Illinois Criminal Justice
Information Authority (ICJIA) Announces $31.5 Million in Grant
Opportunities to Support the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew (R3)
Program
Lincoln/Logan County included in
eligibility map
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[May 19, 2020]
The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (ICJIA) today
announced two funding opportunities to support Restore, Reinvest,
and Renew (R3) programming in historically underserved communities
across Illinois. Grants are available for community assessment and
planning initiatives and service delivery.
Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposed fiscal year 2021 budget includes a $35
million R3 appropriation from the General Revenue Fund to ICJIA for
grants, awards, and administrative costs. A total of $31.5 million
is available for grants, including approximately $28.3 million to
support service delivery and $3.1 million for assessment and
planning.
The Cannabis Regulation and Trust Act legalized adult-use cannabis
in Illinois on January 1, 2020. In addition to limiting enforcement
and prosecution of cannabis-related offenses and providing a source
of state revenue, the Act established the R3 program. R3 provides
25% of tax cannabis revenues in grants to support communities
impacted by economic disinvestment, violence, and the severe and
multilayered harm caused by the war on drugs.
“The R3 program is a critical step towards repairing the harms
caused by the failed war on drugs and decades of economic
disinvestment,” said Lieutenant Governor and R3 Board Chair Juliana
Stratton. “Equity is one of the administration’s core values, and we
are ensuring that state funding reaches organizations doing critical
work in neighborhoods most impacted by the war on drugs.”
Funded programs will offer evidence-based, promising, or innovative
practices within at least one of five R3 Program Priority Areas:
civil legal aid; economic development; re-entry from the criminal
justice system; violence prevention; and youth development.
“In developing these funding opportunities, the focus has been on
equity in opportunity at the community level,” said Acting ICJIA
Director Jason Stamps. “This program will start to close those gaps
in areas most hard hit by gun violence, unemployment, and criminal
justice system overuse. To do so, we are looking to R3 communities
for proposals of programs and strategies they identify to best
address their needs and challenges.”
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The negative consequences of the failed war on drugs have been felt far more
severely by poor and disadvantaged communities throughout the state—mostly
communities of color. The R3 program seeks to repair this disparity by ensuring
that the programs funded are equitable and provide the needed services and
funding in areas that have suffered the most harm.
Areas eligible for funding were identified using community-level data on gun
injury, child poverty, unemployment, and state prison commitments and returns,
combined with disproportionately impacted areas previously identified by the
Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (View
map of eligible areas).
An R3 Working Group of criminal justice practitioners and policy experts
provided guidance to ensure an equitable application and funding process. "The
time to act is now. The funding is desperately needed for our communities to
continue our collective healing," said Sharone Mitchell, Director of the
Illinois Justice Project and member of the working group.
Organizations that serve residents of—or are based in—designated eligible R3
zones will be able to apply. Eligible organizations include nonprofit
organizations, local units of government, tax-exempt faith-based organizations,
businesses, and other community organizations. Application materials with
instructions on how to apply are available here:
https://r3.illinois.gov/. The deadline
for all applications is Monday, July 20, 2020.
To ease the application process and increase access to available grant funding,
ICJIA offers technical assistance to organizations via
online workshops.
ICJIA is dedicated to improving the administration of criminal justice through
work in the areas of grants administration, research and analysis, policy and
planning, and information systems and technology. Visit
www.icjia.state.il.us.
[Illinois Office of Communication and
Information] |