Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SR0379
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Full Text of SR0379  100th General Assembly

SR0379 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


  

 


 
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1
SENATE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, In 1996, the World Health Organization held the
3Forty-Ninth World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland and
4declared violence a leading public health problem; and
 
5    WHEREAS, The World Health Organization developed a
6typology of violence that identified three categories:
7self-directed violence (by oneself), interpersonal violence
8(by another person), and collective violence (by larger
9groups), which includes hate crimes, terrorist acts, and mob
10violence committed to advance a particular social agenda; and
 
11    WHEREAS, Hate crimes, school shootings, and community
12shootings have increased at alarming rates over the past eight
13years; and
 
14    WHEREAS, Hate groups have emerged as one of the greatest
15threats to public safety; from 2008 to 2012, the number of
16"patriot groups", including militias, multiplied by more than
17800%; and
 
18    WHEREAS, Violent extremist threats come from a range of
19groups and individuals, including domestic terrorists,
20homegrown violent extremists, as well as international
21terrorists, lone offenders or small groups who may be

 

 

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1radicalized to commit violence at home or attempt to travel
2overseas to become foreign fighters; and
 
3    WHEREAS, Between 1982 and 2011, mass shootings such as
4Sandy Hook, Columbine, and the Pulse Night Club occurred every
5200 days on average, but between 2011 and 2014, they occurred
6every 64 days; and
 
7    WHEREAS, Hate crimes targeting Muslims tripled in 2015,
8with attacks against Muslim Americans experiencing the biggest
9surge; there were 257 reports of assaults, attacks on mosques,
10and other hate crimes against Muslims, a jump of about 67% in
112015; it was the highest total since 2001, when more than 480
12attacks occurred in the aftermath of the attacks of September
1311, 2001; and
 
14    WHEREAS, Attacks against transgender people have also
15sharply increased; according to FBI data, African Americans
16were the most frequent victims of hate crimes based on race,
17while Jews were the most frequent victims based on religion;
18and
 
19    WHEREAS, Fifty-Nine percent of the hate crimes that the
20F.B.I. recorded were based on the race, ethnicity, or ancestry
21of the victim; religious bias accounted for about 20% of all
22attacks; about 18% of attacks were based on sexual orientation;

 

 

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1and
 
2    WHEREAS, Chicago's homicide and violent crime rates have
3been rising, and appear resistant to violence prevention
4efforts; in 2016, 762 people were killed in Chicago - 300 more
5than 2015, representing the largest one-year increase in any of
6America's biggest cities in the past 25 years; in January of
72017, Chicago shootings and violence were up 24%; and
 
8    WHEREAS, The United States Department of Homeland Security
9has described violent extremism involving school shootings,
10mass shootings, terrorist acts, hate crimes, and gang violence,
11as a serious threat to public safety and has called upon each
12state to develop a comprehensive prevention strategy for
13countering violent extremism using a public health approach;
14and
 
15    WHEREAS, There are three levels of public health violence
16prevention: primary prevention, which aims to prevent violence
17before it occurs; secondary prevention, which focuses on
18immediate responses to violence such as pre-hospital care; and
19emergency services or treatment, and tertiary prevention, that
20focuses on rehabilitation, reintegration, reducing long-term
21physical emotional or physical disability relevant to victims
22or perpetrators of violence; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, A comprehensive response to violence protects and
2supports victims of violence, reduces the perpetration of
3violence, and changes the circumstances and conditions that
4give rise to violence in the first place; and
 
5    WHEREAS, Faith and community-based organizations provide
6critical leadership, knowledge, and passion when it comes to
7preventing and intervening in cycles of youth violence around
8the country; and
 
9    WHEREAS, All throughout the country, faith and non-profit
10organizations have taken on many tasks in order to keep young
11people safe and increase their positive opportunities; and
 
12    WHEREAS, Staff and volunteers from churches, mosques,
13temples, synagogues, and community-based organizations are
14actively involved in the lives of both victims and perpetrators
15of violence; collaborating with medical staff, law
16enforcement, courts, social service, business, and community
17activists; therefore, be it
 
18    RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDREDTH GENERAL
19ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we urge faith-based
20organizations and community-based organizations to collaborate
21and build a multidisciplinary alliance that promotes community
22resilience and public safety through the development of

 

 

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1programs and strategies aimed to prevent violence and violent
2extremism in impoverished, underserved, and at-risk
3communities by providing media outreach and educational
4campaigns, after-school programs, mentoring programs, and
5other activities that replace negative messages, activities,
6beliefs, and attitudes with positive productive activities,
7beliefs, and messages, through a transparent and collaborative
8process with the community that takes full advantage of any
9available State and federal funding resources.