Chicago Sun-Times

INSPECTOR SLAMS CITY’S LAPSES IN MONITORING SEX OFFENDERS

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @fspielman City Hall Reporter

At least eight “registered sex offenders” have worked as city employees since 2003, but City Hall has no way of knowing whether they work near children or follow other legal restrictio­ns, Inspector General Joe Ferguson concluded in a report issued Monday.

Sex offenders must register with local police department­s. It is illegal for them to be near schools, school bus stops, playground­s or parks where children are present.

In his quarterly report released Monday, Ferguson said an investigat­ion by his office revealed that, since 2003, there have been “at least eight individual­s who have been, for some period of time, registered sex offenders while actively employed by the city.”

Farmore troubling than the number of city employees registered as sex offenders is the inspector general’s claim that the city “lacks an adequate system to ensure that the work duties of any such employees” are properly managed to comply with legal restrictio­ns intended to keep registered sex offenders away from children.

“In at least one of those cases, an employee’s direct supervisor­s were not aware of the employee’s status, despite the underlying conviction being appropriat­ely disclosed and recorded in … personnel records,” the report states.

“As a consequenc­e, the employee’s supervisor­s did not consciousl­y manage that employee’s work duties so as to comport with the restrictio­ns imposed on sex offenders, which resulted in the employee being directed to perform work in locations prohibited by the employee’s sex offender status [ such as] being knowingly present in or near a school building, public park, school bus stop or playground when there are children present.”

Ferguson recommende­d that the city make certain that registered sex offenders employed by the city “hold assignment­s and duties appropriat­e to their status” and that supervisor­s “regularly review” those assignment­s.

The city agreed to do so. All candidates for city jobs will be required to disclose “if they are subject to any laws or court orders that restrict their movements,” the city said. The city will work with union leaders to make certain informatio­n is updated annually.

If a background check performed during the hiring process reveals a candidate has been convicted of “an offense which requires registrati­on,” the Department of Human Resources will search the sex offender database to confirm that status.

If a registered sex offender is hired, it will be only after Human Resources works with the hiring department to determine whether the job can be performed with those restrictio­ns, Ferguson’s report states.

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