[in person] 14th Police District Council - Logan Square/Humboldt Park/Wicker Park
Chicago Police District Councils3009 N Kedzie Ave, Chicago, Illinois 60618 Chicago, IL 60618 (Directions)
VFW Post 2978, Event Hall
This is an in-person assignment and will include an additional hour of pay. PLEASE DOUBLE CHECK the meeting details on the day of your assignment, as dates and locations sometimes change. As of this writing, this meeting is listed in the 2023 meeting schedule but an agenda has not yet been posted.
Pre-Research Resources
- The TRiiBE: “ECPS coalition wins a wide majority of Chicago’s new Police District Council seats”
- City of Chicago: Official District Council webpage
- Find My Beat and District: Interactive map of police district boundaries
- Chicago Reader/Block Club Chicago: Information about the candidates who ran for this council in the municipal elections
Reporting
Edited and summarized by the Chicago - IL Documenters Team
There have been numerous reports of inappropriate behavior from police in the 14th District, including an instance in which an officer showed up to a home with a gun and told migrants staying there to go to the police station with their belongings.
There have been numerous reports of inappropriate behavior from police in the 14th District, including an instance in which an officer showed up to a home with a gun and told migrants staying there to go to the police station with their belongings.
11:57 AM Dec 2, 2023 CST
Community members continue to trickle in to the meeting room at 1 PM and the council waits to start.
The meeting is called to order at 1:10pm and roll call is underway, starting with public comments.
"Broadly speaking, I find our role in three ways: Police accountability, restorative justice and public safety," Orlikoff adds.
"Police officers accused of misconduct can go through an arbitration process away from the public, essentially," explains one community organizer.
Vargas talks about one incident involving a 14th district police officer who attempted to intimidate a migrant with firearms. That has been brought to the attention of the Inspector General's Office, Vargas says.
"I've been told by multiple community members that there's a pattern of targeting and harassment that drove a huge group out of [a local] charity network," Orlikoff says.
"Unfortunately, I did not get a formative response to that," Orlikoff says.
"How we can go about having a preventative approach to mental health?" the presenter asks. "How do we decrease the number of mental health crises that happen globally? And really for us?"
Another question for the audience:
"How do we have intervention when there is an actual crisis...that doesn't seek to criminalize the individual?"
The Treatment not Trauma initiative notes the city's limited mental health and related services.
Despite promises from the Lightfoot administration to increase funding for mental health services, issues persist.
Their non police crises response efforts decreased crime rates and the police budget.
Read about expanded mental health services in the 14th ward area and city.
The meeting adjourns at 2:35 pm.
Follow @CHIdocumenters for more coverage like this, and keep an eye out for meeting notes from today by Mona Tong.
Respond here with any questions and comments⤵️
Agency Information
Chicago Police District Councils
Each of the 22 District Councils is made up of three people elected by residents of the police district in regular municipal elections every four years, though anyone can participate in District Council work, and the more people who participate, the more effective the District Councils can be. The first District Council elections occurred in February 2023. Just as Chicagoans vote for a mayor and a local ward Alderperson, they also vote for up to three people to serve on the District Council.
The District Councils have several key roles:
- Building stronger connections between the police and the community at the district level, where the community is a true partner in making the neighborhood safer. They can work with the police to address problems and set priorities.
- Collaborating in the development and implementation of community policing initiatives.
- Holding monthly public meetings, where residents can work on local initiatives rooted in community concerns and priorities. They can also raise and work to address concerns about policing in the district, and increase accountability.
- Working with the community to get input on police department policies and practices. Working to develop and expand restorative justice and similar programs in the police district.
- Ensuring that the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability gets input from the community, so that the Commission’s work will be based on what people in neighborhoods across the city are concerned about.
- Nominating members of the Community Commission. Anyone who serves on the Community Commission must first have the support of elected District Council members.
(Source: Municipal Code of Chicago, 2-80-070(a) and (e))
For a map of police districts, visit https://www.chicagocityscape.com/maps/index.php#/?places_type=chipolicedistrict.
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