Upcoming Mass Incarceration/Juvenile Justice Events in Chicago

In the next few days, there are several events happening around Chicago that relate to issues of mass incarceration and juvenile justice. We thought that we would provide a partial list here.

EVENTS

Support our friends at the Moratorium on Deportations Campaign tomorrow as they begin a THREE-DAY WALK to Crete, Illinois to protest the building of a new privately owned detention center. Click here to find important information.

On April 2, there is a teach in at UIC about the case of Jacqueline Montanez. You can click here to download a flier for the event.

On April 3rd, there is a forum titled RESTORATIVE JUSTICE: Moving from Response to Solutions. It is focused on on issues of violence among youth in Chicago.11:50 am – 1:30 pm — DePaul Center #8005 At Jackson/State. Lunch provided for first 100 guests. Featuring: The Honorable Judge Sophia H. Hall, Administrative Presiding Judge; Father Dave Kelley, Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation; Kathy Bankhead, Assistant State’s Attorney, Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office. Click here to download a flier for this event.

On April 5th, join several organizations (including Project NIA) for FORCED OUT: A United Forum on Immigration and Incarceration at UIC from 10 am to 2 p.m. More information is here.

On April 17th, join our friends at Neighborhood Writing Alliance for a workshop about mass incarceration as part of a project called The Missing. Information about the writing workshop can be found here.

On April 19, join us for a workshop about “Understanding the Criminalization of Youth” from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 op.m. at the Chicago Freedom School, 719 S. State Street, Suite 3N. More information is here.

On April 21st, join us for a youth-led teach-in about youth justice titled Locked Up and Locked Out. The teach-in is specifically targeted for youth ages 12-24. Adults who want to register are asked to please try to bring young people with you. You can register HERE. Pre-registration is REQUIRED.

ACTIONS/CAMPAIGNS

There are several campaigns that can also use your support right now. Specifically, we encourage you to visit the site for TAMMS-YEAR 10 to learn about how you can support closing that prison that prison.

On April 4th, there will be hearings about whether to support Governor Quinn’s recommendation to close IYC-Joliet. Visit the Closing Illinois Youth Prisons Campaign site for more information.

SB3809 Passes the IL Senate: More Criminalization of Youth and Less Opportunities

The Senate passed SB 3809 prohibiting park districts from hiring juveniles who have committed certain offenses and directing the State Police to do background checks on juveniles when requested by park districts…as State Police do now on adults seeking jobs from park districts.

The bill passed the Senate passed by a vote of 52-0 and will be sponsored in House by Rep. Darlene Senger. If you remember, we asked you back in February to speak out against HB4643. Our thanks to those who did however we now find ourselves in the position of having to ask House Reps NOT to support this bill again. More importantly we are likely to have to ask Governor Quinn not to sign this bill further criminalizing our young people and shutting them out of employment opportunities.

Below is the press release from the bill’s sponsor in the Senate:

Friday, 23 March 2012

Mulroe bill allows broader criminal background checks for potential park employees

SPRINGFIELD, IL – Park districts in Illinois will soon be able to expand criminal background checks for potential hires if a bill sponsored by Senator John Mulroe (D-Chicago) passes the General Assembly. The measure was voted out of the Senate today and now heads to the House floor for consideration.

Currently, park districts are only able to perform criminal background checks for adult convictions for crimes such as murder, attempted murder, aggravated criminal sexual assault and other specified serious crimes. Senate Bill 3809 will also allow the park districts to check juvenile court convictions for the same offenses. The measure has the support of the Illinois Association of Park Districts as well as several park districts around the state.

“Park districts typically have young staffs and young patrons in various programs, so it makes sense to have access to juvenile criminal records for juveniles who seek employment with park districts in Illinois,” Mulroe said.

The measure also adds the criminal convictions of stalking, cyberstalking, and aggravated stalking to the list of offenses.

Save the Date: Blue & Black – Talking about Policing & Violence With Youth

In the last few months of 2011 into early 2012, the issue of police violence once again burst into the mainstream with the treatment of Occupy protesters. We at Project NIA and the Chicago PIC Teaching Collective found ourselves concerned that the conversation was divorced from historical context.

Over the past couple of years, we have been developing and co-creating a number of resources that we hope will help to inform and educate the broader public about the longstanding tradition of oppressive policing toward marginalized populations (including some activists and organizers). In addition, we have been supporting projects that constructively engage young people in talking about their encounters with the police.

by Rachel Williams

Join us on Saturday May 5th 2012 from 1:30 to 4:30 pm at UIC Student Center East, 750 S. Halsted Street, as we unveil and discuss several popular education resources focused on the history and current manifestations of policing in the U.S. In addition, you will hear a presentation from Chain Reaction based on our documentation of youth encounters with police in Chicago. Finally, you will learn about how Circles & Ciphers is engaging young men in constructive discussion about policing and violence.

Agenda for the Event:

1. Where we are right now in Chicago? The contemporary realities of policing and violence for Chicago youth
A presentation about the Chain Reaction project.

2. Constructively Engaging Youth in Dialogue about the Police — Circles & Ciphers Model

3. New Resources Developed to Help in Fostering Productive Reflection and Dialogue about Policing and Violence
Some of the resources that we will unveil include:
1. A new zine about the roots of police violence by Rachel Marie-Crane Williams.
2. Some new pamphlets from the Historical Moments in Police Violence Project.
3. A new curriculum resource guide about police violence.
4. Two new interactive timelines about the history of policing and violence in the U.S.

RSVP is REQUIRED at projectniaevents@hotmail.com.

We hope to see you on May 5th for what we anticipate will be an engaging and challenging dialogue.

When: Saturday, May 5th
Time: 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Where: UIC, Student Center East, 750 S.Halsted Street (Commuter Wellness Center)
Info: This event is at no cost to participants but you MUST RSVP, projectniaevents@hotmail.com.

Click here to download a flyer for the event

Action Alert: HB5602

UPDATE: This bill passed the house with 99 votes yesterday, March 23rd. HB5602. It passed despite objections from advocates. The bill broadens scope of police reporting to all school officials to include all offenses and those under investigation as well as actually arrested.

HB 5602 (Rep. Sente) amends the School Code and the Juvenile Court Act to allow for “reciprocal reporting” of law enforcement records between “appropriate school official(s)” and local law enforcement agencies when a student has been arrested or “is the subject of a police investigation” for a felony or a Class A or B misdemeanor.

These laws already allow reporting of information to schools when a youth has been arrested, detained or taken into custody for certain offenses, such as unlawful use of a weapon, forcible felonies or violations of the controlled substances, cannabis or methamphetamine acts. This bill would broaden the reporting of law enforcement and juvenile records to schools.

The pending amendment to the bill would also REMOVE language in the original bill to protect the confidentiality of any records shared with schools. The amendment STRIKES language that would have provided that “information derived from the law enforcement records shall be kept separate from and shall not become a part of the official school record of that child and shall not be a public record. The information shall be used solely by the appropriate school official or officials to aid in the proper rehabilitation of the child and to protect the safety of students and employees in the school.”

HB 5602 and the amendment are sponsored by Carol Sente (D), Lake County. It was passed out of the House Elementary and Secondary Education Committee on March 7th with the understanding that it would need further amendment before going to a floor vote.

Please contact Rep. Sente’s office to state your opposition to bill and your concern about further stigmatizing and criminalizing youth. PLEASE DO THIS TODAY AND MONDAY

Representative Carol A. Sente (D)
59th District
Springfield Office:
292-S Stratton Office Building
Springfield, IL 62706
(217) 782-0499
(217) 558-1092 FAX

District Office:
430 N. Milwaukee Ave.
Suite 8
Lincolnshire, IL 60069
(847) 478-9909
(847) 478-9960 FAX
Lake County

Locked Up and Locked Out: A Youth-Led Teach In about Youth Justice

This is an introductory teach-in appropriate for youth leaders (ages 12 to 24) who want a beginner’s understanding of the school-to-prison pipeline, youth rights in the juvenile justice system, and the prison industrial complex’s impact on youth. Workshops will be primarily facilitated by youth for other youth. Download the flier HERE. PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. Register HERE.

When: April 21, 2012
Time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Where: Columbia College, 600 S. Michigan Ave.
Info: This teach-in is offered at NO COST to participants. PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.

Gov. Quinn’s FY13 Budget – Juvenile Justice

by Billy Dee

Yesterday Governor Quinn released his budget (PDF)-

He specifically mentioned IYC-Joliet and IYC-Murphysboro in his list of 14 state facilities he has targeted for closure. These two facilities are slated to close by July 31, and save the state $17.7 million.

Redeploy IL maintained its current FY12 funding level of $2,485,500.

The Dept of Juvenile Justice budget would shrink from the FY12 actual $141,419,800 to an FY13 proposed level of $125,211,000, based on the two facility closures, but….. aftercare would increase from FY12 level of 9,729,100 to $12,715,100 for FY13.

The DJJ Fact Sheet includes a goal to “rebalance from prison-based to community-based care when appropriate.”

You can view the agency budget breakdown here (PDF).

Yesterday We Made Cards in Solidarity With National Occupy Day in Support of Prisoners

The following photographs were taken by our friend Sarah Jane Rhee. We thank everyone who participated in this event which was organized in solidarity with National Occupy Day in Support of Prisoners.

Call to Action: 2012 Illinois Juvenile Justice Legislation

Project NIA is supporting several bills in this session of the General Assembly that are related to juvenile justice. We would like to share these with you and ask that you please reach out to your representatives about these bills. Please take 10 minutes out of your day to call or e-mail them to let them know that you too support these commonsense bills. Information about how to do this is below.

The UN-marked Campaign — Please check back next week when we will have a bill number for our juvenile expungement reform bill that is being sponsored by Senator Kwame Raoul. More information about this bill will be forthcoming.

HB5492 (Gabel) – Juvenile Reentry Reform (PDF) – This bill sets a time limit for juvenile parole, per the recommendation of the Illinois Juvenile Justice Commission’s extensive Youth Reentry Improvement Report, October, 2011. Currently, youth can be held on parole terms lasting until they turn 21.

SB 3194 (PDF) – (Collins) – Preventing Juvenile Records from Going to State Police – This bill ensures confidentiality of juvenile arrests by reenacting protections against sending juvenile arrest records to state police.

SB3195 (PDF) (Collins) – Access to Counsel for youth questioned on murder charge – This bill creates a mandatory presumption against admission of statements by minors made without an attorney in homicide investigations – the presumption applies only to the use of the statements in adult, not juvenile, court. There will be hearing on this bill on Wed February 29 at 9:00 am (Rm 212 Capitol).

SB3196 (PDF) (Collins) – Raise Age of Juvenile Detention to 13 –This bill will make the minimum age for detention (pre-trial confinement) of minors consistent with the current minimum age for for post-trial commitment to Dept of Juvenile Justice. Currently, the minimum age for detention is 10, while the minimum age for commitment to state facilities is 13 – this makes 13 the uniform age for confinement. The number of youth affected is small with 306 youth under the age of 13 held in detention statewide in 2010, based on data from the statewide juvenile detention monitoring system, JMIS.

You can access bill text and full information HERE. You can find the list of the members of the Senate Criminal Law committee HERE.

Please contact the Senate Criminal Law Committee members today and tomorrow about your support specifically for SB3194, SB3195, and SB3196.

New Release: The Missing Toolkit

The Missing is a public art/consciousness-raising/community engagement project to focus public attention on the epidemic of mass/hyper-incarceration in Chicago.

You can access the toolkit HERE.

Call for Submissions: Challenging Convictions – Survivors of Sexual Assault/Domestic Violence Writing on Solidarity with Prison Abolition

ANTHOLOGY CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS:

Working Title: Challenging Convictions: Survivors of Sexual Assault/Domestic Violence Writing on Solidarity with Prison Abolition.

Completed submissions due: April 15, 2012.

Like much prison abolition work, the call for this anthology comes from frustration and hope: frustration with organizers against sexual assault and domestic violence who treat the police as a universally available and as a good solution; frustration with prison abolitionists who only use “domestic violence” and “rape” as provocative examples; and, frustration with academic discussions that use only distanced third-person case studies and statistics to talk about sexual violence and the Prison Industrial Complex (PIC). But, this project also shares the hope and worth of working toward building communities without prisons and without sexual violence. Most importantly, it is anchored in the belief that resisting prisons, domestic violence, and sexual assault are inseparable.

Organizers of this anthology want to hear from survivors in conversation with prison abolition struggles. We are interested in receiving submissions from survivors who are/have been imprisoned, and survivors who have not.  Both those survivors who have sought police intervention, as well as those who haven’t, are encouraged to submit. We are looking for personal essays and creative non-fiction from fellow survivors who are interested in discussing their unique needs in anti-violence work and prison abolitionism.

Discussions of sexual assault, domestic violence, police violence, prejudice within courts, and imprisonment cannot be separated from experiences of privilege and marginalization. Overwhelmingly people who are perceived to be white, straight, able-bodied, normatively masculine, settlers who are legal residents/citizens, and/or financially stable are not only less likely to experience violence but also less likely to encounter the criminal injustice system than those who are not accorded the privileges associated with these positions. At the same time, sexual assault and domestic violence support centers and shelters are often designed with certain privileges assumed. We are especially interested in contributions that explore how experiences of race, ability, gender, citizenship, sexuality, or class inform your understandings of, or interactions with cops, prisons, and sexual assault/domestic violence support.

Potential topics:
·      What does justice look like to you?
·      Perspectives on police and prisons as a default response to sexual assault
·      What do you want people in the prison abolition movement with no first hand experiences of survivorship to know?
·      How did you overcome depression/feelings of futility when dealing with these systems?
·      Critical reflections on why the legal system has or has not felt like an option for you
·      Perspectives on the cops/PIC participating in rape culture
·      Restorative justice and other methods for responding to sexual violence outside of the PIC? (if you are a settler be conscious of appropriations of indigenous methods)
·      How have you felt about conversations you’ve had about the PIC?
·      How sexual assault inside and outside of the PIC is treated by organizers against sexual assault, domestic violence, and the PIC
·      Police and prison guards as triggers
·      Responding to sexual assault and domestic violence when communities weren’t there for you
·      What the legal system offers survivors and what it doesn’t
·      Rants at manarchists, the writers/directors of televised cop dramas, and communities that let you down
·      Survivor shaming for reporting and for not reporting to police

Please submit first-person accounts, critical reflections, essays, and creative non-fiction to survivorsinsoli@gmail.com by April 15, 2012 with “Submission” as the subject line.

Please:
·      One submission per person;
·      12 point Times New Roman font;
·      Submit as an attached document (.doc files preferred, no .pdfs);
·      English language (American spelling);
.      Pseudonyms welcomed, as are name changes in the written piece.

Early submissions are encouraged. First time authors encouraged.

If you have questions, we welcome emails to survivorsinsoli@gmail.com with “Question” in the subject line. We are looking for both shorter pieces of writing and longer pieces, but if your piece is more than 20 pages consider sending us an email to run the idea by us.

Please attach a short biography that you are comfortable sharing with the editors (200 word max.). This is not about your credentials, but getting to know you and where you are coming from. All information you provide will be kept confidential.

About selection and editing: Submissions will be reviewed by a group of readers who will consider if and how each written piece could contribute to the finished project. Each piece will be read by at least two readers who will contribute to the decision to accept/reject/edit the piece. Some of us working on this project have been made to feel alone as both survivors and abolitionists. Some of us have managed to carve spaces within these communities. Now we are looking to open the conversation and hear from people we’ve never met, who have struggled to practice politics in a rape culture and police state. We believe that the needs of survivors matter in these movements, and we don’t need someone else to speak for us or about us as case studies and numbers. We want to hear from you.

For more information please visit: http://survivorsinsoli.blogspot.com/

Please distribute widely.

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