Reimagine Public Safety Act to drive violence intervention funds to
state’s most dangerous areas
Send a link to a friend
[December 11, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A state program aiming to
take a “comprehensive approach to ending Illinois' firearm violence
epidemic” will be expanded under a law signed Friday by Gov. JB Pritzker.
The Reimagine Public Safety Act became law in June, but the expansion
signed Friday clarifies guidelines in the original bill and gives the
Illinois Department of Human Services and a newly created Office of
Firearm Violence Prevention greater grant making flexibility.
The crux of the RPSA is that it creates the Office of Firearm Violence
Prevention to coordinate violence prevention efforts and give grants to
on-the-ground community organizations that know how and where
intervention is needed in the state’s most violent communities.
Heading that office is Chris Patterson, who was appointed by Pritzker as
assistant secretary for violence prevention at IDHS.
“We will work hand-in-hand, individually and collectively to address the
violence on our streets and invest in addressing the underlying root
causes that cause so much despair: Too much addiction, too little mental
health, and too few opportunities,” Patterson said Friday at a Chicago
news conference.
The contracted organizations are to focus on programs such as youth
intervention services, violence interruption and trauma treatment.
Pritzker said applications are now open for groups that can help train
community organizations that will deliver evidence-based violence
interruption and prevention services.
A notice of funding opportunity is available at https://www.dhs.state.il.us/page.aspx?item=138882.
This year’s budget includes $50 million for programs defined in the act,
and the governor said he’ll work with the General Assembly to include
another $100 million in state funding in the budget for each of the next
two years.
“Today, the legislation that I'm signing will advance our commitment to
make that unprecedented investment in public safety, utilize data to
inform where help is most needed, address both immediate needs and
systemic change to reduce gun violence, and most importantly, reach even
more communities that have historically been left out and left behind,”
Pritzker said at the news conference.
In November, Pritzker signed an executive order classifying gun violence
as a public health crisis and expediting implementation of the Reimagine
Public Safety Act.
The bill was backed in the House and Senate by a pair of Chicago
Democrats, Rep. Justin Slaughter and Sen. Robert Peters. Both have been
active in some of the major criminal justice overhauls in recent years,
including a bill that eliminates cash bail in Illinois beginning in
2023.
“Leaders and members in our communities have been yelling for help for
years, and at one point they were met with the deafening silence of a
budget impasse and institutions and services closed,” Peters said. “For
years, our approach to these struggles was built off of a system that I
would call a form of big government gone bad called mass incarceration.”
The RPSA requires that the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention
identify the 10 most violent Chicago neighborhoods with the first
consideration being the number of shootings per capita. Then it is
required to identify another seven of the most violent communities,
based on the number of victims.
The language in the follow-up bill signed Friday also allows the office
to identify another five Chicago communities for grants as well.
For neighborhoods outside of Chicago that have a population of more than
35,000, the office is tasked with identifying 10 of the most violent
communities based on the same parameters. After those are identified,
the office can direct grants to up to five more neighborhoods.
[to top of second column]
|
Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, speaks at a news
conference Friday about the Reimagine Public Safety Act which he
sponsored in the General Assembly. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
The office is tasked with creating a formula for grant distribution and
working with advisory councils in the identified communities. The bill
states that “when possible” grant amounts should be of at least $300,000
per youth development organization.
Slaughter said the problems facing Chicago and other communities in
Illinois are similar to those nationwide.
“This all begins with acknowledging that, unfortunately, systemic racism
does exist and understanding that our criminal justice system adversely
and disproportionately impacts underserved communities and people of
color,” he said.
Slaughter said the SAFE-T Act, which is the criminal justice reform bill
passed in January’s lame duck session, contained two prongs of a
three-pronged approach to criminal justice reforms backed by the
Illinois Legislative Black Caucus – police and sentencing reforms.
The Reimagine Public Safety Act represents the third prong, which is
violence and crime prevention.
“The Reimagine Public Safety Act signifies a different and new approach,
one that is not necessarily soft or hard on crime, but rather a smart on
crime,” he said.
The bill signed Friday, House Bill 2791, passed the Senate 52-0 and the
House 71-41.
Republicans tried, to no avail, to push a series of sentence
enhancements and other strict-on-crime criminal justice measures that
ultimately failed to receive a hearing in either chamber.
That GOP-backed package included a bill that would appropriate $100
million to the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board to
fund grants to local departments for gang violence, carjacking and motor
vehicle theft prevention, as well as officer staffing.
The GOP, led by Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, also pushed for measures
eliminating good time sentence reductions for someone who brought a
weapon to a penal institution or attacked a law officer.
Another Republican-backed bill would require a minimum 10-year sentence
for aggravated discharge of a firearm, use of a stolen or illegally
acquired firearm in an offense, unlawful possession of a weapon by a
felon, armed habitual criminal offenses, or aggravated hijacking or
carjacking. A second such offense would come with a life sentence.
Pritzker was asked about GOP opposition in the House on Friday, and he
said Republicans “have only been calling for more time in prison for
people.”
“They've only been calling for cracking down and being, you know, just
slogans around law and order,” he said. “What we do, what we Democrats
have done, is actually invest in fighting crime and actually investing
in our communities, investing in the community organizations that make a
difference on the ground.”
In other remarks at the news conference, Pritzker pointed to his efforts
to double State Police patrols on Chicago’s expressways, to increase
funding for the State Police to add more troopers, and to build a new
State Police crime lab. He also pointed to a bill reforming the state’s
Firearm Owners Identification Act.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
|