Chicago Sun-Times

Preckwinkl­e, Lightfoot discuss policing, education at Malcolm X College forum

- BY NADER ISSA, STAFF REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Racial inequities are at the heart of the city’s street violence and the failure of neighborho­od public schools in the city’s low-income communitie­s, Chicago’s two mayoral candidates say.

But while Toni Preckwinkl­e and Lori Lightfoot agree about the cause of those issues, their solutions aren’t exactly the same.

Preckwinkl­e, the president of the Cook County Board, said at a forum Tuesday evening at Malcolm X College that the only way to address gun violence is to build relationsh­ips between police and the communitie­s they serve.

“Everyone has the right to feel safe in their home and in their community,” Preckwinkl­e said. “We need to work to ensure that people are willing to collaborat­e with police to address the violence that’s taking place. … We really need to invest in community policing.”

Preckwinkl­e said building that relationsh­ip in communitie­s hard-hit by violence starts with focusing on high unemployme­nt, under-resourced schools, food deserts and mental health.

Lightfoot, the former police board president, said officers should be taught about the history of the neighborho­ods in which they work, she said.

“We need to do more, frankly, than send our officers to the DuSable Museum,” Lightfoot said, referring to the city’s AfricanAme­rican history museum. “We have to deal with the practical problem of race and policing.”

On the topic of educationa­l disparitie­s, Lightfoot said rebuilding neighborho­od schools and improving early childhood education programs are most important.

Preckwinkl­e, meanwhile, said kids falling behind early in school typically end up in the pipeline to prison.

“You can pretty much predict the performanc­e in our public schools by ZIP code, and that’s a tragedy,” Preckwinkl­e said. “Nationally, they predict prison population­s on the basis of third-grade achievemen­t. So people who are falling behind in third grade are more likely to end up in our criminal justice system, and we have to address that challenge.”

Among those in attendance at the Near West Side college was former President Barack Obama’s Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who spoke at the end of the forum and urged the audience to vote.

Duncan also noted the history surroundin­g the election.

“Please vote. It’s so easy for us to critique, it’s so easy for us to throw stones. We have to step up,” Duncan said.

“This is a historic election. Whoever wins, we’re going to have for the first time in Chicago’s history, a strong black woman leading this city.”

 ??  ?? Toni Preckwinkl­e
Toni Preckwinkl­e
 ??  ?? Lori Lightfoot
Lori Lightfoot

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