Springfield News
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The LaSalle Veterans’ Home was the center of a deadly COVID-19 outbreak that began in November 2020.
The family of a 90-year-old Korean War veteran who died in November after he contracted COVID-19 at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home is seeking $2 million from the state, according to a lawsuit filed last week.
Attorneys working on behalf of the family of Richard Cieski Sr., who died in November, announced the suit Monday, alleging administrators of the veterans’ home were negligent by failing to protect the veteran.
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President of the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association Kristina Zahorik faced criticism from Rep. Ryan Spain (R-Peoria) on Friday when she testified in a House redistricting hearing.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers have used very different messages and approaches throughout the first four weeks of redistricting hearings.
Republicans have seized on witnesses’ concerns about using alternate Census data, touted legislation to take redistricting out of lawmakers’ hands and called for the majority to slow down the process.
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Common Cause Illinois executive director Jay Young and Rep. La Shawn Ford (D-Chicago) discuss the effort to end prison gerrymandering on the latest episode of The CloutCast.
In January, when Illinois lawmakers approved a comprehensive measure to overhaul criminal justice and policing, the legislation contained a provision that would effectively end so-called “prison gerrymandering.”
Today, prisoners across the country are counted by the U.S. Census as residents of legislative districts where the prisons are located, rather than at a person’s last known address. Critics of the process say it artificially inflates the population of counties with prisons, where inmates cannot vote, while giving those areas more federal money. At the same time, counties with a significant portion of residents who are sent to prison but don’t have a facility are at a disadvantage.
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As lawmakers continue to field redistricting recommendations from Illinois residents, members of the Latino community and advocacy organizations are hoping to bolster their influence in the legislature under a new map.
Representatives from one organization have begun urging state officials to create a map that include as many as 20 majority-Latino legislative districts in Illinois. Another group has called for lawmakers to draw maps solely based on each district’s “voting age population.” Other Latino organizations have urged lawmakers to avoid dividing their communities, which in Chicago are struggling to contend with gentrification and the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Representatives from the Illinois Muslim Civic Coalition, including Dilara Sayeed and Deena Habbal, have testified at several legislative redistricting hearings.
In the five weeks since state lawmakers began holding redistricting committee meetings, they’ve held 25 hearings as of Wednesday.
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Last month, a group of 11 Chicago alderman sent a letter to Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) calling for the lawmakers to pass a bill they said would help address the city’s affordable housing needs.
“With every crisis comes an opportunity to look for solutions,” Ald. Daniel La Spata (1) wrote in a March 17 letter co-signed by Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20), Ald. Michael Rodriguez (22), Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25), Ald. Felix Cardona (31), Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez (33), Ald. Andre Vasquez (40), Ald. Michele Smith (43), Ald. Matthew Martin (47), Ald. Harry Osterman (48) and Ald. Maria Hadden (49).
















