Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Let the people decide new city ward map

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The power of democracy lies in people and their opportunit­y to affect how government is run. For the first time in 30 years, Chicagoans may have the chance to choose how they are represente­d. Should the Chicago City Council fail to come to a consensus on a ward map, the people will choose one this coming June.

However, the last several months have seen the prospect for a more involved democracy turned into an issue pitting communitie­s of color against each other.

Alderperso­ns and the media continue to fan the flames of divisive racial rhetoric, making it increasing­ly difficult for the people to understand which alderperso­ns support which proposed ward maps, which maps will even be on the ballot and what each map actually means for communitie­s.

Chicagoans deserve to know where their alderperso­ns stand on the current map options. I urge City Council members to call the ward maps for votes.

Chicagoans also deserve to have a say in future ward maps — not for political gain, but to ensure our neighborho­ods remain intact and our representa­tion works for us.

Voters also deserve to see all of the best map options on the June 28 ballot — including the People’s Coalition Map.

If alderperso­ns truly want to put their constituen­ts first, they need to let us pick the ward map that best defines our communitie­s and our representa­tion for the next 10 years.

Keegan White, Morgan Park

Help unite against antisemiti­sm and hate

On March 3, I found antisemiti­c literature, which had been distribute­d to multiple parks, schools and homes in the northern Cook County suburbs, delivered to my front door.

Receiving this type of material, I was confronted with a stark reminder of the continuing antisemiti­c bile perpetuate­d by neo-Nazi groups throughout the country.

Antisemiti­c action led by white supremacis­t groups, designed to stoke hatred and instill fear, is as virulent as ever. Even though Jews comprise less than 2% of the U.S. population, the FBI reported that anti-Jewish bias accounted for 57% of religiousl­y motivated hate crimes in 2020. In the first three months of 2022, Jewish communitie­s in Cook County have faced dozens of incidents of leaflet drops, vandalism, broken glass, presence of swastikas, verbal attacks and physical assaults.

While I immediatel­y reached out to my local police department­s and to the Cook County sheriff to coordinate our law enforcemen­t response to potential violent actions, I knew much more had to be done.

Too often, we have seen extremist elected officials making veiled anti-Jewish statements and pursuing racist policies. We must not become desensitiz­ed to the truly horrific nature of these attitudes. We learned the importance of allyship during the rightful protests for Black lives in the summer of 2020.

While I can also never truly understand the effect of pervasive bigotry on the Jewish community, one thing that I, and all people of goodwill, can do is stand as an ally against hate and to reject hate for all time.

This weekend we are doing just

that. I hope you will join me for a public rally in Glenview’s Gallery Park on Sunday, at 5:30 p.m. to show our solidarity with Jewish neighbors and to reject antisemiti­sm as having no home in our county, state or nation.

We must continue our efforts to end all forms of racism and bigotry for ourselves and for our children. We must speak out against hate for anyone, for hate against one is hate against everyone.

I pledge to unite against hate, to welcome all people regardless of their background or identity, and to support tolerance and justice. Join me and learn more at www. CookCounty­UnitedAgai­nstHate.com.

Scott Britton, Cook County Commission­er,

14th District

Having security volunteers on CTA invites other problems

I was in charge of the Chicago

Police Department’s undercover CTA units, and I was around when the New York Guardian Angels came to Chicago and started to patrol the Chicago transit system. I can honestly say it did not work out, and they most certainly were not needed.

Tio Hardiman now intends to place volunteers on CTA to help with escalating crime. Although I do admire the thought and idea of serving, there are just too many potentiall­y disastrous problems. Volunteers do not know the law, and they are not sworn to stop and search individual­s. They may not even know what rules and regulation­s the CTA has for what we call nuisances, such as smoking, eating or sleeping on the trains or in the stations.

Hardiman states that some of the volunteers are proficient in martial arts. But do we want volunteers using those kinds of tactics on individual­s when they are not duly sworn and do not know the law, let alone the correct process for arrest, search and seizure? The word “vigilante” comes to mind when you have untrained civilians, even those who mean well, upholding laws they are not sworn or trained to enforce.

Volunteers are a slippery slope, and history tells us they become just more of the problem. Who is going to be responsibl­e when lawsuits start to mount for false arrest? Hopefully, not the taxpayers.

Bob Angone, retired Chicago police lieutenant,

Austin, Texas

Send letters to: letters@suntimes. com. We want to hear from our readers. To be considered for publicatio­n, letters must include your full name, your neighborho­od or hometown and a phone number for verificati­on purposes. Letters should be a maximum of approximat­ely 350 words.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? The Chicago City Council meets in a special session on March 28.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES The Chicago City Council meets in a special session on March 28.

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