastructure along with the various highways and roadways
|
3 | | throughout the district, including the Central Illinois
|
4 | | Regional Airport, that serves as a transportation hub for the
|
5 | | region along with the Pontiac and Dwight Amtrak Stations.
|
6 | | Interstates that run through Proposed Legislative District
53 |
7 | | include I-39, which runs north and south near the western
|
8 | | border of Proposed Legislative District 53, together with I-55
|
9 | | and I-57, which run southwest and northeast through the
|
10 | | district. U.S. Route 24 runs through the entirety of the
|
11 | | district going east and west. |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 53 has a total population of |
13 | | 217,052 which is 109 or 0.05% under the ideal population. The |
14 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 53 has a |
15 | | total population
that is 87.92% White, 1.53% Black, 1.13% |
16 | | Asian, and 5.56%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
17 | | 12.08%. The total
voting age population is 89.94% White, 1.52% |
18 | | Black,
1.07% Asian, and 4.39% Hispanic. The total minority
|
19 | | voting age population is 10.06%.
Incumbent Senator
Jason |
20 | | Barickman (R) resides in the proposed district. |
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 54 |
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 54 is located in central
|
23 | | Illinois. The Current Legislative District 54 saw a decrease
|
24 | | of 599 in population which is 292 under the ideal
population |
25 | | target. To account for these population losses in downstate |
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1 | | districts,
Legislative District 54 has been reconfigured. |
2 | | The northern
border follows county lines in Sangamon and |
3 | | Menard Counties in the west and the Moultrie County line and |
4 | | precinct lines in Macon County in the west. The western border |
5 | | follows township in Macoupin County, and western county lines |
6 | | of Sangamon
and Menard Counties. |
7 | | The southern border runs along
precinct township and |
8 | | precinct lines in Effingham, Madison, Montgomery and
Fayette |
9 | | counties in addition to county lines in Shelby and Macoupin
|
10 | | Counties. The proposed Legislative District contains the
|
11 | | entirety of Menard and Shelby Counties and portions of
|
12 | | Montgomery, Macoupin, Sangamon, Macon, Christian, Moultrie, |
13 | | Effingham,
Fayette, and Madison Counties. |
14 | | The district relies primarily on agriculture, energy,
|
15 | | manufacturing, and healthcare for economic sustenance. It has
|
16 | | also historically contained a large number of State employees
|
17 | | who commute to Springfield from rural Macoupin, Montgomery, |
18 | | Menard,
and Christian Counties. The district is
also served by |
19 | | Interstates 70 and 57 in the southeastern portion, Interstate |
20 | | 55 in the east and
Illinois Route 51 in the central portion of |
21 | | the proposed district.
|
22 | | Proposed Legislative District 54 has a total population of |
23 | | 217,148 which is 13 or 0.01% under the ideal population. The |
24 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 54 has a |
25 | | total population
that is 92.88% White, 1.06% Black, 0.53% |
26 | | Asian, and 1.95%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
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1 | | 7.12%. The total
voting age population is 93.70% White, 1.12% |
2 | | Black,
0.54% Asian, and 1.68% Hispanic. The total minority
|
3 | | voting age population is 6.3%. Incumbent Senator Steve McClure |
4 | | (R) resides within the proposed district. |
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 55 |
6 | | Proposed Legislative District 55 is located in south
|
7 | | central Illinois. The Current Legislative District 55 saw a
|
8 | | decrease of 14,888 in population which is 14,581 under the |
9 | | ideal
population target. Whereas Current Legislative District |
10 | | 54, which has a similar design to Proposed Legislative |
11 | | District 55, saw a population loss of 599. To account for
|
12 | | population losses in most downstate districts, Proposed |
13 | | Legislative District 55 was crafted with areas of Current |
14 | | Legislative Districts 54 and 55 which have not ceded |
15 | | population to bolster populations in surrounding districts.
|
16 | | Proposed Legislative District 55 is reconfigured to move |
17 | | further west to east starting in the far suburbs of the Metro |
18 | | East to the eastern border of Richland County. Proposed |
19 | | Legislative District 55 was expanded to
like populations in |
20 | | south-central Illinois to meet the
population goal.
|
21 | | The northern border of the district follows the northern |
22 | | county lines of Madison, Bond, Fayette, and Richland Counties |
23 | | and township lines in Effingham County. The southern district
|
24 | | line follows township and precinct lines in St. Clair, |
25 | | Washington and Marion Counties,
and county lines in Clay and |
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1 | | Richland Counties. The proposed district is located in 12
|
2 | | south-central Illinois counties, including portions of
|
3 | | Madison, St. Clair, Washington, Marion, Effingham, and |
4 | | Montgomery Counties,
and the entirety of Bond, Clinton, |
5 | | Fayette, Clay, and Richland Counties. The municipalities of
|
6 | | Greenville, Vandalia, Carlyle, Centralia, Salem, and Olney, |
7 | | are included in the proposed
district.
|
8 | | The district is traversable by various major
roads. |
9 | | Interstate 70 runs east to west through the majority of
the |
10 | | district while Interstate 57 travels through the
north-south |
11 | | center of the district. U.S. Route 50 traverses
east to west |
12 | | through the entire district.
|
13 | | Agriculture is an important industry in a
region filled |
14 | | with farms and agriculture service providers.
The district |
15 | | includes Vandalia and Centralia State
Correctional Facilities |
16 | | and the Federal Correctional
Institution at Greenville are |
17 | | major employers in the region.
The proposed district includes |
18 | | a number of institutions of
higher education including |
19 | | Kaskaskia, Olney Central, and
Wabash Valley Community |
20 | | Colleges, as well as Greenville
University.
|
21 | | Proposed Legislative District 55 has a total population of |
22 | | 217,112 which is 49 or 0.02% under the ideal population. The |
23 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 55 has a |
24 | | total population
that is 89.93% White, 2.66% Black, 0.66% |
25 | | Asian, and 2.64%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
26 | | 10.07%. The total
voting age population is 90.72% White, 2.83% |
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1 | | Black,
0.7% Asian, and 2.33% Hispanic. The total minority
|
2 | | voting age population is 9.28%. Senators residing in the |
3 | | proposed district include Senators
Jason Plummer (R) and |
4 | | Darren Bailey (R). The pairing of these
incumbents stems |
5 | | mainly from the need to expand districts in
southern and east |
6 | | central Illinois. Furthermore, Senator
Bailey has announced |
7 | | his intention to run for Governor, thus
this pairing will most |
8 | | likely not result in a primary battle
between two incumbents.
|
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 56 |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 56 is located in the Metro
|
11 | | East in Madison County. The Current Legislative District 56
|
12 | | saw an increase in population of 63 which is 370 over the
ideal |
13 | | population target. With population losses in surrounding |
14 | | districts, Legislative District 56 contracts in some areas to |
15 | | move needed population to other districts. |
16 | | The
western board of the proposed district runs along the
|
17 | | Mississippi River and Illinois' border with Missouri. The
|
18 | | western border runs from East Street north to Winter Lane. The
|
19 | | northern boundary of the proposed legislative district is
|
20 | | formed mainly along precinct boundaries. The Eastern boundary
|
21 | | runs along mainly precinct lines from North State Route 157
|
22 | | south into St. Clair County with Piper Hills Drive being the
|
23 | | most southern part of the district. The southern boundary of
|
24 | | the proposed district runs mainly along streets.
|
25 | | Municipalities like Hartford, Roxana, South Roxana, Alton,
and |
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1 | | Wood River are all entirely in the proposed legislative
|
2 | | district. Communities with roots that trace back to the
|
3 | | Phillips 66 Refinery, now the Wood River Refinery, providing
|
4 | | jobs and services to the surrounding municipalities. The
|
5 | | history of the Phillips 66 Refinery is so ingrained in this
|
6 | | community that their high school mascot is the Shells. The
|
7 | | proposed Legislative District adds Granite City, home to
|
8 | | several large steel companies such as US Steel, Heidtman
|
9 | | Steel, and America Steel.
|
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 56 links higher education
|
11 | | institutions. Southern Illinois University Edwardsville,
|
12 | | Southern Illinois School of Dental Medicine, and Lewis & Clark
|
13 | | Community College are all in the same Legislative District. |
14 | | These
higher education facilities drive the region's economy |
15 | | and
provide numerous educational opportunities to people |
16 | | across
the area.
|
17 | | The proposed Legislative District encompasses many
|
18 | | healthcare partners within the district, such as Southwestern
|
19 | | Illinois Health Facilities Inc., Alton Memorial Hospital,
and |
20 | | Gateway Regional Medical Center, to serve the region.
|
21 | | Interstates 270 and 55/70 along with the Clark Bridge in
|
22 | | Alton provide the residents of Proposed Legislative District
|
23 | | 56 easy access to downtown St. Louis and the city's western
|
24 | | suburbs.
|
25 | | Proposed Legislative District 56 has a total population of |
26 | | 217,244 which is 83 or 0.04% under the ideal population. The |
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1 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 56 has a |
2 | | total population
that is 75.01% White, 12.47% Black, 1.38% |
3 | | Asian, and 5.44%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
4 | | 24.99%. The total
voting age population is 77.78% White, |
5 | | 11.72% Black,
1.41% Asian, and 4.52% Hispanic. The total |
6 | | minority
voting age population is 22.22%.
|
7 | | Incumbent
Senator Rachelle Aud Crowe (D) resides within |
8 | | the proposed
district.
|
9 | | Proposed Legislative District 57 |
10 | | Proposed Legislative District 57 is located in the Metro
|
11 | | East, mainly in St. Clair County. The Current Legislative
|
12 | | District 57 saw a population decrease of 18,252 which is
|
13 | | 17,945 under the ideal population target. To account for these
|
14 | | population losses in the District and in most downstate |
15 | | districts, Legislative District 57 has been
reconfigured to |
16 | | move further south and east than previous years.
|
17 | | The western boundary to the proposed district is
the |
18 | | Mississippi River and the Illinois and Missouri border.
The |
19 | | western border goes from East Street south to the southern
|
20 | | border of St. Clair County. The southern boundary of the
|
21 | | proposed district runs along county, township, and precinct
|
22 | | lines spanning from the Mississippi River east to the eastern
|
23 | | border of Fayetteville Township. The eastern boundary of the
|
24 | | proposed 57th Legislative District runs from the southern
|
25 | | border of Fayetteville Precinct 1 north along the eastern |
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1 | | borders of Engelmann and Mascoutah Townships to precinct lines |
2 | | in Lebanon. The northern boundary is formed
mainly along |
3 | | precinct and county lines. |
4 | | To accommodate for population loss in the Metro East of
|
5 | | about 10,000 people, the Proposed Legislative District 57 had
|
6 | | to be expanded outward allowing the proposed district to keep
|
7 | | previously divided municipalities whole. The proposed 57th
|
8 | | Legislative District also expands south to include all of
|
9 | | Cahokia, Dupo, and Sauget Village which are historically
|
10 | | underrepresented Black communities of similar social and
|
11 | | economic concerns with the residents of East St. Louis,
|
12 | | Madison, and Venice which are now all located in the proposed
|
13 | | district. This also allowed the proposed district to encompass
|
14 | | East Carondelet and Dupo Village, keeping similar communities
|
15 | | together.
|
16 | | The proposed district is anchored on the east side of the
|
17 | | district by Scott Air Force Base, a major employer in the
|
18 | | region. Keeping the Air Force Base and the surrounding
|
19 | | communities in one district allows these communities with a
|
20 | | shared economic goal to be included in a singular district.
|
21 | | The proposed district remains the home to the MidAmerica St.
|
22 | | Louis Airport, which employs 119 full-time employees and is |
23 | | growing the local economy and expanding housing options to the
|
24 | | area. |
25 | | Interstates 64, 55, and 255 run through the proposed
|
26 | | district providing access to St. Louis and its suburbs.
|
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1 | | Continued investments into infrastructure expansion projects
|
2 | | will unite the region with the greater St. Louis, Missouri
|
3 | | metropolitan area.
|
4 | | Proposed Legislative District 57 has a total population of |
5 | | 216,858 which is 303 or 0.14% under the ideal population. The |
6 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 57 has a |
7 | | total population
55.85% White, 33.07% Black, 1.23% Asian, and |
8 | | 4.29% Hispanic.
The total minority population is 44.15%. The |
9 | | total
voting age population is 59.32% White, 31.44% Black, |
10 | | 1.34%
Asian, and 3.53% Hispanic. The total minority voting
age |
11 | | population is 40.68%. Incumbent Senator
Christopher Belt (D) |
12 | | resides in the proposed legislative
district.
|
13 | | Proposed Legislative District 58 |
14 | | Proposed Legislative District 58 is located in southern
|
15 | | Illinois. The Current Legislative District 58 saw a decrease
|
16 | | of 11,660 in population which is 11,353 under the ideal
|
17 | | population target. To account for these
population losses in |
18 | | the District and in most downstate districts, Legislative |
19 | | District 58 has been
reconfigured to move further north and |
20 | | east than previous years.
The western
border of the proposed |
21 | | district follows the Mississippi River
from the northern |
22 | | border of Monroe County to the middle of
Jackson County and the |
23 | | eastern border runs along the border of
the Illinois-Indiana |
24 | | state line (Wabash River) in White and Wabash Counties. The |
25 | | northern border
generally follows county lines with the |
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1 | | exception of St. Clair, Washington, and Marion Counties, in |
2 | | which it runs along precinct and
township lines. To the south, |
3 | | the district is bordered almost
exclusively on township or |
4 | | precinct lines in Jackson, Franklin, Hamilton, and White |
5 | | Counties. The proposed
Legislative District is located in |
6 | | portions of St. Clair,
Jackson, Monroe, Franklin, Marion, |
7 | | White, and Hamilton Counties and
the entirety of Randolph, |
8 | | Washington, Perry, Wayne, Jefferson, Edwards, and Wabash
|
9 | | Counties. The district is populated by numerous small
towns |
10 | | including Columbia, Waterloo, Red Bud, Sparta, Chester,
|
11 | | Murphysboro, DuQuoin, Pinckneyville, Nashville, Benton,
|
12 | | McLeansboro, Fairfield, Carmi, and Mt. Carmel. |
13 | | During a hearing of the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee
|
14 | | on Southern Illinois, a representative of the League of Women
|
15 | | Voters stated that there were two main issues with the
current |
16 | | configuration of the 58th Legislative District. First,
the |
17 | | 58th District is almost "V-shaped". The second main issue
is |
18 | | that the City of Carbondale is currently split between the
|
19 | | 58th and 59th Legislative Districts. In order to achieve near
|
20 | | ideal population and address concerns regarding the current
|
21 | | district, the existing district was reconfigured east to west
|
22 | | to give the district a more streamlined design while
|
23 | | compensating for significant population loss in the region. In
|
24 | | an effort to address these concerns, the population of the
|
25 | | City of Carbondale was placed entirely in the 59th District.
|
26 | | The district is traversable by various major roads.
Interstate |
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1 | | 64 runs east to west through the majority of the
district. |
2 | | Other major roadways that connect the district
include U.S. |
3 | | Route 51 and State Routes 154, 127, 15, 13, and 4. The
proposed |
4 | | district seeks to create a rural district where urban
|
5 | | influences are minimized as much as possible in order to
|
6 | | provide a clear voice for rural communities with similar
|
7 | | values in the region. Agriculture is an important industry
|
8 | | throughout the district, as many of the towns are small
|
9 | | farming communities and a majority of the farms are
|
10 | | multi-generational. The district is home of the Du Quoin State
|
11 | | Fair which brings visitors from throughout the region. The
|
12 | | district also brings together many former or current
|
13 | | manufacturing communities, as many of the villages throughout
|
14 | | are former industrial communities or are communities built
|
15 | | around presently operating manufacturing plants. Continental
|
16 | | Tire has a large plant in Mt. Vernon where many people from
|
17 | | across the district are employed. Pepsi MidAmerica also
|
18 | | employs a great deal of residents at its Chester and Mt. Vernon
|
19 | | locations.
|
20 | | Home value and average income are generally comparable
|
21 | | throughout the proposed district as a result of the shared
|
22 | | industries and similar social experiences. Many of the high
|
23 | | schools are longstanding sports rivals and many of the
|
24 | | residents work at the same plants and coal mines. The proposed
|
25 | | district attempts to keep counties as whole as possible and
|
26 | | pair together communities that share values and experiences
|
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1 | | throughout the region. |
2 | | Proposed Legislative District 58 has a total population of |
3 | | 217,166 which is 5 or 0.00% over the ideal population. The |
4 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 48 has a |
5 | | total population
that is 89.15% White, 3.99% Black, 0.59% |
6 | | Asian, and 2.31%
Hispanic. The total minority population is |
7 | | 10.85%. The total
voting age population is 90.09% White, 4.11% |
8 | | Black,
0.62% Asian, and 1.94% Hispanic. The total minority
|
9 | | voting age population is 9.91%. Incumbent Senator Terri
Bryant |
10 | | (R) resides in the proposed district.
|
11 | | Proposed Legislative District 59 |
12 | | Proposed Legislative District 59 is located in southern
|
13 | | Illinois. The Current Legislative District 59 saw a decrease
|
14 | | of 12,126 in population which is 11,819 under the ideal
|
15 | | population target. To account for these
population losses in |
16 | | the District and in most other downstate districts, |
17 | | Legislative District 59 has been
reconfigured to move further |
18 | | north.
|
19 | | The western,
eastern, and southern borders of the district |
20 | | run along the
Illinois state line formed by the Mississippi |
21 | | and Ohio Rivers.
The northern boundary follows township lines |
22 | | in Jackson,
Franklin, and Hamilton Counties, and township and |
23 | | precinct lines in White County.
|
24 | | The proposed Legislative District is located in portions |
25 | | of
the state's southern counties including: Jackson, Union |
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1 | | (entire
county), Alexander (entire county), Pulaski (entire |
2 | | county),
Franklin, Williamson (entire county), Johnson (entire |
3 | | county),
Massac (entire county), Hamilton, Saline (entire |
4 | | county), Pope
(entire county), Gallatin (entire county), |
5 | | Hardin (entire
county), and White.
In order to achieve near |
6 | | ideal population, the proposed
district is expanded |
7 | | geographically and reconfigured to
compensate for regional |
8 | | population loss as well as pairing
communities with shared |
9 | | interests in the southernmost counties
in Illinois. The |
10 | | proposed district pairs together more urban
areas in generally |
11 | | rural southern Illinois. As requested in
testimony at a |
12 | | regional Senate Redistricting Committee
hearing, the entirety |
13 | | of Carbondale is now represented in one
district whereas it |
14 | | had previously been separated. Other
relative population hubs |
15 | | such as Metropolis, Marion, and
Harrisburg are included as |
16 | | well in the proposed district,
along with the surrounding |
17 | | satellite municipalities.
Proposed Legislative District 59's |
18 | | economy is largely
supported by agriculture, tourism, coal |
19 | | mining and light
manufacturing. Transportation is extremely |
20 | | important to the
district's economy. Major roadways such as |
21 | | Interstates 24 and
57, U.S. Routes 45 and 51, and State Routes |
22 | | 13, 127, and 145 tie
the district together and provide |
23 | | important economic
assistance to the region. Due to its |
24 | | strategic location, river
transportation has long played a |
25 | | role in the area. The State of
Illinois has committed $40 |
26 | | million in capital project funding
to build a new inland port |
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1 | | in Cairo in hopes of reviving a once
thriving river town. |
2 | | Higher education is an important economic
driver across the |
3 | | district, as it is home to John A. Logan,
Shawnee Community, |
4 | | and Southeastern Illinois Colleges, as well
as Southern |
5 | | Illinois University at Carbondale.
|
6 | | The tourism industry is also important to the district as
|
7 | | the Shawnee Wine Trail stretches throughout the majority of
|
8 | | the region. It is home to Metropolis, the hometown of
|
9 | | Superman, which boasts an annual Superman Festival and a 15 |
10 | | foot
tall statue of the Man of Steel which brings thousands of
|
11 | | tourists to the area. The proposed district includes a
|
12 | | riverboat casino in Metropolis and a proposed new casino
|
13 | | resort at Walker's Bluff Williamson County. The district is an
|
14 | | outdoor paradise containing the Shawnee National Forest,
|
15 | | Garden of the Gods, numerous State parks, and Cave-in-Rock. |
16 | | The
heavily traveled River to River Trail, a 151.8 mile
|
17 | | point-to-point trail, winds through the heart of the proposed
|
18 | | district starting at Elizabethtown on the Ohio River and
|
19 | | ending at Devil's Backbone on the Mississippi River. The coal
|
20 | | industry has been historically important to the district with
|
21 | | coal mines still operating throughout the district today.
The |
22 | | district brings together significant African American
|
23 | | communities in Alexander and Pulaski Counties that have been
|
24 | | historically underrepresented in an effort to maximize their
|
25 | | voice in the region. It also seeks to ensure that relatively
|
26 | | urban populations in the southernmost stretch of the State are
|
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1 | | represented. Many of the communities in the proposed district
|
2 | | share similar socioeconomic status, and property and home
|
3 | | value is comparable throughout, creating a district with
|
4 | | generally shared social and economic values and goals.
|
5 | | Proposed Legislative District 59 has a total population of |
6 | | 217,036 which is 125 or 0.06% under the ideal population. The |
7 | | demographic makeup of Proposed Legislative District 59 has a |
8 | | total population that
is 83.11% White, 7.11% Black, 1.45% |
9 | | Asian, and 3.24% Hispanic.
The total minority population is |
10 | | 16.89%. The total
voting age population is 84.47% White, 6.93% |
11 | | Black, 1.56%
Asian, and 2.83% Hispanic. The total minority |
12 | | voting
age population is 15.53%. Incumbent Senator Dale Fowler
|
13 | | (R) resides in the proposed district.
|