Chicago Sun-Times

When we draw new lines for legislativ­e districts in Illinois, everybody will be at the table

- BY ILLINOIS SENATE PRESIDENT DON HARMON Illinois Senate President Don Harmon is a Democrat from Oak Park.

Thirty years ago, my hometown of Oak Park was diced up six ways to Sunday in a winner-takes-all redistrict­ing process that left the community feeling disenfranc­hised and diluted.

Our singular, strong voice in Springfiel­d was gone, replaced by a half-dozen legislativ­e districts that, for the next decade, would send us scurrying in different directions to be heard.

Twenty years ago, it looked like we were destined to continue the same fate. I helped lead the fight against such an outcome, pushing back against any plan that would have sacrificed the best interests of our community in favor of unseen political forces. Anywhere two or more people gathered to talk about redistrict­ing, we showed up to be heard. Our efforts worked and a new district was created, encompassi­ng most of Oak Park as well as parts of Chicago’s West Side and other near western suburbs.

We had won a seat at the table.

I am honored to now serve the people of Oak Park in the Senate and humbled to lead the chamber as president. So it is fitting that the lessons learned during that experience many years ago will inform how the Senate approaches the redistrict­ing process this year. We will be guided by the knowledge that the best way to guarantee fairness is to create more room at the table, and the understand­ing that the only way to truly reflect the great diversity of Illinois is to give a megaphone to those who have been silenced.

Led by Sen. Omar Aquino, who will chair the Senate Redistrict­ing Committee, and Sen. Elgie Sims, who will serve as vicechair, the Senate will conduct as many as two dozen regional hearings in the coming weeks, allowing for input from stakeholde­rs in all of Illinois’ 102 counties.

Aquino and Sims are steadfast public servants who have long worked to lift the voices of their communitie­s, always pushing for equity, inclusion and justice. I know they will continue to embrace those principles throughout this process, as will other members of this diverse committee who span the ethnic and geographic breadth and depth of Illinois.

Inclusion will be at the center of these proceeding­s, and for the first time in Illinois, any citizen who wishes to propose a new legislativ­e map will be able to construct one online.

Though this year presents unique challenges, from navigating public meetings

during a global pandemic to delays in data from the U.S Census Bureau, we will not shy away from our constituti­onal duty to ensure that communitie­s receive fair and equal representa­tion. Black, Latinx, Asian and other minority communitie­s have been marginaliz­ed and silenced for far too long, left to pay the ultimate price.

We must also embrace the wide geographic diversity of our state, unified by the richness wrought from our varied experience­s.

We are dedicated to fulfilling our responsibi­lity to approve a new map through a system that gives the people of Illinois a strong say in the process. Failure to meet deadlines would upend the democratic process and turn mapmaking over to a small commission of appointed political insiders and, as

history has shown, ultimately yield a more partisan result. That would be a disservice to our citizens and counter to everyone’s stated goals.

As I recall my fight to win fair representa­tion for Oak Park all those years ago, I can think of no more frustratin­g outcome than to have the will of my community ignored in favor of backroom political deals. But that is what is at stake for communitie­s across Illinois if legislator­s do not forge ahead in a deliberate manner, placing people ahead of politics.

We must not let history repeat itself. We must make room at the table.

 ?? AP ?? “Inclusion will be at the center of these proceeding­s,” writes Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, “and for the first time, any citizen who wishes to propose a new legislativ­e map will be able to construct one online.”
AP “Inclusion will be at the center of these proceeding­s,” writes Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, “and for the first time, any citizen who wishes to propose a new legislativ­e map will be able to construct one online.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States