Chicago Sun-Times

For 5th time, aldermen boost harassment ordinance

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Is there no end to the number of times Chicago aldermen will move to inoculate themselves from a sexual harassment scandal? Apparently not. At least not yet. On Wednesday, the City Council’s Committee on Human Relations added sexual harassment to the statement of city policy that is included in the city’s Human Rights ordinance.

“Although sexual harassment has been prohibited under the ordinance since 1990, acknowledg­ing it in this manner affirms the City Council’s position . . . that sexual harassment is a major threat to the rights of city residents [ just] as prejudice, intoleranc­e, bigotry and discrimina­tion, and will not be toler- ated in the city of Chicago,” Mona Noriega, chairman of the city’s Commission on Human Relations, told aldermen.

“In making this amendment, the city of of Chicago will continue to show its leadership on significan­t civil rights issues and will demonstrat­e its commitment to ending all forms of bias and discrimina­tion.”

Noriega noted that sexual harassment in the workplace is “not always easy to spot.” Nor is it often reported — at least not to the Commission on Human Relations charged with fielding and investigat­ing complaints.

Last year, the commission received only 45 complaints alleging sexual discrimina­tion. Only half alleged “some form of sexual harassment,” Noriega said.

To reverse “under- reporting” and encourage more victims to come forward, the commission is now using print and social media to “take advantage of the increased attention to the issue of sexual harassment” touched off by the # MeToo campaign, Noriega said.

It was the fifth time in six months that City Hall had moved to insulate aldermen in advance.

Aldermen have made sexual harassment training mandatory for all city employees, including aldermen and citywide elected officials.

They have added themselves and other elected officials, including the mayor, to rules barring sexual harassment of other city officials or employees and broadened the protective umbrella to cover lobbyists, constituen­ts, businesses and developers.

Most recently, they have moved to require all companies seeking city business “on or after June 30” to have a comprehens­ive sexual harassment policy in place and provide “legal recourse” for sexual harassment victims.

The latest change was sponsored by Ald. Marge Laurino ( 39th), the City Council’s president pro tem, as were many of the earlier changes.

Laurino stressed that she knows of no shoe that’s about to drop. “I’m not anticipati­ng any major scandals here . . . By being proactive, we send out a good message,” Laurino told her colleagues.

 ??  ?? Ald. Marge Laurino
Ald. Marge Laurino

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