Lawmakers introduce bills to punish sexual assault in schools, end
fossil fuel investments
Send a link to a friend
[February 01, 2025]
By Ben Szalinski & Jade Aubrey
Republican lawmakers put forward a proposal to expel students who
sexually assault another student at school.
Current Illinois law has no provisions requiring schools to expel a
student who commits sexual violence or assault against another student
at school. However, the law says that if a student brings firearms,
knives, brass knuckles, or other any other weapon that can be used to
cause bodily harm into a school, they must be expelled for at least a
year.
Sen. Steve McClure, R-Springfield, said the goal of Senate Bill 98 is to
force schools to confront and deal with issues of sexual assault at a
school or any activity or event related to a school.
He said this issue was brought to his attention when he caught wind of
an incident that involved a 10-year-old girl in Taylorville.
The girl’s mother, Ashley Peden, spoke alongside McClure at a Capitol
news conference on Wednesday in support of the bill. Peden, who is a
teacher in Springfield, said the way that the Taylorville school
district handled the assault against her daughter caused her to rethink
her decision to be a teacher.

“The lack for safety of all students has been a concern of mine from the
very beginning, so much that at one point I was asked, ‘are you worried
about your daughter or the other students,’” she said. “To which I
quickly replied, ‘I’m worried about every single one of them, aren’t
you?’”
Peden said that between late January and early February 2024, her
10-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by an older student who was
14 years old on their school bus and at their bus stop. The assaults
increased in severity every day until the final assault, where her
daughter was chased from her bus stop and raped.
After reporting the incident, Peden said she obtained an emergency order
of protection for her daughter and brought it to the principal of
Taylorville Junior High School, who made a “safety plan” for her
daughter. Peden said the plan prohibited the accused student from coming
into contact with her daughter at school, which the order of protection
already called for.
“This safety plan was shared with the bus company, my daughter’s fifth
grade teacher and office staff,” Peden said. “No one else knew of the
assaults. No one else knew of the safety plan.”
“As an educator myself, I have been a part of a situation where all
staff needed to know about something about a student. It was as simple
as an email saying, ‘Student A should not be in the presence of Student
B, we need to keep them apart.’ I asked for it to be just as generic as
that, and I was not granted that,” she said.
Peden said after several meetings with the school board and multiple
court orders, the student was removed from her daughter’s school and
sent to an alternative school for the rest of the spring semester.
However, in August, she received a phone call about the student’s
reentry into her daughter’s school and again asked the school to remove
the student.
“We have laws where a student gets expelled for bringing a weapon on
school grounds, but what about cases like this, when the student’s body
is the weapon?” Peden said. “This boy continuously brought his weapon to
school on the bus and to the bus stop. This is not acceptable. This is
not ensuring safety for all students.”
McClure said the bill is aimed at stopping schools from sweeping issues
of sexual assault under the rug.
[to top of second column]
|

“What’s happening right now is silence in these schools,” McClure said.
“Because they’re not telling the parents in some cases, and other
students aren’t even aware of what’s happening. That’s a danger to them
as well.”
Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Murrayville, filed an identical bill in the
House. He said this issue needs to be addressed in schools across the
state.
“It’s not punishment for the individual who committed the crime,” he
said. “It’s to protect all of our kids and to ensure that the people who
committed the crimes get the help that they need.”
Divesting pensions from fossil fuels
Some Illinois Democrats are pushing the General Assembly to pass
legislation that would require the state’s five pension systems to
divest from fossil fuel companies.
Under Senate Bill 130, the pension systems for legislators, state
employees, university employees, teachers and judges would be prohibited
from investing in any fossil fuel companies or their affiliates. Pension
systems would be required to complete divestment in fossil fuel
companies by 2030 but would be prohibited from making any new
investments in them once the bill is signed by the governor.
Fossil fuel companies covered under the legislation include
subsidiaries, affiliates and parent companies of 200 publicly traded
companies with the largest fuel reserves in the world, the 30 largest
public companies owning coal-fired power plants and any company with
fossil fuel operations at the core of its business.
Supporters of the bill said it is important Illinois not financially
support fossil fuel companies as the state moves toward clean energy
goals. Those goals include requiring coal and gas power plants close by
2045.
“It is really imperative for the state pension funds to be more mindful
and aligned with the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act that we made a
commitment to, and this will align with that,” bill sponsor Sen. Adriane
Johnson, D-Buffalo Grove, said at a news conference.
Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, a budget leader in the House, said he
believes divesting from fossil fuel companies will ultimately lead to
better investment outcomes for pension systems as lawmakers search for
ways to improve pension liabilities. Illinois has a $143.7 billion
unfunded pension liability, according to the Commission on Government
Forecasting and Accountability.
“Divesting our pension funds from fossil fuels will increase returns in
the long run,” Guzzardi said. “Not only is it aligned with our goals on
climate, but it is aligned with our goals on guaranteeing a safe
retirement for all public employees.”

Fossil fuel investments underperform other types of investments,
according to Guzzardi. A University of Waterloo study found American
pension funds would see greater investment returns without investments
in the energy sector.
It’s not clear how much of Illinois’ pensions are invested in fossil
fuel companies, Guzzardi said, which is why lawmakers are using the bill
to ask the pension systems to disclose their investments in fossil
fuels.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government
coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily
by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |