Chicago Sun-Times

It’s ‘ gut- check time’ for lawmakers on legislatio­n to curb sexual harassment

- MADELEINE DOUBEK @ mdoubek Madeleine Doubek is policy & civic engagement director for the Better Government Associatio­n.

It was a surreal moment last week to sit in an ornate Illinois Senate hearing room with a group of young men from a championsh­ip Chicago high school football team and listen, with them, to two women describe in excruciati­ng detail having been raped and repeatedly sexually abused back in high school by their club volleyball coach.

Everyone in the room was riveted to their words.

The coach, Rick Butler, wasn’t present. He repeatedly has denied the claims made by the women. The statute of limitation­s for criminal charges ran out before they came forward. Still, the women repeat their story, again and again.

“I want to stop it from happening to another child,” Julie Romias told lawmakers serving on a sexual harassment and discrimina­tion task force last week.

Two such task forces were created in the wake of the # MeToo movement and in the wake of allegation­s that some people who work in Illinois government and politics behave inappropri­ately. The movement also laid bare the fact that Illinois had no legislativ­e inspector general investigat­ing complaints about the Legislatur­e for three years. The office sat vacant because legislativ­e leaders did not appoint anyone to fill the post.

Now, with less than two weeks left in the spring session, will lawmakers fix the broken process within their own walls and throughout Illinois?

Members of the Senate task force cochaired by state Sen. Melinda Bush, a Grayslake Democrat, are working on a proposal to beef up the Illinois Human Rights Act. Two other bills, drafted by state Sens. Karen McConnaugh­ay, a St. Charles Republican, and Cristina Castro, an Elgin Democrat, attempt to fix the office of legislativ­e inspector general and the legislativ­e ethics commission.

The sexual harassment omnibus legislatio­n Bush introduced expands the definition of harassment and extends discrimina­tion protection­s to independen­t contractor­s. It would give workers two years, rather than six months, to file charges and sue. It would require reporting of settlement­s from large public contractor­s and employers, and prohibit non- disclosure agreements unless the victim wants one. Among other things, it also requires a panic- button system for hotel workers and mandates that anyone who works in youth sports be required to report abuse suspicions to the Department of Children and Family Services.

McConnaugh­ay and Castro still are working on their legislatio­n, but McConnaugh­ay noted temporary Legislativ­e Inspector General Julie Porter has agreed to stay until year’s end to finish investigat­ing complaints from the period the office was vacant. The commission has agreed to hire a full- time LIG who would conduct ethics and sexual harassment training for government workers, increase the response time to complainan­ts and create a more robust website, she said. The commission­ers, all of whom are lawmakers appointed by their legislativ­e leaders, also have agreed to post meeting minutes.

All those changes represent progress, but they don’t yet have the force of law. Castro and McConnaugh­ay hope to push legislatio­n through the Senate and House that would codify that and more:

The LIG should not have to secure an OK from the commission before launching any investigat­ion or issuing a subpoena.

The LIG should publish summaries of any investigat­ion in which a violation is found to have occurred so the public knows ethics standards are being upheld and bad behavior is being punished. Castro’s working bill would require a supermajor­ity vote to quash publicatio­n of such a summary report.

Commission­ers would be required to recuse themselves and be replaced if they are involved in any investigat­ion.

A process for replacing the LIG within 30 days of a vacancy occurring would be set.

These are critically needed attempts to bring accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, safety and justice to Illinois and to the halls of the Capitol.

But, in the next two weeks, will the women and men of the Illinois House and Senate get the chance to debate and vote on changes that have the effect of policing of lawmakers and diluting some of the legislativ­e leaders’ control?

“We need to get something done so that victims and the accused have better protection and so that there’s a fair and timely process,” Bush said.

“I feel a sense of urgency,” McConnaugh­ay said. “This is a women’s issue. How is it over 200 women ( who work in the Capitol) signed a # MeToo letter and we’re having real difficulty coming up with legislatio­n and getting it done?”

How indeed. Will lawmakers put protection­s and accountabi­lity in place for themselves, the women who testified last week and countless others in Illinois?

It’s gut- check time.

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