Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago tightens regulatory leash on party buses— again

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@ suntimes. com | @ fspielman

Thirty- two more citations and two more “cease- and- desist” orders were issued last weekend to party bus operators accused of violating year- old rules aimed at reining in rowdyism and violence.

But City Hall isn’t done trying to prevent those buses from becoming what one alderman once described as “rolling cemeteries.”

The Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection has hammered out an intergover­nmental agreement with the Illinois secretary of state’s office aimed at bolstering the city’s capacity to crack the whip against illegal and irresponsi­ble party bus operators.

The agreement will empower 10 city investigat­ors instead of the current five to look up vehicle license plates, vehicle identifica­tion numbers and driver’s license numbers maintained by Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White in “real time.”

Enforcemen­t will be further enhanced by giving those 10 designated city investigat­ors expanded access to so- called “driver abstracts.”

Abstracts are a three- year record of all moving violation conviction­s, accident involvemen­t reports and other actions that trigger driver’s license “suspension­s, revocation­s or other disqualifi­cations.”

That will allow city investigat­ors to determine whether party bus operators have a valid commercial driver’s license passenger endorsemen­t, which is required to operate a party bus.

The intergover­nmental agreement will also create a Party Bus Safety Task Force with representa­tives from the Chicago Police Department, the secretary of state’s office, the Illinois Department of Transporta­tion and the Illinois State Police.

The task force will meet twice a year — and more frequently when problems occur — to identify legal loopholes and share enforcemen­t informatio­n about party bus operators licensed in suburbs or out of state, but causing problems in Chicago.

Business Affairs and Consumer Protection Commission­er Rosa Escareno recalled the March 2017 shooting that triggered the latest in a string of city crackdowns against party bus operators.

An argument aboard an illegal suburban party bus that stopped at a Dunkin’ Donuts in Edgewater turned into an exchange of gunfire that killed a 28- year- old man and injured two others.

“The goal here is tackling illegal problem operators coming into the city from outside the city. … It’s gonna be stronger … if we can call the state police and say, can you do something about this guy?’ ” Escareno said.

“We’ll issue a cease- and- desist [ order]. But he’s still operating in the suburbs. You guys need to take care of him out there. If they fix it out in the suburbs, guess what? We’re also addressing it here in the city.”

Escareno said she’s been testing a “night team” operating in conjunctio­n with the Chicago Police Department to enforce party bus regulation­s.

But that night team won’t become permanent until access to driver and vehicle informatio­n is expanded from five city investigat­ors to 10.

“It’s sensitive informatio­n. They don’t easily allow more individual­s to have this access. What we have asked the secretary of state is, ‘ Let’s go above and beyond what we’ve been doing. Can you give me [ access] for five more individual­s?’ ” Escareno said. “If a driver has a license, but we don’t know the system actually suspended him, now we can actually check the system and have more resources on the street to verify records for the owner of the vehicle as well as the driver.”

Last year, the City Council moved to require party buses that carry at least 15 people drinking on board or making multiple bar stops to install security cameras or hire more security personnel.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s ordinance also gave operators the option of ending a trip at a destinatio­n, instead of returning to the point of origin, when an unruly passenger refuses to get off the bus. Problem buses were also hit with a 10- fold increase in fines.

In the year since the ordinance took effect, the city has issued 260 tickets, issued 36 cease- and- desist orders and levied $ 130,650 in fines.

Shootings have declined from six in 2016 to three last year and one through June 1 of this year.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Party buses carrying 15 people or more who are drinking on board or at bar stops are already required to install security cameras or hire security personnel.
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Party buses carrying 15 people or more who are drinking on board or at bar stops are already required to install security cameras or hire security personnel.

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