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| | HR0095 | | LRB098 07359 GRL 41383 r |
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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
3 | | Representatives recognize that there are distressed counties |
4 | | and communities throughout Illinois that struggle with many |
5 | | economic and social problems, including crime, unemployment, |
6 | | poverty, mortgage foreclosures, declining property values, |
7 | | deficiencies in public health services, and deficits in public |
8 | | education; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, In recent years, these economic and social |
10 | | problems have become more prevalent and have exacerbated |
11 | | existing conditions, which include inequalities in access to |
12 | | justice in the civil court system, an overburdened and |
13 | | ineffective criminal justice system, overcrowded correctional |
14 | | facilities, increased homelessness, inadequate educational |
15 | | opportunities, insufficient affordable housing, inadequate |
16 | | delivery of social services to the less fortunate, and |
17 | | deficiencies in the availability and quality of public health |
18 | | services; and
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19 | | WHEREAS, Some counties and communities disproportionately |
20 | | experience these serious social and economic ills; for example, |
21 | | Illinois counties which had 16% or more of their population in |
22 | | poverty in 2010 include Alexander, Champaign, Coles, Cook, |
23 | | Franklin, Gallatin, Hardin, Jackson, Lawrence, McDonough, |
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1 | | Macon, Marion, Massac, Perry, Pike,
Pope, Pulaski, Saline, |
2 | | Union, Vermilion, White, Williamson, and Winnebago; |
3 | | municipalities with a population of over 100,000 which had |
4 | | family poverty rates of 10% or more are Aurora, Chicago, |
5 | | Joliet, Naperville, Peoria, Rockford, and Springfield; and
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6 | | WHEREAS, It is important to take a comprehensive approach |
7 | | to the ongoing crisis of distressed counties and communities in |
8 | | Illinois; a significant poverty rate is among the best |
9 | | indicators that a community is in distress; and
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10 | | WHEREAS, Care must be taken when addressing poverty and its |
11 | | associated problems in counties with distressed communities |
12 | | because an emphasis on serving the largest number of people in |
13 | | poverty will miss other areas of the State with significant |
14 | | poverty problems; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, An emphasis on areas with the highest rates of |
16 | | poverty will ignore large populations in need; for example, |
17 | | Cook County has the highest number of persons living in |
18 | | poverty, totaling nearly 50% of the State's poverty population, |
19 | | but DuPage County, which has historically been considered to be |
20 | | a wealthy county with a small low-income population, has the |
21 | | second-highest number of persons in poverty; the 10 poorest |
22 | | counties in Illinois, as measured by poverty rate, are |
23 | | generally downstate, with small total populations, and while |
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1 | | their poverty rates are very high (the highest county rate is |
2 | | 31.1%, with an average for all 10 of the poorest counties of |
3 | | 21.6%), these counties collectively account for less than 10% |
4 | | of the State's total poverty population; the 10 counties with |
5 | | the highest numbers of persons in poverty are, for the most |
6 | | part, near urban centers, with 5 in the Chicago metropolitan |
7 | | area; these 10 counties include over 70% of the State's poverty |
8 | | population; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, A state-wide emphasis on the top 10 counties with |
10 | | high poverty rates will ignore the needs of 94% of the State's |
11 | | poverty population, but an emphasis on the 10 counties with the |
12 | | highest numbers of people in poverty will deemphasize the |
13 | | counties with the highest poverty rates; and |
14 | | WHEREAS, On September 12, 2012, the U.S. Census Bureau |
15 | | announced that, in 2011, the median household income in the |
16 | | United States declined by 1.5% from the 2010 median, which was |
17 | | the second consecutive annual drop; the weighted average |
18 | | poverty threshold for a family of four in 2011 was $23,021; the |
19 | | nation's official poverty rate was 15%, with 46.2 million |
20 | | people in poverty; although the poverty rate and number of |
21 | | people remained statistically unchanged since 2010, this is the |
22 | | fourth year in a row with such significant amounts of poverty |
23 | | in the nation; and
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1 | | WHEREAS, In 2011, the poverty rate in Illinois was 14.2%; |
2 | | this amounts to a 42% increase in the poverty rate in Illinois |
3 | | from 2007 to 2011; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, Living in an area with a high poverty rate may |
5 | | include threats to life itself; for example, a recent |
6 | | comparison of the 5 poorest and the 5 least poor Chicago |
7 | | neighborhoods showed that the poorest neighborhoods had a |
8 | | homicide rate that is 11 times the homicide rate in the least |
9 | | poor neighborhoods; the mortality rate for the leading causes |
10 | | of death in Chicago (cancer, heart disease, diabetes-related |
11 | | illnesses, stroke, and unintentional injury) is 5 times higher |
12 | | in the 5 poorest neighborhoods than it is in the 5 least poor |
13 | | neighborhoods; the infant mortality rate is 2 1/2 times higher |
14 | | in the poorest neighborhoods than in the 5 least poor |
15 | | neighborhoods; the Years of Potential Life Lost (YPLL), an |
16 | | estimate of the average years a person would have lived if he |
17 | | or she had not died prematurely, showed that the YPLL due to |
18 | | homicide in the 5 poorest neighborhoods was 2,172 for every |
19 | | 100,000 residents (assuming a life expectancy of 75 years) |
20 | | compared to the YPLL homicide rate of only 186 in the 5 least |
21 | | poor neighborhoods; and |
22 | | WHEREAS, So long as these social and economic problems are |
23 | | not successfully addressed in distressed counties and |
24 | | communities, the cost to taxpayers in the State of Illinois for |
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1 | | the many programs operated or funded by the State will only |
2 | | increase; and |
3 | | WHEREAS, State government resources are expended in |
4 | | ever-increasing amounts to address these social and economic |
5 | | problems; those expenditures are a significant drain on the |
6 | | State's road to financial stability; therefore, be it
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7 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
8 | | NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
9 | | the Distressed Counties and Communities Task Force is created; |
10 | | and be it further
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11 | | RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall consist of the |
12 | | following members: 4 members appointed by the Governor; 2 |
13 | | members appointed by the President of the Senate; 1 member |
14 | | appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate; 2 members |
15 | | appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; 1 |
16 | | member appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
17 | | Representatives; 1 member appointed by the Director of the |
18 | | Department of Human Services; 1 member appointed by the |
19 | | Illinois State Board of Education; 1 member appointed by the |
20 | | Department of Children and Family Services; 1 member appointed |
21 | | by the Illinois Housing Development Authority; and 1 member |
22 | | appointed by the Director of the Human Rights Commission; and |
23 | | be it further |
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1 | | RESOLVED, That this Task Force shall take testimony from |
2 | | stake holders in distressed counties and communities, |
3 | | representatives of appropriate State agencies, and community |
4 | | leaders to explore, discuss, and coordinate efforts to prepare |
5 | | an action plan to offer enhanced State governmental services in |
6 | | a meaningful way, to foster leadership, and to create programs |
7 | | that can succeed in addressing the myriad social and economic |
8 | | problems that exist in order to benefit all Illinois |
9 | | communities; and be it further |
10 | | RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall hold hearings in |
11 | | distressed counties and communities to hear directly from |
12 | | stakeholders on their ideas for an innovative anti-poverty |
13 | | agenda; and be it further |
14 | | RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall find and create |
15 | | innovative means to address and meet the numerous needs of |
16 | | those who receive State social services, design plans to assist |
17 | | and enhance the efforts of State agencies and local governments |
18 | | that provide law enforcement and social services, analyze |
19 | | successful State and local governmental programs in other |
20 | | locations in the subject areas of law enforcement, court |
21 | | administration, corrections, job skill retraining, education, |
22 | | economic opportunity, job creation, social services, and |
23 | | public health, and develop an action plan that includes |
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1 | | information about changes and improvements to existing |
2 | | programs, statutes, and regulations that can be made by |
3 | | reallocating existing resources and not increasing State |
4 | | taxes; and be it further |
5 | | RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall develop a legislative |
6 | | and administrative agenda that can serve as a national model |
7 | | for developing a successful anti-poverty agenda; and be it |
8 | | further |
9 | | RESOLVED, That the Office of the Governor shall provide |
10 | | administrative support for the Task Force; and be it further |
11 | | RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall submit a report to the |
12 | | Illinois House of Representatives within 60 days of the |
13 | | completion of the hearings held by the Task Force.
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