Driving a car is a privilege. It makes sense that the government should have the authority to set qualifications for who can operate a motor vehicle and to suspend or revoke the licenses of unsafe drivers. But while driving may not be a right, for many people in Illinois it is a necessity to live and provide for their families. More than 80% of Illinoisans drive to work, and a valid driver's license is a prerequisite just to apply for many jobs, whether or not the job involves driving.

Every year, tens of thousands of people in Illinois lose their driver's licenses - and in many cases, their ability to work - for reasons that have nothing whatsoever to do with unsafe driving. Increasingly, driver's license suspensions are imposed not as a punishment for moving violations but as a tool for the government to try to collect revenue from people who have fallen behind on payment of parking tickets or other fines and fees. Unsurprisingly, the impact of these heavy-handed collection tactics falls most heavily upon low-income communities and people of color. 
 
ProPublica recently reported that in Chicago, parking and traffic tickets brought in nearly $264 million in 2016--about 7% of the city's $3.6 billion operating budget. Debt for unpaid tickets disproportionately impacts the city's lowest-income residents, and the highest rates of accumulated ticket debt per adult are concentrated overwhelmingly in majority African American communities. 
 
The relative lack of jobs in low-income neighborhoods means that people from these communities often need to commute to other parts of the city or the suburbs in order to work. Those who live or work in "transit deserts" can be left without any viable transportation options when they lose their driving privileges.
 
The proliferation of ticket debt has corresponded with an explosion in driver's license suspensions: the number of suspension requests from the City of Chicago to the Secretary of State's office tripled between 2010 and 2016. These suspensions don't make the roadways any safer. Instead, they force people to choose between unemployment, bankruptcy, or risking going to jail for driving on a suspended license. License suspensions also punish families, because people need to drive in order to get their kids to school, to care for the needs of their elderly relatives, and much more.
 
This week, the Chicago Jobs Council released their new report Living in Suspension which highlights the negative impacts these unnecessary driver's license suspensions are having on people's lives in Illinois. In CJC's survey of more than 500 respondents from across the state, they found that:
  • 52% who had their licenses suspended as a result of non-driving violations missed out on an employment opportunity as a result of the suspension
  • 72% of the survey respondents would need to pay more than $500 in order to re-obtain a valid license
  • 31% of the survey respondents would need to pay more than $3000 in order to re-obtain a valid license
Given that 46% of adults in America say they could not cover an emergency expense costing $400, it is not surprising that so many people who owe debts for unpaid tickets opt to file bankruptcy-over 10,000 cases in Chicago alone last year according to the ProPublica article.
 
This is why we support SB 2411 (Previously HB 5340) that would change this counter-productive policy. The License to Work Act would eliminate driver's license suspensions as a penalty for non-payment of parking ticket debt and other violations not related to safe driving and would allow a person whose license was suspended for a non-driving violation to get it back. 
 
It is appalling that this situation has gotten as bad as it has, with so many people's livelihoods and families being put at stake. This common-sense change in the law would help people escape the cycle of ticket debt and get back to work, to the benefit of everyone in Illinois. 
 
For more information about the License to Work Act, please click here. 
 

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Thursday, March 15, 2018 - 9:45am

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The 2018 legislative session in Springfield offers an opportunity to for our state to advance critical civil liberties issues, including measures addressing net neutrality, collecting and reporting data about traffic stops by police, protecting voting rights, expanding spaces for parents to pump breastmilk and assuring fairness in the college application process.  

You can learn about our agenda and how you can be part of the process, by participating in a phone call with Khadine Bennett, Director of the Advocacy and Intergovernmental Affairs at the ACLU on Wednesday, April 4 at 7:00 p.m.

Please contact Rachel Walton with any questions or concerns at 312-201-9740.

Participants will receive a call from Stones Phones, our communication technology partner, at the start of the event. When you answer the call, you will be connected to the tele-town hall. Participants will have the opportunity to submit questions to a moderator during the call by using the touchtone keypad on their phones.

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Wednesday, April 4, 2018 - 7:00pm to
Thursday, April 5, 2018 - 6:45pm

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Testimony of Katie Watson, ACLU of Illinois 

Illinois State Senate - Public Health Committee - SB 3503

1:30pm, Tuesday, March 13, 2018

My name is Katie Watson, and I am an attorney with the ACLU of Illinois’ Women’s and Reproductive Rights Project. I am here to speak in support of Senate Bill 3503.

SB 3503 is a bill to ensure that people who are nursing infants will have equal access to the courts. Litigants, jurors, witnesses, and lawyers spend long hours in courthouses. Some of them are breastfeeding parents who need to pump breast milk every few hours. When people who are breastfeeding do not have access to an appropriate lactation space, their right to contribute to the administration of justice is impaired.
 
This bill fixes this problem by ensuring that nursing parents have access to a clean, private space to pump breast milk in all Illinois county courthouses. SB 3503 requires a private lactation space that includes a chair, a table and an outlet, and is located somewhere other than a bathroom. This room or area does not have to be solely dedicated to lactation - it just needs to be available as a private place to pump when needed.
 
Since 2001, Illinois law has required all employers to provide a lactation area for employees. This means county courthouses have 17 years of experience in accommodating court employees who need to pump breastmilk at work. As a result, many courthouses will already know how to meet this need.
 
New parents should not have to choose between full participation in society and breastfeeding their babies. Yet some mothers find – as Senator Tammy Duckworth has learned – that our civic buildings often fail to accommodate breastfeeding parents. Instead of an experience of access and a message of inclusion, the absence of lactation rooms in courthouses tells breastfeeding parents they are not welcome.
 
We have heard from several women who have been denied access. For example, a woman in a Chicago jury pool was told she had the choice of pumping in the men’s restroom (because the women’s didn’t have an outlet) or being excused from jury duty. A lawyer who was at the McHenry County courthouse to argue a motion was told that her only option was to pump in the cafeteria and face the wall to avoid public viewing of her exposed breasts. A lawyer who was 2nd chair at a jury trial in the Jackson County courthouse rushed to the parking lot at breaks to pump in her car.
 
These exclusions, indignities, and disadvantages must stop. No one should have to choose between being able to breastfeed their baby and being able to participate in public life. I urge you to vote yes on SB 3503. Thank you.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2018 - 1:30pm

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