Full Text of HR0861 101st General Assembly
HR0861 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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| 1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
| 2 | | WHEREAS, Pent-up frustrations, including bad policing | 3 | | practices, a flawed justice system, unscrupulous consumer | 4 | | credit practices, poor or inadequate housing, high | 5 | | unemployment, voter suppression, and other culturally embedded | 6 | | forms of racial discrimination boiled over in many poor African | 7 | | American neighborhoods during the mid- to late-1960s, setting | 8 | | off riots that rampaged out of control from block to block; | 9 | | burning, battering and ransacking property and raging crowds | 10 | | created chaos in which some neighborhood residents and law | 11 | | enforcement operatives endured shockingly random injuries or | 12 | | deaths; and
| 13 | | WHEREAS, Many Americans blamed the riots on outside | 14 | | agitators or young black men, who represented the largest and | 15 | | most visible group of rioters; however, the Kerner Commission | 16 | | turned those assumptions upside-down in March of 1968, | 17 | | declaring it was white racism, not black anger, that turned the | 18 | | key that unlocked urban American turmoil; and
| 19 | | WHEREAS, As a result, The National Advisory Commission on | 20 | | Civil Disorders, known as the Kerner Commission after its | 21 | | chair, then-Governor Otto Kerner Jr. of Illinois, was formed; | 22 | | it was an 11-member Presidential Commission established by | 23 | | President Lyndon B. Johnson in Executive Order 11365 to |
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| 1 | | investigate the causes of the 1967 race riots in the United | 2 | | States and to provide recommendations for the future; and
| 3 | | WHEREAS, The Kerner Commission found that poverty and | 4 | | institutional racism were driving inner city violence and | 5 | | proposed aggressive government spending to provide equal | 6 | | opportunities to African Americans; the report was rushed into | 7 | | print by Bantam Books, and the 708-page report became a | 8 | | best-seller, selling 740,000 copies in a few weeks; and
| 9 | | WHEREAS, To mark the 30th anniversary of the Kerner Report, | 10 | | the Eisenhower Foundation in 1998 sponsored two complementary | 11 | | reports, The Millennium Breach and Locked in the Poorhouse; The | 12 | | Millennium Breach, coauthored by former senator and commission | 13 | | member Fred R. Harris, found the racial divide had grown in the | 14 | | subsequent years with inner city unemployment at crisis levels; | 15 | | The Millennium Breach found that for most of the decade that | 16 | | followed the Kerner Report, the U.S. made progress on the | 17 | | principal fronts detailed in the report, which were race, | 18 | | poverty, and inner cities; then progress stopped, and in some | 19 | | ways reversed, due to a series of economic shocks and trends | 20 | | and the government's own action and inaction; and
| 21 | | WHEREAS, African American poverty remains a critical issue | 22 | | today; in 1969, about one-third of blacks lived below the | 23 | | poverty line; by 2016, that number had dropped to 22 percent as |
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| 1 | | a significant number of African Americans moved into the middle | 2 | | class with a boost from 1960s legislation; however, the | 3 | | percentage of blacks living in poverty is still more than twice | 4 | | as high as the percentage of whites; a lack of opportunity has | 5 | | been shown to increase drug abuse, unemployment, poverty, | 6 | | violence, and other negative factors within a community; and
| 7 | | WHEREAS, Blacks now have a louder voice in government, yet | 8 | | poverty and disenfranchisement remain; notwithstanding the | 9 | | Kerner Commission's optimism about potential change, there | 10 | | have been only scattered efforts over the last 50 years to end | 11 | | the United States' racial divide or to address the racial | 12 | | component of poverty in the U.S.; and
| 13 | | WHEREAS, Now more than ever, it is obvious that we need to | 14 | | rebuild these economies in urban areas which have been fostered | 15 | | by racial discrimination; to accomplish this, we can replicate | 16 | | a successful rebuilding plan from our country's history; and
| 17 | | WHEREAS, In the wake of World War II, Secretary of State | 18 | | George C. Marshall proposed a comprehensive plan to rebuild the | 19 | | economies and spirits of Western Europe in 1947; as part of | 20 | | this plan, the U.S. gave $13 billion in aid to 16 European | 21 | | nations; this aid included shipping food, staples, fuel, and | 22 | | machinery, rebuilding war-devastated regions, removing trade | 23 | | barriers, and investing in an industrial capacity; and
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| 1 | | WHEREAS, Due to what became known as the Marshall Plan, | 2 | | European economies experienced unprecedented growth from 1948 | 3 | | to 1952, postwar poverty and starvation disappeared, and | 4 | | standards of living increased remarkably; and
| 5 | | WHEREAS, Former National Urban League President John | 6 | | Jacobs often spoke of the need for a new domestic Marshall | 7 | | Plan, championing the idea that we could rebuild urban areas in | 8 | | the U.S. the same way we rebuilt entire nations abroad; and
| 9 | | WHEREAS, African Americans in the City of Chicago are | 10 | | disproportionately affected by both the violence and the | 11 | | poverty in the city, particularly on the west and south sides; | 12 | | African Americans make up approximately a third of the city's | 13 | | population; despite this, they have consistently accounted for | 14 | | more than 70 percent of homicide victims for decades; due to | 15 | | pre-existing inequalities such as segregation, financial | 16 | | disparities, lack of access to a good education, lost wages, | 17 | | lost homes, lost inheritances, lack of access to testing and | 18 | | treatment, and other issues, the current COVID-19 pandemic has | 19 | | disproportionately hurt African Americans, especially in | 20 | | Chicago; and
| 21 | | WHEREAS, Across the nation and in our State, a | 22 | | comprehensive and targeted economic recovery plan is necessary |
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| 1 | | to revitalize and to help elevate the African American | 2 | | population; this new plan must provide federal, state, local | 3 | | tax credits, and other enhancements to encourage businesses to | 4 | | relocate to these struggling communities in order to foster | 5 | | economic vitality; therefore, be it
| 6 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | 7 | | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | 8 | | we urge the Illinois General Assembly and the United States | 9 | | Congress to explore a new, domestic investment plan to promote | 10 | | economic growth and recovery in targeted African American | 11 | | communities; and be it further
| 12 | | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be sent | 13 | | to Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Cook County Board President | 14 | | Toni Preckwinkle, all members of the Chicago City Council, | 15 | | Governor JB Pritzker, all members of the Illinois General | 16 | | Assembly, President Donald Trump, U.S. Senate Majority Leader | 17 | | Mitch McConnell, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer,
| 18 | | U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, U.S. House of | 19 | | Representatives Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, and all | 20 | | members of the Illinois Congressional Delegation.
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