Statehouse measure to arm Illinois child welfare workers with pepper
spray advances
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[April 06, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Following the murder
of two Illinois Department of Children and Family Services caseworkers,
a measure that would arm them with pepper spray is being debated by
lawmakers.
Deidre Silas was murdered in January while visiting a home of six
children in Sangamon County. The legislation also recognizes Pam Knight,
a caseworker beaten to death while investigating in Mount Carroll in
2017.
According to an agency spokesman, the attack on Silas marked the 21st
time since 2017 that caseworkers were subject to threats or acts of
violence during over 2 million home visits in Illinois.
Senate Bill 1486 would require the Illinois State Police to develop a
training program for workers to complete before they can carry pepper
spray. Pepper spray could only be used if a worker wants to incapacitate
someone attempting to assault them or to escape from a dangerous
situation when there is no other alternative.
State Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Champaign, is worried the devices will be
misused.
“There is a cultural difference and an anti-Black bias that is very real
in this society, and I would be very concerned about a person who said I
felt threatened,” Ammons said.
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Illinois state Rep. Carol Ammons,
D-Urbana
Greg Bishop | The Center Square
State Rep. Tony McCombie, R-Savannah, said there are provisions in place
for anyone who misuses the device, including anyone wrongfully using
pepper spray would be charged with battery.
“I have faith in our ISP and our DCFS workers that they are not going to
be using this as a tool to hurt children,” McCombie said. “They are
doing this only to protect themselves and to get away.”
Some advocates are still calling for more reforms at DCFS, including
enhanced training, and sending frontline workers out in teams of two.
The measure was approved Friday by the House by a 100 to 4 vote and is
back in the Senate for concurrence.
“Will this end up saving lives?” McCombie said. “I don’t know, but it
sure might have helped Pam Knight have three seconds to get away before
she was brutally murdered, and it also may have given Diedre Silas a
second, or three seconds to get away. That is the point of this.”
Kevin Bessler reports on statewide issues in Illinois for
the Center Square. He has over 30 years of experience in radio news
reporting throughout the Midwest. |