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		Pritzker signs economic equity package
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		[March 24, 2021] 
		By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed a 
		package of four bills Tuesday that made up the “economic access, equity 
		and opportunity” pillar of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus. 
 Speaking at a bill-signing ceremony at the Union Baptist Church in 
		Springfield, Pritzker said the legislative package would go a long way 
		toward addressing the harms caused by “systemic racism” that has 
		prevented people of color from gaining full access to jobs, housing, 
		state contracting and credit.
 
 “Together these four bills mark significant progress in our efforts to 
		close the racial gaps and eliminate barriers that have for too long 
		unfairly held Black and brown Illinoisans back,” he said. “While there 
		is more work to do, we are a better state for what's in this legislation 
		today.”
 
 Pritzker was joined at the news conference by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, 
		several members of the Black Caucus and other individuals who were 
		instrumental in helping put the ILBC agenda together.
 
		
		 
		
 The four bills all passed during the General Assembly’s lame duck 
		session in January. Among them was Senate Bill 1480, which restricts the 
		ability of employers to use a person’s criminal history in making hiring 
		decisions.
 
 “Because of this new law, never again, should an employer refuse to hire 
		someone based on a criminal conviction if that conviction has nothing to 
		do with that type of job being sought,” Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, 
		the lead sponsor of the bill in the House, said during the ceremony.
 
 Also included in the package was Senate Bill 1608, which raises the goal 
		for state contracting with minority-owned businesses to 30 percent, 
		instead of 20 percent. It also establishes a new Commission on Equity 
		and Inclusion within the Department of Central Management Services, to 
		monitor and make recommendations for enforcing diversity requirements in 
		state contracting.
 
 Charles Harrell, president and CEO of the Information Technology 
		Architect Corp., a Black-owned IT company based in Chicago, said 
		stronger enforcement of those rules has been lacking for years.
 
 “While the state agencies has frequently touted the number of vendors it 
		has awarded certification, it has struggled to meet its obligation to 
		create a fair atmosphere for certified vendors to fairly participate 
		after a contract is awarded,” he said.
 
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			Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday is joined by members of 
			the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus and other dignitaries in 
			signing a package of bills aimed at addressing racial economic 
			inequities. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock) 
            
			 
            The new law also creates the Illinois Community Reinvestment Act, 
			which sets new standards for the Illinois Department of Financial 
			and Professional Regulation to examine low- and moderate-income 
			lending by state-chartered banks, credit unions and non-bank 
			mortgage lenders.
 Another bill that was part of the package was Senate Bill 1792, 
			which, among other things, caps the effective interest rate lenders 
			can charge on pay day loans and other small-dollar consumer loans at 
			36 percent, the same limit that applies under federal law to loans 
			made to active duty service members.
 
 “Over the years, the Black community and low-income communities have 
			endured patterns of discrimination in housing, education, health 
			care and economic opportunity and access,” said Sen. Jacqueline 
			Collins, D-Chicago, a cosponsor of that bill. “There is no better 
			example of systemic racism than that practice by some in the lending 
			industry. Predatory loans have been responsible for worsening the 
			racial wealth gap.”
 
 The final bill in the package was Senate Bill 1980, which prohibits 
			public housing authorities from considering a person’s criminal 
			history when deciding whether to rent or lease a housing unit to an 
			applicant, unless it’s required by federal law.
 
 
             
			“Everyone deserves a place to lay their head at night without the 
			shame of their past following them,” Josephine Horace-Jackson, a 
			member of the Restoring Rights and Opportunities Coalition of 
			Illinois, said in a statement distributed by the governor’s office. 
			“Increasing access to public housing is a vital step in ending 
			homelessness and ensuring formerly incarcerated individuals have a 
			fair opportunity for a better future.”
 
 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.
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