Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar


Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives


Previous Post: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A few quick campaign updates
Next Post: Live coverage

Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Posted in:

* Alice Yin




* Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson said Wednesday the city will move ahead with evicting an unknown amount of migrants from city shelters for the first time, rejecting the latest outcry from a group of aldermen opposed to the policy.

Johnson told reporters at an unrelated West Side event an unspecified number of the thousands of migrant shelter residents who were issued 60-day notices to vacate by Saturday will receive “exemptions.” However, others without those privileges will be forced to leave and restart the process for temporary shelter. […]

It was unclear how many migrants previously required to exit will qualify for city-issued exemptions allowing them to instead stay. Johnson’s administration previously estimated as many as 5,600 could be removed, but exceptions will be made for those in the process of securing housing or out-migrating, as well as people with extenuating health circumstances, including pregnancy, he added. […]

Ald. Andre Vasquez, 40th, began circulating a letter among aldermen calling on the mayor to replace the “60 Day Eviction Policy” with a policy that addresses shelter stays on a case-by-case basis. The majority of shelter residents are not allowed to work because of their asylum seeker immigration status or cannot access rental assistance, he wrote in the letter.

* Riverfront Times

Jeffrey Ricker and his partner Michael Wallerstein lived happily in the City of St. Louis for 18 years. […]

In February of 2022, Ricker and Wallerstein moved from their home in Botanical Heights across the river to Collinsville, Illinois. […]

Some of the reasons for the move were mundane, Ricker says: Houses are more affordable on the other side of the river and they wanted to escape the hustle and bustle of the city as they grew older. But the tipping point was the Missouri legislature and its regressive actions. […]

Ricker and Wallerstein represent just one example among many couples, families and activists who are making the decision to leave red states in pursuit of a place where they have more political safety. Nearly half (47 percent) of respondents to a 2022 survey by the National Center for Transgender Equality considered or were considering leaving their state because of laws targeting the transgender community. […]

The good news is that, unlike many other residents of deep blue cities stranded in red states, for St. Louisans, fleeing is relatively simple: You can leave the state without even leaving the metro area. And Illinois could not offer a greater contrast to Missouri.

* Loyola Chicago Center for Criminal Justice

Statewide, pretrial jail bookings fell 17.5% between summer 2023 (i.e., pre-PFA) and fall 2023 (i.e., post-PFA); based on historical patterns, we would have expected them to fall roughly 11.5% during this period. Thus, pretrial jail bookings fell 6 percentage points more after the PFA than we would have expected, which translates to roughly 3,000 fewer people admitted to jails statewide in the three months from October to December 2023.

These decreases were evident across different types of counties: the decrease in Cook County was 3 percentage points larger than would have been expected; other urban jails experienced a decrease that was 6 percentage points larger than expected; Illinois’ rural jails collectively saw a decrease that was 8 percentage points larger than expected.

A more substantial decrease potentially attributable to the PFA was evident when changes in the pretrial jail ADPs were examined. Statewide, pretrial jail ADPs in Illinois fell 14% from summer 2023 (i.e., pre-PFA) to fall 2023 (i.e., post-PFA); historically, we would have expected them to only fall an average of 3% during this period. Thus, pretrial jail populations fell 11 percentage points more after the PFA than we would have expected . Based on these patterns, it is estimated that the pretrial jail ADP across all counties in Illinois combined decreased by roughly 1,500 individuals due to the PFA. In other words, it is estimated that the statewide pretrial jail ADP in Illinois was roughly 12,200 in the fall of 2023 but would have been roughly 13,700 without the PFA.

* Here’s the rest…

posted by Isabel Miller
Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 2:20 pm

Comments

  1. How in the world do does the Mayor’s Office not have a number of asylum seekers that they intend to kick out in three days?

    Comment by Sonny Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 2:37 pm

  2. Sonny, because the city doesn’t have any of the numbers. I was told today that CDC and FEMA have put up all of the dashboards and trackings for the shelters. The only thing the city keeps saying is “we need more federal assistance for housing” without having any plans.

    Comment by Former Downstater Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 2:45 pm

  3. === And Illinois could not offer a greater contrast to Missouri. ===

    And Illinois could not offer a greater POSITIVE contrast to Missouri. My editorial changes.

    Seeing and experiencing that firsthand makes me proud of my home state. Thank you Dems.

    Comment by Norseman Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 2:54 pm

  4. We are becoming a very divided nation. Take to the extreme I could see it splits into 2 separate countries depending on what you are looking for. Red or Blue but it is deeply divided.

    Comment by clec dcn Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 3:49 pm

  5. =I could see it splits into 2 separate countries depending on what you are looking for. =

    I don’t see that. The polls confirm that the largest voting group remains independent. Perhaps the division you’re seeing is nothing more than the noisy extremes at two ends of the spectrum. That also might be all you’re looking for.

    Comment by Pundent Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 4:10 pm

  6. @Prudent Good handle I hope you are right and possibly very much.

    Comment by clec dcn Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 6:42 pm

  7. Re the Riverfront Times story.

    Will that “exodus” possibly reverse the “red exodus” into Madison County that gave them Kurt Prenzler? That would be a nice benefit.

    Comment by Anyone Remember Wednesday, Mar 13, 24 @ 8:11 pm

Add a comment

Sorry, comments are closed at this time.

Previous Post: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A few quick campaign updates
Next Post: Live coverage


Last 10 posts:

more Posts (Archives)

WordPress Mobile Edition available at alexking.org.

powered by WordPress.