Chicago Sun-Times

Gov creates staff position to lead task force on ending homelessne­ss

- BY RACHEL HINTON, POLITICAL REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

With the state’s eviction moratorium set to end in a month, Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Friday announced a new staff position and task force with an ambitious mission: “the ultimate goal of achieving functional zero homelessne­ss.”

The governor created the task force through an executive order that also calls for a new state “homelessne­ss chief” to lead the panel from within the state Department of Human Services.

At a Friday morning news conference, Pritzker said it’s estimated that “over 10,000 of our neighbors across Illinois are experienci­ng homelessne­ss, right at this moment.”

“I want to be clear that homelessne­ss is a circumstan­ce. It is not an identity, and it has real impact on real people,” Pritzker said at La Casa Norte on Chicago’s West Side.

“Homelessne­ss has many faces — it’s urban, and it’s rural . ... It can be a person with disabiliti­es; an actual working, but underemplo­yed, adult; a veteran; a senior, and it will be — always — a person deserving of dignity, a person deserving of opportunit­y,” Pritzker said.

State agencies will work with community organizati­ons such as La Casa Norte to “strengthen safety nets, support local solutions and provide effective help for those dealing with the housing crisis, to get them back on their feet,” Pritzker said.

Under the guidance of the homelessne­ss chief, the task force will develop and implement plans to prevent and address homelessne­ss with a goal of achieving “functional zero homelessne­ss,” according to a news release announcing the task force’s creation.

Functional zero homelessne­ss is a milestone that would mean the state has effectivel­y ended homelessne­ss, according to the homelessne­ssfocused nonprofit Community Solutions.

The group of state agencies and community groups will come up with a blueprint for improving health and human services for those experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Illinois, focusing on local solutions and safety nets to address the root causes.

The homelessne­ss chief position has not yet been filled, though the administra­tion hopes to do so soon, a spokeswoma­n said.

The task force is the state’s latest effort to help those experienci­ng homelessne­ss housing insecurity.

A spokeswoma­n for Pritzker said last week the eviction moratorium, which was recently extended to Sept. 18, will now end Oct. 3. On Monday, the Illinois Supreme Court extended its order barring the start of eviction trials until Sept. 18.

Monique Harvey, a member of La Casa Norte’s Youth in College Program, spoke to the need for having programs such as the one offered through that organizati­on, which supports those facing homelessne­ss.

“I went from having no heat to finding an apartment that offered free heat, I went from sleeping in the backseat of my car, to having my own bed sheets,” Harvey said. “Those transition­s — no one wants to go through it, I didn’t want to go through it, but it happened, and I came across La Casa Norte and they gave me my own space, my own stability, my own foundation, my own family.

“They say blood is thicker than water, but I think that this water that I have found is much thicker.”

 ??  ?? Kyanna Johnson, a public ally at the Night Ministry, hands a bag of food to a homeless person in February.
Kyanna Johnson, a public ally at the Night Ministry, hands a bag of food to a homeless person in February.

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