Chicago Sun-Times

GRANTS OF RENEWAL

State awards $31.4M to groups helping communitie­s wracked by disparate weed laws

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA CHICAGO CHRONICLES mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

In a move acknowledg­ing harm wreaked on communitie­s of color by decades of disparate weed enforcemen­t during America’s war on drugs, Illinois on Thursday awarded $31.4 million in cannabis tax revenue grants to support rebuilding those communitie­s.

The Cannabis Regulation and Trust Act made adult-use cannabis legal in Illinois starting on Jan. 1, 2020. Under that act, 25% of tax revenues go toward grants affecting communitie­s suffering from economic disinvestm­ent, violence and the multilayer­ed harm of disparate enforcemen­t.

Those revenues funded the Restore, Reinvest and Renew (R3) Program, which announced its first grants Thursday. Those grants will go to 81 groups, ranging from community and faith-based organizati­ons to businesses and local government in designated eligible R3 zones. Recipients were selected by the R3 board, chaired by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton; members were recruited from communitie­s statewide.

These first-round awards come amid complaints the state dragged its feet on doling out some $62 million in funds amassed through the R3 measure.

Stratton said this historic move drew a tsunami of submission­s, so her board had to take the time to get this right.

It began with outreach and technical assistance webinars to groups last February and March. The board held its first meeting and released the notice of funding opportunit­y in May. In June, it held community meetings in advance of the July applicatio­n deadline.

Then, in August, it started to review the unexpected torrent of applicatio­ns from across the state.

Board members include criminal justice practition­ers and community stakeholde­rs, as well as people who had faced marijuana charges before legalizati­on.

All members received training to recognize implicit bias, along with training on applicatio­n review. The Justice, Equity and Opportunit­y Initiative also helped ensure every decision throughout the selection process was made within the framework of equity and restorativ­e justice.

“We made sure that we had town halls and meetings throughout communitie­s to spread the word that you are welcome. And they were attended by hundreds of organizati­ons and people. We wanted to reach out to places that might not have often had an opportunit­y like this or thought that they were not valued,” Stratton told the Chicago Sun-Times.

“We valued them and reached out. We also included people in this process who had lived experience, who were justice-involved, to talk about what they thought was needed. What I’m proud of most, is not just that the funds are getting to communitie­s, but the way they are getting to the communitie­s — centered on equity,” she said.

“That was the driving point to get us here. And it is exciting.”

All grantees offer evidenceba­sed, promising, or innovative practices within the R3 priority areas of civil legal aid, economic developmen­t, community re-entry from the criminal justice system, violence prevention and youth developmen­t.

The funds include $28.3 million to support service delivery and $3.1 million for assessment and planning initiative­s.

Communitie­s deemed eligible for funding were identified using data on gun injury, child poverty, unemployme­nt, and state prison commitment­s and returns, combined with disproport­ionately affected areas identified by the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunit­y.

Chicago grantees include groups like Communitie­s United, collaborat­ing with the Lawyers’ Committee for Better Housing to offer legal assistance to the poor. Housing stability is considered a key social determinan­t of health in targeted R3 zones — and an area hugely affected by the pandemic.

That group will use its grant to reach out to at least 10,000 individual­s/families in those zones, offering free legal-aid services to help renters avoid eviction, and court representa­tion to those already facing eviction, as well as intensive short-term case management services addressing those underlying issues that can lead to eviction.

At the Chicago Torture Justice Center, the grant funds will support returning citizens in communitie­s with large population­s of formerly incarcerat­ed, particular­ly Englewood.

The nation’s first and only center dedicated to survivors of police torture will offer trauma-informed resources and holistic healing services to individual­s tortured by police — as in the Jon Burge case — as well as to the previously incarcerat­ed trying to rebuild their lives.

The Chicago Urban League and The Safer Foundation are also teaming to assist returning citizens in entering the technology sector, via the League’s Workforce Developmen­t Center and job placement. The partnershi­p also will promote economic developmen­t in the South Side communitie­s of Douglas, Englewood, Fuller Park, Grand Boulevard, Greater Grand Crossing, Oakland, South Shore, Woodlawn, Washington Park and West Englewood.

 ?? LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES; ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES (BELOW) ?? The Cannabis Regulation and Trust Act legalized adult-use cannabis in Illinois as of Jan. 1, 2020. It also required 25% of revenues from cannabis taxes to fund grants helping communitie­s suffering from economic disinvestm­ent, violence, and the multilayer­ed harm caused by disparate enforcemen­t of the war on drugs.
LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES; ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES (BELOW) The Cannabis Regulation and Trust Act legalized adult-use cannabis in Illinois as of Jan. 1, 2020. It also required 25% of revenues from cannabis taxes to fund grants helping communitie­s suffering from economic disinvestm­ent, violence, and the multilayer­ed harm caused by disparate enforcemen­t of the war on drugs.
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 ??  ?? Juliana Stratton
Juliana Stratton

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