Daily Southtown

Cook circuit court clerk latest to exit federal oversight of hiring practices

- By A.D. Quig aquig@chicagotri­bune.com

Following closely on the heels of the county assessor’s office, Circuit Court Clerk Iris Martinez announced Monday that her office was also freed from federal oversight of hiring and employment practices, known as Shakman monitoring. But the person in charge of bird-dogging compliance and reporting back to the court suggested the office was still deficient in key areas.

Judge Edmond Chang found the office in substantia­l compliance with the Shakman requiremen­ts to keep politics out of county hiring and promotions, “due to the creation and implementa­tion of a new employment plan, acting in good faith to remedy instances of noncomplia­nce, the absence of employment decisions based upon political factors, and the implementa­tion of procedures that will prevent politics from interferin­g with the long-term operations of the office,” according to a release from Martinez’s office.

The office had filed to exit such oversight — and Shakman’s attorneys agreed, according to court filings — last month.

“Achieving substantia­l compliance in less than two years is an incredible feat, which was only achievable by the hard work of everyone in the office, and Cook County taxpayers will save hundreds of thousand dollars,” said Martinez in the release.

She has been in charge of the office that manages paperwork for the county’s circuit courts since 2020.

Shakman oversight predated Martinez’s tenure, beginning under her predecesso­r Dorothy Brown in August 2018.

The hiring monitor was brought in as Brown mounted a campaign for mayor of Chicago, and came as Brown faced allegation­s of bribes-for-jobs in the office, though she denied that and was never charged.

After being booted from the mayoral ballot, Brown announced in 2019 she would not seek reelection as court clerk.

Martinez came out on top in the 2020 Democratic primary on pledges to improve on the inefficien­cies that plagued the office and botched tech rollouts.

The person watching over Shakman at the circuit court, compliance administra­tor Susan Feibus, was responsibl­e for monitoring both the assessor and the circuit court’s practices to ensure politics was not taken into considerat­ion for most personnel decisions, including hiring, firing and discipline of nonexecuti­ve employees.

When the assessor exited compliance, Feibus wrote that the office had “achieved substantia­l compliance and continued court oversight … (is) no longer is necessary.”

But in her final report submitted to the court earlier this month for Martinez’s office, Feibus did not conclude that compliance had been reached. Feibus said instead that she expected Chang to terminate court oversight based on a decision involving the governor’s office this summer that “effectivel­y directed the end” of such oversight of the 50-year-old decree.

That’s a reference to a U.S. appeals court ruling this summer that Shakman oversight was “no longer warranted” — ending the consent decree and freeing Gov. J.B. Pritzker and future governors from such monitoring. Shakman was critical of the ruling.

Feibus highlighte­d ongoing issues at the court clerk’s office, describing the training in the employee handbook as “problemati­c” and lacking clarity in parts. When Feibus suggested edits or asked questions, she wrote the clerk sometimes ignored or rejected her.

Feibus also noted that the court clerk’s human resources department “remains understaff­ed” and that Feibus’ own team “appears largely to be operating as a part of human resources — as opposed to executing the monitoring and audit functions required by the employment plan.” The director of training position had been vacant since late July. A coordinato­r and two labor lawyer positions were also vacant.

“While it might be easier to ignore these issues,” Feibus wrote that she “would not be fulfilling” her responsibi­lities if she did.

In a statement, a Martinez spokespers­on did not directly address the concerns Feibus raised in her final report but rather reiterated that the judge in the case granted the “substantia­l compliance” finding.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? The federal monitoring of hiring in Circuit Court Clerk Iris Martinez’s office began under her predecesso­r, Dorothy Brown.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE The federal monitoring of hiring in Circuit Court Clerk Iris Martinez’s office began under her predecesso­r, Dorothy Brown.

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