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Seeing daylight: ex-offenders finally make political headway against Illinois' longtime support for tough-on-crime measures.


When Algie Crivens III was released from prison in 1999, e thought his nearly decade-long nightmare had end After he was convicted of a 1989 murder, a judge sentenced Crivens to 20 years in prison. But, in 1999, a federal court ruled Cook County prosecutors had withheld evidence in his 1992 trial; Crivens was retried re·tried  
v.
Past tense and past participle of retry.
 in 2000 and found not guilty. Former Gov. George H. Ryan later pardoned him.

Crivens had expected to get a head start on others released from prison--roughly 30,000 each year in Illinois. He had earned a bachelor's degree in social sciences from Roosevelt University Roosevelt University is a four-year, private institute of higher education with full service campuses in Chicago's Loop and northwest suburban Schaumburg. It also offers classes in communities, schools, and corporations, and has the mission of being a metropolitan university and  while behind bars and thought he would face the world with a clean record.

But Crivens' life was sabotaged by his prison past.

"I could not get a job at McDonald's because, every time someone ran my social security number, it would say I had a felony," said Crivens, now 33. He would often explain to potential employers that the felony was the result of a wrongful conviction, to no avail.

After hearing his story, an interviewer at United Parcel Service United Parcel Service, Inc. (NYSE: UPS), commonly referred to as UPS, is the world's largest package delivery company, delivering more than 15 million packages[1] a day to 6.1 million customers in over 200 countries and territories around the world.  agreed to hire Crivens for an entry-level job An entry-level job is a job that generally requires little skill and knowledge, and is generally of a low pay. These jobs may require physical strength or some on-site training. Many entry-level jobs are part-time, and do not include employee benefits. , but he was later told the deal was off because a report had labeled him a felon An individual who commits a crime of a serious nature, such as Burglary or murder. A person who commits a felony.


felon n. a person who has been convicted of a felony, which is a crime punishable by death or a term in state or federal prison.
.

"If they see it, they believe it," he said.

Crivens heard about a way he could clear his record, or expunge To destroy; blot out; obliterate; erase; efface designedly; strike out wholly. The act of physically destroying information—including criminal records—in files, computers, or other depositories.  it, from state Rep. Connie Howard, a South Side Democrat. For years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 state has allowed people without convictions to do this, but the process was lengthy and expensive. During the year it took Crivens to clear his record, he survived on a $6-an-hour cleaning job secured for him by a close family friend.

Today, Crivens works fbr the Illinois Department of Employment Security, evaluating applicants for unemployment insurance. "It's like playing judge," he said, appreciating the irony.

Since 1999, a subtle shift in the state's political landscape has occurred, with support rising for measures like easing expungement Expungement is often equated to the sealing or destroying of legal records. Each state offers its own definition of expungement, based on different rules and laws. Generally, expungement can be viewed as the process to "remove from general review" the records pertaining to a case.  rules. The voices in favor of such legislation were once confined to black and Latino communities, mostly on the South and West sides of Chicago, where lawmakers were taken aback by the large numbers of people having trouble finding work because of old arrest records.

But white politicians have also begun to agree that traditional "tough on crime" approaches have filled prisons with nonviolent drug offenders, many of them black or Latino, and, even after their release, the stigma of a criminal record shuts many out of employment. And activists say the fight for expungement legislation has helped create a grassroots coalition for even broader criminal justice reform.

Last year, for instance, Gov. Rod Blagojevich Milorad Blagojevich, commonly known as Rod R. Blagojevich (pronounced IPA: [blə.ˈgɔɪ.ə.ˌvɪtʃ] listen   signed into law a package of bills that require Illinois courts to automatically expunge the records of those found innocent of a crime.

Workers could also stop potential employers from discovering misdemeanors on their records, as long as they had stayed clean for three to four years.

This year, the Illinois General Assembly The Illinois General Assembly is the legislative branch of the government of the state of Illinois in the United States, created by the first constitution adopted in 1818. It works beside the executive branch led by the state governor and the judicial branch led by the supreme  passed a bill that will allow ex-offenders with minor drug or prostitution convictions to seal their records but not expunge them. Such people will then be able to present clean backgrounds to employers, but law enforcement agencies A law enforcement agency (LEA) is a term used to describe any agency which enforces the law. This may be a local or state police, federal agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) or the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).  will still have access to their full records.

The successes come after black lawmakers spent years responding to complaints from thousands of ex-offenders who said they needed to expunge their records to start over. Bills were periodically introduced in the General Assembly, but it took years, and many compromises, before enough white politicians, especially Republicans and conservative Democrats In American politics, a Conservative Democrat is a Democratic Party member with conservative political views.

21st century Conservative Democrats are similar to liberal Republican counterparts, in that both became political minorities after their respective political parties
, signed on.

Howard proposed a series of reforms in 2001 that would have allowed many to clear their records.

"Too many [ex-offenders] were coming back and not able to support their families, standing on the street corner and doing no good for their communities," she said.

But the proposals were not even allowed to come up for a full vote. "It was just an issue in the black community, people said, for the most part," Howard said. Many Republicans and downstate down·state  
n.
The southerly section of a state in the United States.

adv. & adj.
To, from, or in the southerly section of a state.



down
 politicians said they felt the reforms were too sweeping and pointed to the strong opposition from business groups and law enforcement.

When Howard and other black legislators came back to Springfield in early 2003 with a similar set of bills, they had a Democratic governor and party majorities in the General Assembly. Most of their proposals passed after garnering wide support among many Republicans and conservative downstate politicians.

Even though you see "a flurry of activity" on expungement issue across the country, these reforms "place Illinois at the forefront on these issues," said Debbie Mukamal, the director of the New York-based National H.I.R.E. Network, an information clearinghouse for groups that help ex-offenders get jobs.

"There certainly has been a shift," said state Sen. John Cullerton John J. Cullerton is a Democratic member of the Illinois Senate, representing the 6th district since his appointment in 1991. Early life
Cullerton is a native of Chicago, he received his bachelor’s degree in political science from Loyola University of Chicago and
, a North Side Democrat. Cullerton cautioned, however, that any other criminal justice reforms would likely be modest.

But advocates aren't likely to stop pushing for changes. Patricia Watkins, executive director of the Target Area Development Corp., an economic development group in the South Side's Auburn-Gresham neighborhood, said advocates who first joined together to fight for expungement legislation are preparing to battle for state policies that favor drug treatment instead of prison.

"We're there for the long haul Long distance. Long haul implies traversing a state or a country. Contrast with short haul. ," she said.

The struggle of ex-offenders to rejoin the working world was on w radar screens in 1999. But a job fair held at Howard's office at year caused the first blip.

Howard invited corporations such as American Airlines American Airlines

Major U.S. airline. American was created through a merger of several smaller U.S. airlines and incorporated in 1934. It continued to buy the routes of other airlines, becoming an international carrier in the 1970s; its routes include South America, the
 and Wal-greens to send representatives, and hundreds of residents from the area surrounding Howard's predominantly African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  district attended.

But two or three months later, when checking their files, Howard's staff discovered that everyone who had a record, no matter how minor, was left unemployed.

"I was naive," Howard recently admitted. "I thought if you paid your debt to society you started with a clean slate Noun 1. clean slate - an opportunity to start over without prejudice
fresh start, tabula rasa

chance, opportunity - a possibility due to a favorable combination of circumstances; "the holiday gave us the opportunity to visit Washington"; "now is your chance"
."

In February 2000, she proposed a bill that would allow people convicted of misdemeanors to have their records automatically expunged if they stayed out of trouble for two years. Records of minor felonies would have been cleared after three problem-free years.

The attempt fell flat. Except among a few black legislators from Chicago, she found no support. "[Most] would say, 'I can't do this. My district will not accept it.'"

A year later, Howard introduced seven bills that again called for the automatic expungement of minor offenses, but specifically excluded DUIs and sex offenses A class of sexual conduct prohibited by the law.

Since the 1970s this area of the law has undergone significant changes and reforms. Although the commission of sex offenses is not new, public awareness and concern regarding sex offenses have grown, resulting in the
.

Most of the measures never came up for a vote. One bill meant to address the plight of people like Crivens finally garnered Republican co-sponsors and passed the House almost unanimously. But the bill was never allowed up for a vote in the Senate, then controlled by Republicans.

The importance of the measures to black Chicagoans soon became even more apparent.

In November 2001, U.S. Rep. Danny K. Davis For the other persons named Danny Davis, please see Danny Davis.

Daniel K. (Danny) Davis (born September 6 1941) has been a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives since 1997, representing Illinois's At-large congressional district (map).
 held what his office billed as an "Expungement Summit" in the West Side's Garfield Park neighborhood. The Cabrini-Green Legal Aid Clinic brought lawyers to speak about the issue. Organizers were shocked at the response.

"People started lining up at 5 a.m.," said Tumia Romero, Davis' director of public policy and programs. More than 3,000 people dropped by that day, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 information.

The Cabrini clinic has since trained a cadre (company) CADRE - The US software engineering vendor which merged with Bachman Information Systems to form Cayenne Software in July 1996.  of lawyers to handle expungements at Davis' now-annual summits, said Christine Farrell, the clinic's director of criminal records.

She and many others point to that first day, and the subsequent expungement summits, as instrumental in capturing the attention of state legislators.

Roughly 30,000 inmates are released and put on parole from Illinois prisons each year, said Sharron D. Matthews, the director of advocacy and public policy at the Safer Foundation, which has worked for 30 years to find ex-offenders jobs.

In 2001, 44 percent of inmates released from prison in 1998 returned back. By 2003, the percentage had increased to 54, state corrections data show. "Once people realized the numbers involved, the expungement [movement] slowly but surely stayed on the map and grew," Matthews said.

The souring of the economy further dimmed prospects for jobseekers with criminal records, she believes. "If something does not happen, they will end up right back in jail after committing crimes to pay the rent," said Johnny King, 47, who was convicted in 1999 for drug possession.

"I went down to Cabrini-Green to buy a dime bag dime bag
n. Slang
A specified amount of an unlawful drug, packaged and sold for a fixed price, usually about ten dollars.

Noun 1.
 of crack," King said. Although he was initially sentenced to probation, King continued using drugs. After a positive drug test, he said, a judge sent him to prison for 61 days.

"I had money, and I thought nothing could stop me," King said. His father, an electrician, had taught him the trade, and, at the time he began using, King was working for Schaumburg-based Motorola.

Around the time of his arrest, King had begun to think about seeking help for his addiction. "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 if getting caught helped me, or if it stopped me from getting treatment," King said.

"Most of the people I saw [in prison] were in there for drugs," King added. "They seemed like guys who got caught up in a situation just like I did."

King said he was helped by a 30-day drug treatment program, but he also credits "God for taking the taste [for drugs] away from me."

He wants to get married and possibly raise a family, but right now he doesn't have the money. Currently, King works as an outreach worker for CeaseFire, a Chicago-based nonprofit that seeks to reduce gang violence. He applied for an electrician position with the Chicago Transportation Authority last year, and was told by the agency that he'd be a strong candidate if the 1999 bust hadn't been on his record.

"I want a second chance to work in my field," he said. "I made a mistake and got involved in drugs, but it shouldn't ruin my life."

In the aftermath of Howard's first attempt at reform, several Chicago community groups formed the Developing Justice Coalition; two dozen organizations, including suburban groups, would eventually become members.

"The issue just began to assert itself," said John Bouman, director of advocacy for the Chicago-based Sargent Shiver shiver

involuntary shaking of the body, as with cold. It is caused by contraction or twitching of the muscles, and is a physiological method of heat production in all animals.
 National Center on Poverty Law, a coalition member. Groups that provide social services social services
Noun, pl

welfare services provided by local authorities or a state agency for people with particular social needs

social services nplservicios mpl sociales 
, such as Catholic Charities, had begun to alert Bouman that they were seeing a flood of ex-offenders, he said.

But he did not expect it would be easy to build support in Springfield. "In 15 minutes, I can make a convincing explanation as to why [Howard's legislation] is important," he said. "But legislators know that, in less than 15 seconds, an opponent can make the charge that support for expungement makes them 'soft on crime.'"

For years, state legislators "have put an emphasis on incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment.

Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes.
 and getting tough with criminals," said state Sen. Denny Jacobs, a Democrat who has represented his western Illinois district since 1986. Such attitudes were not confined to Republicans, with Democrats in downstate and swing districts particularly vulnerable to soft-on-crime challenges, said Jacobs, a longtime supporter of the expungement legislation.

But, at the same time, many in Chicago's business community saw a downside to laws adopted in the 1980s and 1990s that increased sentences for petty drug offenses. As the number of prisoners soared, costs to maintain the prisons increased from $377 million in 1980 to $1.3 billion in 2000, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Chicago Urban League Chicago Urban League, Established in 1916 in Chicago, Illinois, is currently being lead by Cheryle Robinson Jackson. Established by an interracial group of community leaders, the Chicago Urban League began as a resettlement organization assisting African American migrants arriving .

"The way we're spending our dollars doesn't have people coming out ready for work," said Paula Wolff, a senior executive with Metropolis 2020, a business group dedicated to promoting public policy cooperation among area governments. "If you're going to spend money on corrections, you should get something from it."

Many suburban and downstate lawmakers began to agree.

"We're coming to realize that, if what we're trying to reduce is recidivism recidivism: see criminology. , we need to focus on employment," said state Rep. Patricia Reid Lindner Patricia Reid Lindner is a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives, representing the 50th district since 1993.

Lindner serves on seven committees: Child Support Enforcement, Judiciary II- Criminal Law, Appropriations-Elementary and Secondary Education,
, a Republican from west suburban Sugar Grove Sugar Grove can refer to:
  • Sugar Grove, Illinois
  • Sugar Grove, Ohio
  • Sugar Grove Township, Mercer County, Pennsylvania
  • Sugar Grove Township, Warren County, Pennsylvania
  • Sugar Grove, Virginia
  • Sugar Grove (Montgomery County, Virginia)
.

Some lawmakers, she said, initially thought expungement was merely a way to let criminals off the hook.

Bouman, and other activists impressed on legislators that this was not just about former prisoners, but also the far greater number who could not clear off even minor arrests from otherwise clean records.

State Rep. Mark Beaubien of Barrington Hills, an affluent, predominantly white northwest suburb, was Howard's first Republican supporter, becoming a co-sponsor of the 2001 bill to help the innocent to expunge their records.

Beaubien had personal experience with the issue: He had helped a relative through the expungement process, but he "would never do it again; it took a year," he said. "I piggyback piggyback

1. A broker trading in his or her personal account after trading in the same security for a customer. The broker may believe the customer has access to privileged information that will cause the transaction to be profitable.

2.
 on what Connie does, because I believe that people who make small mistakes deserve second chances."

"Everyone is for law and order until it's their kid," said Jacobs. He gets two or three calls a year from those looking for help in getting an expungement. "Usually, it's a parent who says my kid screwed up when he was 18; many times it's drugs. If they had everyone on record who tried drugs, it would be 90 percent of the population."

Jacobs, who is white, added that most of the people who want his assistance clearing their records are white and affluent. "I have never had a minority ask me for help on an expungement."

Some of the measures drafted and introduced in early 2003 passed quickly. Those judged innocent got the right to have their records automatically expunged; only two senators voted against that bill. And, to open previously restricted jobs, legislators gave nonviolent ex-offenders the right, after a one- to three-year grace period, to pursue more than a dozen occupations that require state licenses.

But the main goal remained elusive.

Howard's bill to allow ex-offenders to expunge minor felonies from their records morphed into a 2003 law that allowed the records of nonviolent misdemeanors to be sealed.

"What was missing was a real grassroots effort," said the Target development company's Watkins. In mid-2003, she became the chief organizer of the Developing Justice Coalition. The coalition has added groups such as the Protestants for the Common Good, a statewide organization that works with more than 200 churches, many predominantly white.

As a package, the bills passed in spring 2003 left many disappointed. "By the time we got there, the bills had been so watered down," said Watkins. She helped to prepare yet another bill, introduced in earlier this year, to allow ex-offenders to expunge nonviolent felonies.

"And then our adversary appeared," said Watkins.

Lobbyists from the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, with its thousands of businesses from Wal-Mart to morn-and-pop stores, opposed the bill. Cullerton, who co-chairs the committee that initially hears such bills, regarded that as its death knell death knell
Noun

something that heralds death or destruction

Noun 1. death knell - an omen of death or destruction
.

"You don't want a three-time thief in charge of the cash register at McDonald's," said state Rep. Chapin Rose Chapin Rose is a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives, representing the 110th district since 2003. External links
  • Chapin Rose official website
  • Illinois General Assembly - Representative Chapin Rose (R) 110th District
, a Republican from downstate Mahomet.

Undaunted, Watkins said the coalition regularly brought busloads of people to Springfield for the committee hearings and votes. Church members from Protestants for the Common Good, including many from downstate, she said, "wrote individual, personal letters to their legislators, and that's powerful."

In the run-up to the new bill's introduction in February, an aide to Cook County State's Attorney Noun 1. state's attorney - a prosecuting attorney for a state
state attorney

prosecuting attorney, prosecuting officer, prosecutor, public prosecutor - a government official who conducts criminal prosecutions on behalf of the state
 Richard A. Devine Richard A. "Dick" Devine (born July 5, 1943 in Chicago) is the current State's Attorney of Cook County, Illinois, United States. He was elected to his third term in November 2004.  approached Howard, who sponsored the bill in the House, and said Devine wanted to end law enforcement's long-standing opposition. Shocked, Howard said she was eager to discuss the bill. They agreed to a compromise that changed the bill from allowing someone to expunge a minor felony to letting them have it sealed, preserving law enforcement agencies' right to look at anyone's full history.

In late January, hundreds of people from the coalition streamed into the auditorium in the James R. Thompson Center Coordinates:

The James R. Thompson Center (JRTC) (also known as Clark & Lake due to its CTA Blue Line stop) is located at 100 W.
 in Chicago to hear testimony from ex-offenders at a hearing chaired by Cullerton and Howard. "I was impressed by their intensity and sincerity," said Cullerton.

But business opposition seemed implacable im·plac·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to placate or appease: implacable foes; implacable suspicion.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin
.

Watkins said the retailers' association wouldn't return calls until the coalition sent a letter to the president of Jewel Food Stores Jewel Food Stores could refer to:
  • Jewel (supermarket) an American grocery store chain
  • Jewel Food Stores (Australia) an Australian supermarket chain
, an association member. Over three following weeks of negotiations, the coalition agreed to limit the crimes covered to prostitution and small-time small·time or small-time  
adj. Informal
Insignificant or unimportant; minor: a smalltime actor.



small
 drug possession.

At a March Senate committee hearing, nearly 30 people from the coalition, representing churches, community groups and social service agencies, including some ex-offenders, testified for what had become Senate Bill 3007. Reaching across racial and regional lines became part of their strategy.

"When hearings were held, we brought people to testify who were white," said Howard. When it was understood that the people who'd benefit "are not all of dark complexion complexion /com·plex·ion/ (kom-plek´shun) the color and appearance of the skin of the face.

com·plex·ion
n.
The natural color, texture, and appearance of the skin, especially of the face.
, legislators were more willing to listen."

"I don't want to exaggerate its importance, but there have been faces put on this problem from all different racial and ethnic groups," said Cullerton, who is white.

But the most important appearance, even though he did not testify, might have been Rob Karr's, a lobbyist for the retailers' association. He gave the senators a note letting them know the retailers might not support the bill, but they did not oppose it, either.

"What changed was that the advocate groups were willing to scale back what they were asking for," said Karr.

The bill squeaked through the Senate on March 26 with a 30-24 vote, with support from one Republican, Sen. Kirk Dillard, of west suburban Hinsdale. In the House, however, many Republicans still felt the proposal was too sweeping.

Rose, the House member from downstate Mahomet, pointed out that, even after the 2002 elections brought more Democrats to Springfield, a majority of the Criminal Law committee, which has to approve any such legislation before a full vote, were either Republicans or somewhat more conservative Democrats.

That group is reluctant to support "anything that shows leniency le·ni·en·cy  
n. pl. le·ni·en·cies
1. The condition or quality of being lenient. See Synonyms at mercy.

2. A lenient act.

Noun 1.
 or is soft on crime," Beaubien said.

A former assistant state's attorney, Rose said he and many Republican colleagues would not support Senate Bill 3007 until it mandated drug tests for people applying to get their records sealed. And another amendment required that applicants wait four years.

"If we're going to grant you a second chance, you better have cleaned up your act," he said. Without these amendments, he added, the bill "would still be dead in the water."

With them, it sailed through 72-39 on May 27. Twenty-two Republicans, including Rose and Lindner, supported the bill, easily offsetting the 13 Democrats, mostly from more conservative swing districts, who voted against it. It's an election year, Cullerton said, and he "suspects everybody voted safe."

Watkins said the coalition brought more than 600 people to the capitol on November 9 to pressure the Senate to approve the House version of the bill, which it did the next day by a vote of 33-23, clearing the way for Gov. Blagojevich to sign the measure into law.

Lindner and other Republicans said additional reforms would have to clear a high bar. "This bill has been really negotiated," she said.

Crivens recognizes compromise was necessary, but the four-year wait concerns him. He points out that most people leave prison with slim opportunities and no education. "Some of them say, 'I don't have that long--I need a job today.' If they don't have a strong family background, they'll fall back."

"I don't know if my 117 colleagues would have said OK if we had not put all the amendments in," Howard said. But she's also worried the wait might be too long, and that too many lawmakers "don't care
This page is about the music single. For the meaning relating to digital logic, see Don't-care (logic)


"Don't Care" is a 1994 (see 1994 in music) single by American death metal band Obituary.
 that recidivism increases if people aren't getting some type of hope."

But Rose and other Republicans say they will not budge. "I don't mean to sound unsympathetic, but I have an obligation to protect people who don't commit crimes and deal drugs," Rose said, adding that he does not want to allow the possibility that an addict Any individual who habitually uses any narcotic drug so as to endanger the public morals, health, safety, or welfare, or who is so drawn to the use of such narcotic drugs as to have lost the power of self-control with reference to his or her drug use.  could get a construction job "and tweak To make minor adjustments in an electronic system or in a software program in order to improve performance. See calibrate.

1. tweak - To change slightly, usually in reference to a value. Also used synonymously with twiddle.
 out while handling a power saw."

King hopes politicians will look into allowing perpetrators of other victimless crimes Crime where there is no apparent victim and no apparent pain or injury. This class of crime usually involves only consenting adults in activities such as Prostitution, Sodomy, and Gaming  to clear their records.

But lawmakers say advocates should proceed slowly. "The General Assembly would be wise to see how this one works before they jump on something else," Lindner said.

Watkins said the struggle begun at Howard's 1999 job fair has gone as far as it could, at least for now. She advises others to wait until 2006, when the state should complete a study of the new law's effect on recidivism, to see if a bigger push is needed.

In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
, the state recently opened the Sheridan Correctional Center, which officials hope will reduce recidivism by providing drug treatment to as many as 1,300 inmates. But Watkins' coalition will set its sights on an even bigger prize: reforming sentencing laws so low-level drug offenders like King can get drug treatment and completely avoid the stigma of prison.

But she said it will take months of discussion to ensure the coalition has a common platform. And she acknowledges that overcoming conservative resistance will require even broader support, so she hopes to enlist judges, bar associations, universities, philanthropists and more large downstate churches.

Rose agrees that many Illinois Republicans no longer have a "knee-jerk reaction of 'lock-'em-up,'" leaving them open to new proposals to bring drug treatment into existing prisons. But he said Watkins' goal of restructuring sentencing laws is out.

U.S. Rep. Davis says he's undeterred undeterred
Adjective

not put off or dissuaded

Adj. 1. undeterred - not deterred; "pursued his own path...undeterred by lack of popular appreciation and understanding"- Osbert Sitwell
undiscouraged
. "That doesn't mean we're going to do anything but push ahead," Davis said, promising to work for sentencing reform. "We see daylight."

Efren Arcos helped research this article.

THE NUMBERS

Building Coalitions

Since 2003, state lawmakers have put forward seven bills aimed at casing the transition of ex-offenders back into the working world. In the state Senate, support from Chicago and mostly Democratic suburbs has been solid, but the bills have also attracted votes from suburban and downstate Republicans.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Notes: Lines drawn show state Senate district. Bills included are: Senate bills 0788, 3007, and 0423; House bills 0569, 4566, 2391, and 3316.

Source: Illinois General Assembly: analyzed by The Chicago Reporter.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Community Renewal Society
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Rogal, Brian J.
Publication:The Chicago Reporter
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:3666
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