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AFSCME
Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
4:35pm
Tue Jul 10, 2012

Downstate Lawmakers, Union Work To Undo Prison Closures

AFSCME Council 31, the state’s main public employees union, and a group of state lawmakers vowed today to undo Gov. Pat Quinn's closing of corrections facilities, including Dwight women’s prison and Tamms supermax prison, during the fall veto session.

Overriding Quinn’s decision requires 3/5 approval from the House and Senate. Any vote would take place in November – after the scheduled closings of Tamms and Dwight.

With that timetable in mind, Henry Bayer, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, said in a press conference call today that the union might take legal action. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
2:42pm
Tue Jun 26, 2012

Controversial Tamms Closure A Triumph For Prison Reformers

Governor Pat Quinn’s decision to shutter Tamms Correctional Center, effective August 31, in order to save money is a landmark victory for prison reform advocates who spent a decade fighting to close the facility that has held inmates for years in 24-hour solitary confinement.

“We are ending the era of solitary confinement,” says Laurie Jo Reynolds, an organizer with the Tamms Year Ten coalition, which ran a legislative campaign to close the prison. Reynolds noted that other states, such as Mississippi and Maine, also recently shut down solitary confinement facilities and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) conducted a Senate hearing last week on solitary confinement.

But Quinn’s unilateral action goes against the wishes of the Illinois General Assembly. It also further alienates the governor from AFSCME Council 31, the union representing many of the state's public employees. The union is steadfastly against the closings and other Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) shut downs, even though the governor's office says the moves will result in no public employee layoffs. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
5:16pm
Fri Jun 1, 2012

State Budget Keeps Facilities Open

Amid the focus in Springfield yesterday on pensions, the General Assembly passed its entire budget for fiscal year 2013, which begins July 1. The package delivered an expected rebuke of Gov. Pat Quinn’s plan to close multiple state facilities.

The Tamms supermax prison, a women’s prison in Dwight, the mental health center in Tinley Park, and developmentally disabled centers in Jacksonville and Centralia all received funding to stay open, along with smaller state facilities Quinn wants closed.

However, the governor may opt to close the mental health and developmentally disabled centers, and Tamms will no longer be a supermax facility. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
3:37pm
Thu May 31, 2012

Pension Bill Expected To Face Lawsuit

State legislative leaders may have worked out a historic overhaul to the state public employee pension system, but the courts could, in the end, decide the issue.

A coalition of labor unions is poised to file a lawsuit if the pension bill that sailed through the House Executive Committee this morning eventually clears both chambers and is signed into law by Gov. Pat Quinn.

“We certainly hope it won’t come to that but we are prepared if it does,” says Anders Lindall, spokesman AFSCME Council 31, which represents public employees. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
6:09pm
Thu Feb 16, 2012

Mental Health Employees Receive First Layoff Notices

On Monday, we reported that patients of city mental health clinics received a letter stating when six of the city’s 12 mental health clinics will close and what might happen to their care.

The Chicago Department of Public Health has also sent initial layoff notices to clinic employees – including some of the therapists that are supposed to help patients transition through the clinic closings.

Read more »