Illinois
(Under)counting on Illinois
I stood in entrance of the courtyard constructing on Jonquil Terrace, with my official U.S. Census Bureau bag slung over my shoulder. I had 4 addresses to go to inside — 4 addresses that hadn’t returned a Census kind — however I used to be confronted with an impediment: a locked gate. Each constructing in Chicago is required to publish the identify and variety of the supervisor on the facet. I known as. A lady answered. I defined my dilemma.
“Why do you could get inside?” she requested.
“I’m with the Census Bureau. I would like to seek out individuals who didn’t mail again their types.”
“Effectively, perhaps they didn’t need to take part!” she shouted.
“Everybody has to take part within the Census,” I shouted again. “It’s within the Structure!”
Finally, I adopted a resident by way of the gate. To my nice fortune, the owner was so slummy that the locks on all of the entrance doorways had been damaged, so I may stroll inside and trouble the residents head to head. Don’t choose me. I used to be doing my Constitutional responsibility. Nonetheless, it was one other instance of the challenges that confronted city enumerators. Not like our counterparts within the suburbs and the countryside, we couldn’t knock straight on the doorways of our addresses. We needed to sneak in, or ring doorbells. Typically, even that was not possible, due to these confounding digital buzzers that record the residents’ names, as a substitute of unit numbers.
That’s why I wasn’t shocked by the information that Illinois was undercounted within the 2020 Census, by someplace between 65,000 and 440,000 individuals. The unique Census numbers advised that Illinois had misplaced 18,000 individuals throughout the 2010s. It seems we truly gained individuals. Gov. J.B. Pritzker is taking all of the credit score, though he was governor for under a 12 months earlier than the Census was taken.
From my very own expertise as an enumerator, I’m positive the Census Bureau missed much more individuals than that. The aim of the Census is making certain the truthful distribution of energy and sources. Engaged on the Census is a lesson in how the individuals most in want of energy and sources are the individuals almost certainly to get omitted.
Immigrants, for one. My Spanish was simply ok to information Mexicans and Guatemalans by way of the questionnaire. Not all immigrants converse Spanish, although. There was an outdated lady on Lunt Avenue who gave the impression to be from an Japanese European nation. I couldn’t perceive her and she or he couldn’t perceive me, so she shut the door in my face. Senior residents had been afraid to open their doorways due to COVID.
Renters may be a problem. Wealthy individuals transfer round so much lower than poor individuals, since they personal their very own properties. Our job was to learn how many individuals had been residing at an handle on April 1, Census Day. COVID delayed the mission, so we labored into October. That meant we had been making an attempt to seek out individuals who had moved six months earlier. Most administration corporations shared details about their tenants. There was one, although, whose brokers hung up on me each time I known as. I lastly requested the alderwoman’s workplace to intercede. She wished everybody in her ward counted. The owner wished renovation permits. After a telephone name from the ward workplace, we began getting the numbers we wanted. That’s how Chicago works.
Working each side of Howard Road confirmed me one more reason the Census reinforces the inequities it’s presupposed to treatment. The white, skilled, homeowning residents of Evanston had been way more cooperative than the Black, brown, working-class immigrants of Rogers Park. There was that man on Asbury Road who threatened to kick my ass if I didn’t get the f*ck away from his door and hold strolling, however most Evanstonians not solely gave me their private info, they gave me their neighbors’ info, if I wanted it. They thanked me for my service, and supplied me bottled water. These individuals trusted the federal government. They believed within the system, as a result of the system labored for them. In Rogers Park, individuals feared the federal government. If I flashed my federal badge, they normally gave me their private particulars, however hardly ever would they share their neighbors’. Finally, I began counting individuals even when they refused to speak to me. I’d seen an individual within the dwelling, proper?
(Donald Trump was nonetheless president throughout the 2020 Census. His administration tried to incorporate a citizenship query, however was thwarted by the Supreme Courtroom. We requested about nationwide origin, however we by no means requested whether or not individuals had been residents, or whether or not they had been within the nation legally. Our job was to rely each individual within the nation, irrespective of why they had been right here. Nonetheless, Trump was identified to be hostile to [non-white] foreigners, so he might have frightened some immigrants out of taking part.)
I’m glad the Census corrected the misperception that Illinois misplaced inhabitants. It’s a pleasant speaking level for the state, however sadly, the post-Census survey won’t change our official numbers, or carry us extra federal cash. We had been one among six states with a major undercount. As I discovered after I went door to door, we’re a hard-to-count state. And that’s simply going to be our robust luck for the subsequent ten years.
Associated Content material
Illinois
Legislature approves bill to prioritize family members in foster care; heads to Pritzker's desk
SPRINGFIELD — A bill soon heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk would direct foster care officials in Illinois to prioritize placing children with relatives.
The House voted unanimously on Monday to pass the Kindship in Demand Act, or KIND Act. House Bill 4781 puts an obligation on the Department of Children and Family Services to use a “kin-first approach” when placing children in foster care settings. Lawmakers and advocates said it’s better for children to be placed with a family member or another person close to the child when possible.
“If we can stabilize 10 or 12 kids, we’re going to change somebody’s community,” Rep. Marcus Evans, D-Chicago, told the House Adoption and Child Welfare Committee on Sunday.
Pritzker previously voiced support for the idea at a news conference in December.
The approach ultimately will allow the state more access to federal funds, Nora Collins-Mandeville from the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois told the committee Sunday. Currently, the state reimburses family members for care costs, but once they become certified under the new bill, the state can get more federal funding to cover those expenses.
Like most other state agencies, DCFS faced challenges during a two-year budget impasse that ended in 2017 and strained the system’s funding and ability to promptly place children in care settings.
The Pritzker administration has ramped up funding for the agency, but former DCFS director Marc Smith was found by a Cook County judge in contempt of court multiple times in 2022 for failing to find adequate placements for foster care children, some of whom were residing in psychiatric hospitals beyond medical need. An appellate court later vacated the contempt citations.
Rep. Steve Reick, R-Woodstock, said Monday that state lawmakers and DCFS’ new director, Heidi Mueller, have taken a different approach in recent years.
“I don’t think we would’ve seen this two years ago because there’s a new way of looking at child welfare,” he said.
Nearly 10,000 children in DCFS care live with family members, but more than 60% of those families are not eligible for monthly foster care payments, clothing vouchers, or foster care support groups, according to the ACLU.
Kin-first foster systems have decreased risk of abuse and give a higher chance of achieving permanency, according to Casey Family Programs – the nation’s largest foundation focused on foster care.
DCFS reduced the number of children and young adults in its care from 50,000 in 1995 to 16,000 in 2023. The number, however, has risen in the past year to 18,000.
Illinois’ foster care system ranked in the bottom third of states in 2019 for children placed in permanent homes, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Between 2017 and 2021, the number of children who were placed in a permanent home decreased by 7.8%, according to the 2021 Child Welfare Outcomes Report to Congress.
“We know that placing youth in the child welfare system with relatives lessens the trauma associated with family separation, reduces the number of times a child is moved, enhances permanency options if youth cannot be reunified, results in higher placement satisfaction for youth in care, and delivers better social, behavioral, mental health, and educational outcomes for youth than when they are placed in non-kin foster care,” Collins-Mandeville said in a statement.
Under the KIND Act, there would also be different criminal background criteria for relatives and foster parents. The federal government allows DCFS to waive “non-safety-related licensing” for relative caregivers on a case-by-case basis. Relatives would be subject to a personal analysis assessing their criminal record and its potential impact on the child. The bill would allow DCFS to consider, for example, the overrepresentation of minorities in the prison system, especially for minor drug felonies.
Courts would also have a larger role in family-finding efforts like monitoring whether DCFS complies with notifying relatives that a child has been removed from its parents’ custody within 30 days.
Amalia Huot-Marchand is a graduate student in journalism with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and a Fellow in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of print and broadcast outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.
Illinois
Tiffany Henyard misses Thornton Township and Dolton, Illinois meetings on same day
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Illinois
Illinois Congressman recalls Jan. 6 attack 4 years later as local defendants seek pardons from Trump
CHICAGO (WLS) — Historically, the date presidential elections are certified are mundane. That is, until four years ago, when it meant certifying a loss that the 45th president falsely claims did not happen.
It is an image now burned into American history: Thousands of armed, flag-wielding Donald Trump supporters swarming and scaling the scaffolding of the United States Capitol, beckoned there by the then-president.
ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch
As the mob shattered the windows and stormed the halls of Congress, U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider hid with colleagues on the gallery floor, readying a gas mask.
Four years to the day, Congress passed through steel security gates and returned to session Monday to again execute that exact same process. This time, it was to certify President-elect Trump’s return to the White House.
“We always need to remember this day for the fragility of our democracy,” Rep. Schneider, D-Illinois, told the I-Team.
In the largest investigation in Department of Justice history, nearly 1600 Americans have been convicted of crimes connected to the Capitol insurrection. More than 600 have faced charges for assault or interfering with law enforcement; 53 of those charged traveled to the Capitol from Illinois.
Trump himself faced federal charges for conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election.
With his 2024 reelection now certified by the candidate he defeated and the federal charges brought against the former president dropped, Trump has promised sweeping pardons for the convicted insurrectionists he has repeatedly referred to as patriots.
Gil Soffer, a former federal prosecutor and ABC7’s chief legal analyst, explained what that could mean.
“The pardons, they don’t expunge the record. They don’t make it as if people who have already been convicted were never convicted, but it restores their civil liberties. As to the vast number of people who could still be charged if he, if he offers a walk, a broad pardon, they can never be charged,” Soffer told the I-Team.
There are dozens of Illinois defendants, convicted of January 6-related crimes, hoping for pardons. Some who have not been charged yet are hoping the DOJ will drop their case altogether.
Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.
-
Health1 week ago
New Year life lessons from country star: 'Never forget where you came from'
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta’s ‘software update issue’ has been breaking Quest headsets for weeks
-
Business6 days ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Culture6 days ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports6 days ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics5 days ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics4 days ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics3 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?