Find The Daily Line Guest Commentaries Below

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    Even though our communities would collapse without their work, as a society, we don’t treat Black women as essential.

    The pay gap for Black women has only narrowed by nineteen cents from 1967 to 2018. Black women are paid, on average, thirty-eights cents on the dollar less than white men. This loss represents $1,962 per month, $23,540 per year, and a staggering $941,600 over a 40-year career. Ultimately, this affords Black women less opportunity to build wealth and economic security for themselves and their families.

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    We should stop teaching history in our schools. The way history is now being taught leads to a racist society, perpetuates white privilege, and overlooks the contributions of women and minorities. I ask the Illinois State Board of Education and school districts to immediately remove history curricula, books, and materials that unfairly communicate history until suitable alternatives are developed.

    We are building on the 1991 Black History mandate, HB 2859, a law introduced and enacted by the late Illinois State Senator William Shaw. In 2018 I introduced and passed Illinois House Resolution 1098 which created the Black History Curriculum Task Force. We have already started the process to collect data about every Illinois school district's Black history curriculum to be able to improve the curriculum, but we can no longer ignore the contributions and struggles of all minorities.

  • As a Black man, a husband and father raising his three Black children in the Austin neighborhood, and a former teacher of Black students, the murders of Black people at the hands of the state continues to shake me to my core. I feel sad, hopeless, desperate, fearful for my family and community.

    Breonna Taylor, Rayshard Brooks, Rekia Boyd, Bettie Jones, Laquan McDonald. How is it possible that these lynchings--broadcast across the world in real time--have not already led to transformative change for the Black community?

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    Promoters of the “Tax Hike” Amendment aren't telling voters something very important about this new tax hike on the ballot in November.

    They're claiming it'll only affect “the wealthy.” But that's highly misleading. In fact, it's downright disingenuous.

    The truth is, we – as Illinois voters – aren't voting on the tax rates.

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    Today is a national day of strikes, walkouts, and worker actions to demand race and economic justice. The workers of SEIU Local 73 are standing in solidarity with workers across the country who are uplifting Black Lives Matter.

    Most Black Americans live with a legacy of 400 years of slavery, 100 years of Jim Crow, decades of racial housing and education segregation and more. The unfair criminal justice system did not begin with the police murder of Laquan McDonald and it will not end with the police murder of George Floyd. Their murders and the murders of hundreds of other black men at the hands of police are a byproduct of a criminal justice system that is inherently unfair to black and brown Americans.

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    Rising in swells from oceans of anger toward and fear of the police are cries to defund, dismantle, and decommission the Chicago Police Department. Rallying cries, however, do not make for effective policy, and the paroxysm of violent crime in which Chicago finds itself is no time to put at risk the pursuit of accountable, constitutional policing in order to keep people safe.

    The way we talk and write about the notion of defunding as Chicago grapples with a crisis of confidence in its police department may well determine whether this moment is an opportunity for real reform, or a morass out of which overcorrections emerge which are no less damaging for being well intentioned.

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    As Illinoisans finalize their taxes for the July 15 deadline, there’s hope that this will be the last Tax Day we’re forced to file under our state’s current broken tax system. That’s because the Fair Tax is on the ballot for voters to approve this November. The Fair Tax would update our outdated system to one that lifts the burden off our middle and lower-income families by requiring the wealthiest Illinoisans to pay their fair share.

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    Following the Chicago region’s third straight wettest May on record, communities are grappling with how to address increasingly frequent and costly urban flooding. From private property owners to state leadership, the reality is that everyone can and must play a role. That’s why in May the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago (MWRDGC) updated an ordinance that enables an innovative new tool to help manage stormwater in Cook County while benefiting property owners and encouraging economic development.

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    Economists mark the mid-1970s as a point where “deindustrialization” sent American manufacturing offshore and focused our collective attention, talents, and capital on the financial markets.

    In few cities has this process been more evident than in Chicago. Our own economic character changed in 1980 after Wisconsin Steel closed its South Side manufacturing plant, setting in motion several decades of manufacturing plant closings. As manufacturing left the South and West sides, Chicago embraced an economy built on services: lawyers, accountants, consultants, and money managers. “Business services” is now the top employment sector in Chicago, according to the U.S. Economic Development Administration.

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    By the Founding Members of Northwest Side Coalition Against Racism: Sonia Mozek, David Sutherland, Michael Rabbitt, Mary Shapiro, Colleen Gaca, Al Grippe, Georgette Ginter, Dawn Nettnin, and Monica Dillon

    The Northwest Side Coalition Against Racism is calling for all far Northwest Side aldermen to work toward racial healing and transformative justice in our communities and throughout the City of Chicago.