Chicago Sun-Times

Activists canvass in Little Village as Election Day nears

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_ Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not- for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

Immigrant leaders walked the streets of Little Village on Monday morning leaving fliers on doorsteps in a last- ditch effort to encourage people to vote ahead of Election Day.

Jocelyn Aranda, a fellow with Enlace Chicago, said the goal is to remind residents about Tuesday’s election by dropping off educationa­l literature. Most people “have been pretty receptive on the idea of voting,” Aranda said.

“We are not doing this for us at the end of the day,” she added. “We are doing it for the residents that don’t have direct access to informatio­n or internet. We are doing it for the community.”

About a dozen volunteers with Enlace Chicago and the Illinois Coalition for Immigratio­n and Refugee Rights brought yard signs to hand out to residents who wanted them, and hung fliers on doorknobs of those who weren’t home.

“We see this year as being absolutely unpreceden­ted as why it’s really important for folks to get out and actually make their voices heard,” said Veronica Castro, deputy director of Illinois Coalition for Immigratio­n and Refugee Rights. “People are hearing the message that if they don’t participat­e, our issues are going to get left on the sideline.”

Castro said it’s been difficult to court the Latino vote in previous elections because campaigns rarely put much effort into mobilizing the base. That voting bloc is often taken for granted, she said.

“People aren’t talking to us, they are overlookin­g us,” Castro said. “We are simply not invested in and if you are not talking to Latinos about things they care about, you are not giving them a reason to come out and vote.”

Canvassers — and their fliers — made the case for approving the graduated income tax amendment, which also is on the ballot. It would change Illinois’ current system, in which everyone pays the same income tax rate, regardless of income. People in higher income brackets would be taxed at a higher rate than those in lower income brackets.

“This is an opportunit­y to have the rich tax at a fairer rate,” Castro said. “It’s not fair that our folks are paying the same rate of taxes, in terms of percentage­s, as billionair­es.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? ICIRR Deputy Director Veronica Castro answers questions Monday during a lit drop to get residents to go out and vote on South Harding Ave in Little Village.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ICIRR Deputy Director Veronica Castro answers questions Monday during a lit drop to get residents to go out and vote on South Harding Ave in Little Village.
 ??  ?? Brandon Lee hangs voting literature on South Harding Avenue in Little Village on Monday.
Brandon Lee hangs voting literature on South Harding Avenue in Little Village on Monday.

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