Illinois
Illinois museums working to return thousands of Native American remains, items by federal deadline
CHICAGO (WLS) — Across the country, Native American tribes are struggling to reclaim what was stolen from them over centuries: the remains of their ancestors and personal sacred items, now held in museums, universities, and other institutions that are, in many cases, far from home.
Despite federal legislation passed nearly 35 years ago aimed at correcting these past crimes, the ABC 7 I-Team found little progress has been made, and the state of Illinois tops the list of having the highest number of ancestral remains that haven’t been reunited with tribal descendants.
In addition, Illinois institutions including Chicago’s Field Museum and the Illinois State Museum have thousands of sacred items that officials tell the I-Team they are working to identify and return.
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Under the Native American Graves and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which US President George H. W. Bush signed into law in 1990, any institution that receives federal funding must identify any Native American, Native Alaskan, or Native Hawaiian ancestral remains, funerary objects (something placed with individual human remains usually at the time of burial), sacred objects, and objects of cultural patrimony in their possession.
Federally recognized tribes can make a claim that those people and objects belonged to their ancestors, and therefore should be returned to tribal lands for proper reinterment and care through a process called repatriation.
“It is that mechanism that allows Native people to have their ancestors that have been disturbed and not at rest returned to those communities so that they can properly take care of them,” said Logan Pappenfort, the director of tribal relations for Illinois and a citizen of the Peoria Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma.
The ABC7 Data Team examined thousands of federal documents to identify how many ancestors and sacred objects are at institutions across the country. To search all U.S. institutions with collections, click here.
Native American tribal members said this problem is more than a century old, but is finally getting the attention it deserves.
‘It is a moral obligation’
Pappenfort now lives on the land that his ancestors were forcibly removed from two hundred years ago.
“My people were removed in 1818,” he said. “I got back here in 2021.”
Pappenfort is the second director of tribal relations for the state of Illinois. In close collaboration with the Illinois State Museum, he’s working to correct centuries of injustice against Native Americans in the U.S. Pappenfort said repatriations from the Illinois State Museum are a priority, and he understands the process intimately.
It’s extremely hard when you visit an institution and you know that those ancestors are likely returning home… you have to put them back and reassure them that it will be alright
Logan Pappenfort, director of tribal relations for Illinois
Before Pappenfort took this job, he says he was on the other side of negotiations, working for the Peoria Tribe to put his ancestors at rest.
“It is a moral obligation as a native person to do what I can to move that needle and to do right by my ancestors and return them to where they need to be,” Pappenfort said.
Pappenfort acknowledged that the original law wasn’t written with a clear roadmap of how institutions and tribes should complete consultations together.
“It was, in many ways, toothless and in a lot of ways, I think probably the bare minimum that could have been done at the time,” Pappenfort said. “But I also appreciate it because it did give that avenue for tribal nations to at least engage with the conversation.”
The process of repatriation requires multiple consultations with tribes, often over months or even years. Pappenfort said while many of his Peoria Tribe ancestors have been repatriated from the Illinois State Museum collections, others are still in the process of being identified and returned home.
“It’s extremely hard when you visit an institution and you know that those ancestors are likely returning home, they’re returning to where they need to be soon, but at least until you get the logistical paperwork, you have to put them back and reassure them that it will be alright,” Pappenfort said.
Pappenfort recounts, “You’re left with this almost somber feeling as you drive away, that you know you’ve done everything you can, but there’s still so much work to be done.”
A civil rights issue
Nearly 35 years after NAGPRA became law, many institutions nationwide have been slow not only to identify the Native American, Native Alaskan, and Native Hawaiian ancestors and sacred objects in their possession, but also in returning them home.
Nationwide, more than 128,000 Native American ancestors and 4.5 million sacred objects have been identified in collections across museums, universities and government agencies, according to data from the National Parks Service.
Those numbers don’t include more than 90,000 ancestors and 700,000 associated funerary objects that have not yet been identified in collections.
“I’m pretty sure my ancestors from long ago did not bury their relatives thinking this was going to be the outcome,” said Stacy Laravie, a member of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska and the indigenization director for the National Association of Tribal Historic Preservation Officers (NATHPO), a nonprofit organization devoted to preserving indigenous cultures and identities throughout the United States.
Laravie stressed that NAGPRA and the return of ancestors and sacred items is, above all, a civil rights issue.
“These are not just material things that are sitting somewhere in a museum,” she said. “There’s still that dehumanization, and we have to explain why this is important.”
For the Illinois State Museum, Pappenfort stressed that nothing is off limits.
“I would say that we are completely open to discussing the affiliations with any of the ancestors in our collection,” he said.
According to the National Parks Service data, the Illinois State Museum has the most ancestors and sacred objects of any institution in the state – more than 7,000 ancestors, and 72,000 associated funerary objects and other sacred objects. Nearly 80% of that collection has not yet been identified.
Pappenfort says the numbers are so high, in part, because the museum serves as the repository for human remains in the state, and the land has a “great Native history” predating European expeditions in the 15th and 16th centuries.
“When you look at the archeological sites in Illinois, we have one that is absolutely unlike anything else, and that is Cahokia,” Pappenfort said.
According to the Cahokia Mounds State Historic Park website, Cahokia, which was located just across the Mississippi River from where St. Louis is today, was a metropolis in the 12th and 13th centuries-nearly 20,000 people at its peak and larger than London at the time.
“As a result, there is a large population of Native people, which led to a large amount of archeological excavations at the dawn of American archeology,” Pappenfort said. “This led to many ancestors being unearthed during that time.”
The new regulations do establish more ways to establish that cultural affiliation… There is another provision that allows if absolutely no determinations can be made, there is still an avenue for return
June Carpenter, Field Museum NAGPRA Director
Additionally, Pappenfort said that in the 1990s, institutions were able to say that an ancestor was “culturally unidentifiable” if there was no comprehensive documentation about who they were or where they were from.
However, with new regulations, Pappenfort said things are changing.
“In the 30 years afterwards, we understand that, of course, these people have descendants and these descendants are likely the contemporary tribes that we work with on these sites,” Pappenfort said. “And so one of the big shifts in NAGPRA has been not hiding behind that ‘culturally unidentifiable moniker’ and moving forward and doing that right thing, doing the moral thing and collaboratively working with tribal partners to return these ancestors to where they need to be.”
‘We kind of had a slow start.’
Other institutions acquired their collections through different means.
In 1893, historical records from that time show Native American ancestors and sacred objects were among the exhibits on display at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
After the event, those remains were not returned home, but donated or sold to the Chicago Field Museum, museum representatives told the I-Team.
According to the Field Museum, there are approximately 1,700 Native American ancestors in the custody of the institution. Of those, about 1,300 have not yet been affiliated with any tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations. A spokesperson for the museum emphasized that all of these individuals are available for repatriation, but those without affiliation still require consultation first.
June Carpenter, the Field Museum’s NAGPRA Director, is a member of the Osage Nation, and like Pappenfort, worked with her tribe to bring ancestors and sacred objects home before transitioning to her role at the Field Museum.
“I do this work as a way to try to honor and respect and represent my native community and culture,” Carpenter said.
She credits an update to NAGPRA that went into effect in January 2024 with expediting her work.
Under the new regulations, institutions that fall under NAGPRA cannot display Native American, Native Alaskan or Native Hawaiian ancestors or sacred items without permission of descendants, tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations. Institutions also now have 90-day deadlines to respond to repatriation requests.
“The new regulations do establish more ways to establish that cultural affiliation,” Carpenter said. “There is another provision that allows if absolutely no determinations can be made, there is still an avenue for return.”
Carpenter also said that many tribes are now working together to push for joint repatriation requests.
In compliance with those new requirements, many exhibits in the Field Museum’s Ancient Americas Hall, which encompasses the history of central and North America, including the Northwest Coast and Arctic, are now covered with murals, black boards, and butcher paper.
In some exhibits, entire sections have been removed as Carpenter said she and her staff are working with Native communities to consult about the sacred objects that were on display only a year ago.
“We may have covered more than we needed, but we need to engage in consultation with the potentially affiliated tribes before we can display those items,” Carpenter said.
In 2022, the Field Museum also opened its Native Voices exhibit, which was curated in partnership with Indigenous communities to allow them to tell the stories of their own objects and cultures.
“We can help to facilitate those stories, but they’re their stories,” Carpenter said. “They need to be the ones who are telling them.”
Carpenter hopes that someday she will “work herself out of a job.” She says every time tribal members come into the Field Museum to visit with their ancestors and sacred objects, she feels a sense of accomplishment.
“I think seeing your items in the museum collections, it’s difficult. It’s really difficult,” Carpenter said. “But at the same time, you know, it can be fulfilling in a way to be reconnected with those items.”
I see things moving and progressing just from where I know that we were, and I really feel hopeful that things are just going to keep getting better and better.
Stacy Laravie, NATHPO indigenization director
Laravie hopes that this work will help non-Native people understand that her ancestors and items sacred to her community are more than a museum exhibit.
“When people visit museums or hear our stories, they need to keep in mind where those histories come from,” Laravie said. “These came from real human beings, and some of these-the majority of these-items did not come to that museum in a good way. They came from a people that are very much alive and well. They are somebody’s grandmother, somebody’s grandfather.”
Laravie added that with the new regulations, she has hopes that institutions will take the requirements of NAGPRA more seriously.
“I see things moving and progressing just from where I know that we were, and I really feel hopeful that things are just going to keep getting better and better,” Laravie said.
Pappenfort at the Illinois State Museum hopes that this difficult work will make things better for the next generation of Native voices.
“We are righting wrongs that have been here for hundreds of years at this point,” Pappenfort said. “It’s not something that’s super easy to put into words, but it’s something that both grounds me and gives me strength.”
At home, Pappenfort has a three-year-old, growing up on the land that his ancestors once inhabited.
“I think about how powerful that is, and the fact that I get to raise my daughter, a Peoria [Tribe] citizen, in her homeland, and that’s something my people haven’t had for centuries.”
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Illinois
Ask the Meteorologist: How one storm produced a violent tornado, 6-inch hail in Illinois
One storm near Kankakee, Illinois, produced a large, destructive tornado Tuesday. It also produced what will likely go down as a record hailstone for the state.
It looked like something out of a weather textbook. Let’s show you the moments we knew destruction was happening.
The hail
We’ll start with the hail.
I was getting ready for bed around 7 p.m. EDT Tuesday (since I’m up before 2 a.m.), and I checked my radar app.
The image below is what I saw.
A textbook supercell (rotating thunderstorm) was moving south of Chicago, but there was a unique feature that caught my attention.
I’ve highlighted that in the image. It doesn’t look like much, but it’s a huge teller of large hail. It’s called a TBSS, or three body scatter spike.
As the radar beam hits hailstones, it gets scattered three different times. That results in the appendage you see on radar extending off the storm.
Moments later, reports came in of hail that was baseball-sized and larger. One such report could break the state’s record for largest hailstone.
The report suggested a hailstone of 6 inches in diameter.
According to NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information, this would break Illinois’ previous record for largest hailstone – and by a long shot.
The largest hailstone on record in the U.S. happened in South Dakota, and it was measured at 8 inches in diameter.
Insane!
The tornado
While it takes time to assess the damage and come up with a rating, there was zero doubt that a tornado spawned from this storm too.
It’s common during tornadoes for there to be hail on the northern flank of the storm. It’s called the “hail core,” and it is a result of rapidly rising air.
In terms of the actual tornado, it became evident that one was active when looking at radar.
A hook echo is commonly seen in supercell thunderstorms. It’s an indication of warm air flowing into the storm, while cold air flows down its rear flank. This is your rotational aspect of the storm that extends down to the surface.
The air spins rapidly and – eventually – it picks up debris. This can show up as a ball on the southern tip of the storm.
Every bit of this storm was something out of a meteorology textbook – a marvel for those who admire the atmosphere, but a nightmare for those at ground level enduring its fury.
Illinois
Central Illinois could see tornadoes tonight. How to sign up for alerts
Tornadoes rip through Michigan just hours after deadly tornado in Oklahoma
Destructive tornadoes wreaked havoc hundreds of miles apart from March 5-6, as severe storms roared through the middle of the U.S.
Central Illinois is expected to be hit with tornado alerts Tuesday afternoon and evening, with the highest risk between 6 and 10 p.m.
The National Weather Service announced on X that a Tornado Watch is 95% likely in east-central Illinois through 4:30 p.m. The potential storm is forecast to reach a peak intensity of 2-3.5 inch hail, 55-70 mph winds and 120-150 mph tornadoes.
Here’s how to stay updated on weather alerts in your area.
How to sign up for weather alerts in Illinois
Most residents throughout Illinois will automatically receive Wireless Emergency Alerts on their mobile phones from the NWS, warning them of potentially dangerous weather in their area. These will look like normal text messages and will typically show the type and time of the alert, any action you should take and the agency issuing the alert.
Other sources of information include NOAA Weather Radio, the Storm Prediction Center’s live map of nationwide tornado watches and the Emergency Alert System on radio and TV broadcasts.
Residents can also sign up for text alerts through their local county emergency management agency, such as NotifyChicago.
Sign up for USA TODAY Network weather alerts
Illinois residents can sign up for alerts from the USA TODAY Network to receive texts about current storms and weather events in their area.
Tornado watch vs warning
The NWS explains the difference between the varying tornado alert terminology on its website.
A tornado watch means tornadoes are possible in the area, while a tornado warning means a twister has been sighted or indicated by the weather radar. A tornado emergency is the most severe alert, meaning a violent tornado has touched down in the area.
The website uses the phrases “be prepared,” “take action” and “seek shelter immediately” to summarize the three alerts.
Central Illinois weather radar
Chicago weather radar
Illinois
Record-high Illinois university workers opt-out of pensions
A record share of Illinois university employees opt-out of pensions for a 401(k)-style plan, lawmakers should give other state employees the same flexibility.
More retired state university employees are opting for a 401(k)-style plan rather than a traditional pension than ever before. They want more choice and flexibility in their retirement benefits. Lawmakers should expand the option to all state workers.
SURS published its annual actuarial evaluation for 2025. With only 47.1% of what they need to pay retirees, they are the second-highest funded state pension in Illinois, beaten only by the Teachers Retirement System with a funded ratio of 47.8%. That shouldn’t be a source of pride, however.
Experts say 60% funded is dangerous and 40% funded or lower is past the point of no return, so 47% is far too low. Illinois’ pension crisis is the worst in the nation.
But the system stands apart because it offers a way out for employees who don’t want to be stuck in the outdated, one-size-fits-all pension model or a pension system that might become insolvent.
SURS gained 1,314 new employees last year, 725 to the traditional and portable pension plans while 589 opted into the Retirement Savings Plan. Nearly half, 45%, of all new members joining are opting out of a traditional pension.
The numbers show 18.2% of all active employees opted into the Retirement Savings Plan, the highest ever since it started in 1998.
It’s a defined contribution plan, similar to a 401(k), rather than the typical defined benefit pension available in most state retirement systems. That’s up from 17.7% of active employees in 2024.
Actuaries expect this pattern to continue, projecting a growing share of active employees opting into the plan until it reaches around 30% of all active employees who are on a defined contribution plan.
Academic hires such as professors are expected to opt-in to the Retirement Savings Plan at a rate of 45%. Non-academic employees such as administrators are expected to opt-in at a rate closer to 25%.
In both cases, employees seem to enjoy getting more choice over how to invest their retirement benefits, but the difference highlights why this option is so important. Currently state university employees are the only ones with this defined contribution option.
Traditional pensions for new workers at Illinois universities have a vesting period of 10 years. That means if someone leaves their job or the state before they’ve completed 10 years, they won’t be eligible for anything but a refund of their contributions. Not the state match or any interest they could’ve accrued while working.
Early-career academics face higher job uncertainty and are more likely to change institutions than later-career or tenured faculty. Under higher expected mobility, defined contributions are more attractive because you don’t have to worry about losing out on retirement benefits because the vesting period is much lower at 5 years.
Mobility isn’t only important in academia. The ability to change careers is important for a variety of jobs today. Wage and salary workers in the public sector today have a median tenure of 6.2 years. That number is likely skewed because 3-in-4 government workers are aged 35 and older.
Younger workers tend to stay in jobs for shorter periods. Across the public and private sectors, the median tenure of workers 55 to 64 is 9.6 years and 2.7 years for workers 25 to 34. Both figures are far below the 10-year vesting requirement for most Illinois pensions.
There’s no reason to limit flexibility and control to only employees under the State University Retirement System. Senate Bill 3389 offers a step in the right direction by allowing downstate teachers to opt-in to a similar Retirement Savings Plan. But that is only the start.
Illinois should expand this option to all five of its state pension systems so that employees can choose to have more control over their retirement finances. Similar plans have been enacted in Rhode Island and Tennessee, which has one of the best-funded pension systems in the country. A defined contribution plan offers more freedom and security for retirees.
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