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August 7,
2007 WEEKLY REVIEW
Provided through the Generous Support of
the McCormick Tribune Foundation
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In this
issue:
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COMPREHENSIVE FISCAL REFORM
Urge your legislators to support a responsible
budget and income tax increase
ILLINOIS RETIREMENT SECURITY INITIATIVE
New report shows financial condition of the
Illinois retirement systems
STATE CHILDREN'S HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
Congress close to expanding children's health
program
ACTION ALERT: TRANSIT
Support transit funding now!
NEWS FROM CTBA
A message to Weekly Review readers: Goodbye and
thank you
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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August 6-10, 2007: Action Out Loud!
Youth Activist Training Camp (Chicago)
-
August 7, 2007: Illinois Youth -
Ready for Life: Teen Poverty & Youth Development Project (Champaign)
-
August 9, 2007: National field call
on the reauthorization of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention Act
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August 14, 2007: Illinois Youth -
Ready for Life: Teen Poverty & Youth Development Project (Chicago)
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August 16, 2007: Illinois Youth -
Ready for Life: Teen Poverty & Youth Development Project (Mt. Vernon)
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August 16, 2007: Moving from Poverty
to Opportunity Action Forum: DeKalb, Kane, Kendall and McHenry Counties
(Aurora)
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August 22, 2007: Moving from Poverty
to Opportunity Action Forum: Southside of Chicago (Chicago)
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September 11-12, 2007:
Single-Family Development: Community Housing Developers Institute
(Springfield)
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September 24-26, 2007: National
Association of Social Workers (NASW) IL Chapter’s Statewide Conference,
“Bridging Health Disparities: Help Starts Here” (Chicago)
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October 16-17, 2007:
Property and Asset Management: Community Housing Developers Institute
(Springfield)
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November 1-30, 2007:
Affordable Housing Month (Public education events and activities to be
held throughout the state)
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COMPREHENSIVE
FISCAL
REFORM |
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URGE YOUR LEGISLATORS TO SUPPORT A
RESPONSIBLE BUDGET AND INCOME TAX INCREASE
Despite looming deadlines and threats of a
governmental shutdown, Illinois legislators have yet to complete work on
a budget for Fiscal Year 2008; however, the buzz around the Capital
suggests that legislators may be getting close. Part of the
challenge facing lawmakers is the lack of available funds for
Illinoisans' top priorities, including school funding reform,
healthcare, paying off the state's pension debt, and property tax
relief. In order to adequately address these funding priorities,
legislators have been considering different revenue options. A
recent proposal garnering a lot of attention is the idea to expand
gaming.
CTBA has concerns over the use of gaming
expansion as a revenue source to fund vital public services. Many
of these concerns are echoed in a
testimony given in May 2005 by economist Dr. Victor Matheson to the
Illinois General Assembly on the fiscal impact of riverboat gaming.
Dr. Matheson claims, among others things, that gaming would generate far
less money than current speculations suggest and there are important
social costs to consider when reviewing a gaming expansion proposal
(such as increased crime and pathological gambling disorders).
For decades, advocates, lawmakers and
taxpayers have strongly supported education funding and fiscal reform in
Illinois. Many of us continue to hope that this is the year when
legislators take a stand and get something accomplished. CTBA and
other advocates know it is imperative for Illinois to create a new
revenue source for education funding reform - one that is less reliant
on property taxes. A fiscally responsible way to generate this new
money is by imposing an income tax increase (read a CTBA
fact
sheet on the four principles of good fiscal policy). CTBA and
our partners support a responsible budget that adequately funds
schools and other vital state services, and includes a modest income tax
increase dedicated to education.
Income Tax Options: read a
CTBA analysis on potential uses of, and revenue generate by,
increasing the state income tax by 1% or 2%.
What you can do - Call your legislators!
Use
the A+ Illinois toll-free legislative hotline. Even if
you've called before, lawmakers need to hear from you before it's too
late.
Call: 1-800-651-0315
RESOURCES
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Read a
message from State Superintendent Christopher Koch, informing
school districts that they will be allowed to borrow money from the
Illinois Finance Authority in the event that no budget is passed and
schools don't receive their General State Aid payments for August.
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Read the latest
Illinois Gaming Board Annual Report, 2006
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Commission on
Government Forecasting and Accountability report on gaming revenues,
Wagering in Illinois: 2006 Update.
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ILLINOIS
RETIREMENT
SECURITY
INITIATIVE |
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NEW
REPORT SHOWS FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE ILLINOIS RETIREMENT SYSTEMS
The Commission on
Government Forecasting & Accountability's recently released July 2007
Report on the Financial Condition of the Illinois Public Employee
Retirement Systems finds that:
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From FY 1998
through FY 2006 the unfunded liabilities grew for all of the five
state retirement systems, with the combined unfunded liabilities of
the systems increasing by $27.0 billion.
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Over the last
nine years, the State of Illinois has contributed $19.4 billion to
the five retirement systems; of that amount $7.3 billion was from
the sale of $10 billion in pension obligation bonds.
-
The Teachers
Retirement Systems has received by far the largest amount of
contributions, totaling over $10.9 billion. The Judges’ and General
Assembly Retirement Systems have received the smallest amount of
contributions, as they have far fewer participants.
Summary of Contributions State
Retirement Systems, FY 1998-FY 2006 ($ in Millions)
|
Fiscal Years |
TRS |
SURS |
SERS |
JRS |
GARS |
Total |
|
1998 |
466.9 |
201.6 |
200.7 |
15.7 |
3.1 |
888.0 |
|
1999 |
573.0 |
217.7 |
315.5 |
18.7 |
3.7 |
1,128.6 |
|
2000 |
634.0 |
224.6 |
340.9 |
21.4 |
4.0 |
1,224.9 |
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2001 |
719.4 |
232.6 |
366.0 |
24.2 |
4.3 |
1,346.5 |
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2002 |
810.6 |
240.4 |
386.1 |
27.5 |
4.7 |
1,469.3 |
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2003 |
926.0 |
269.6 |
396.1 |
31.4 |
5.2 |
1,628.3 |
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2004 |
5,357.6 |
1,743.7 |
1,864.7 |
178.6 |
32.9 |
9,177.5 |
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2005 |
903.9 |
270.0 |
427.4 |
32.0 |
4.7 |
1,638.0 |
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2006 |
534.6 |
166.6 |
203.8 |
29.2 |
4.2 |
938.4 |
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Totals: |
$10,926.0 |
$3,566.8 |
$4,501.2 |
$378.7 |
$66.8 |
$19,439.5 |
*FY 2004 State contributions include $7.3
billion in proceeds from the sale of pension obligation ponds.
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The total
unfunded liabilities of the State retirement systems totaled over
$40.7 billion on June 30, 2006, led by the Teachers Retirement
System (TRS) whose unfunded liabilities amounted to $22.4 billion.
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As the largest
of the State systems, TRS accounts for over half of the total assets
and liabilities of the five state systems combined.
-
At the beginning
of FY 1998, Illinois’ State funded retirement systems' total
unfunded liabilities were approximately $13.7 billion. At June 30,
2006, these liabilities stood at about $40.7 billion, or 197% above
the FY 1998 level.
-
The primary
cause of this increase, in order of impact, were insufficient
employer contributions (when compared to contributions based on
normal cost plus interest), increases in retirement benefits
(essentially the increase in the benefit formula for TRS and SERS
members in fiscal year 1998 and 2002 SERS ERI), lower than assumed
investment returns, and to a lesser extent, underestimation of
salary increases.
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The cumulative
funded ratio for the State funded systems grew steadily from FY 1999
to FY 2000, mainly due to higher than assumed investment returns and
adherence to the funding plan established in Public Act 88-593,
which more than offset the increase in accrued liability caused by
benefit increases.
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In FY 2002, the
funded ratio fell to the lowest level since FY 1998 primarily due to
investment returns totaling $5.6 billion less than previously
assumed.
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In FY 2003,
investment returns continued to be lower than assumed (by $2.2
billion), but not nearly as low as the previous two years.
Investments began to bounce back in FY 2004, helping to increase the
funded ratio.
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In addition, in
2003 the State sold $10 billion in pension obligation bonds and used
part of the proceeds to pay all of the contributions for FY 2004.
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The bond sale
generated $7.3 billion to reduce unfunded liabilities of the state
funded retirement systems.
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The funded ratio
remained relatively stable in FY 2005 and FY 2006 despite
insufficient employer contributions, mainly due to very high
investment returns.
-
In accordance
with the funding method contained in current law, the State
appropriated $1.37 billion to the State retirement systems in FY
2007.
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Under current
law, required State contributions are expected grow to $4.26 billion
in FY 2015. These steady annual increases will support attainment
of the 90% funded ratio goal in FY 2045.
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If the State
continues funding according to current law, the accrued liabilities
of the State retirement systems will increase from approximately
$108.8 billion at the end of FY 2007 to an estimated $463.5 billion
at the end of FY 2045. At the same time, assets are projected to
increase from $64.6 billion to $417.1 billion. Consequently, the
unfunded liabilities are projected to increase from $44.2 billion at
the end of FY 2007 to $46.4 billion at the end of FY 2045, and the
funded ratio is expected to decrease slightly from 59.4% in FY 2007,
and then increase to 90.0% by the end of FY 2045.
Funding Projections for the State
Retirement Systems
Projections Based on Laws in Effect on
June 30, 2006
($ in millions)
|
Fiscal Year |
Annual Payroll |
Total Sate Contribution |
State Contribution as a % of
Payroll |
Total Employee Contribution |
Accrued Liabilities |
Assets |
Unfunded Liabilities |
Funded Ratio |
|
2007 |
15,132.2 |
1,372.3 |
9.1% |
1,292.3 |
108,838.4 |
64,639.4 |
44,198.9 |
59.4% |
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2008 |
15,787.9 |
2,018.7 |
12.8% |
1,343.2 |
114,409.7 |
67,429.7 |
46,979.9 |
58.9% |
|
2009 |
16,428.1 |
2,739.1 |
16.7% |
1,396.4 |
120,185.2 |
70,906.5 |
49,278.8 |
59.0% |
|
2010 |
17,092.9 |
3,498.7 |
20.6% |
1,449.9 |
126,141.1 |
75,122.9 |
51,018.2 |
59.6% |
|
2011 |
17,772.6 |
3,641.9 |
20.6% |
1,504.2 |
132,244.2 |
79,447.0 |
52,797.2 |
60.1% |
|
2012 |
18,469.0 |
3,788.2 |
20.6% |
1,559.7 |
138,473.2 |
83,864.4 |
54,608.7 |
60.6% |
|
2013 |
19,188.6 |
3,939.6 |
20.6% |
1,617.0 |
144,801.9 |
88,350.8 |
56,451.1 |
61.0% |
|
2014 |
19,938.2 |
4,096.7 |
20.6% |
1,677.8 |
151,219.9 |
92,900.9 |
58,319.0 |
61.4% |
|
2015 |
20,725.3 |
4,261.5 |
20.6% |
1,743.1 |
157,729.7 |
97,573.1 |
60,156.6 |
61.9% |
Read the
full report: Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
Report on the Financial Condition o f the Illinois Public Employee
Retirement Systems, July 2007
Read this
article in PDF format.
Read IRSI's updated Public Employee
Retirement System
FAQs.
For more
information on Illinois Public Employee Retirement Systems please
contact,
Jourlande
Gabriel,
Director of the
Illinois Retirement Security Initiative,
at (312) 332-1103
or jgabriel@ctbaonline.org.
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STATE
CHILDREN'S
HEALTH
INSURANCE
PROGRAM |
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Nine
million American children lack health insurance.
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CONGRESS CLOSE TO EXPANDING CHILDREN'S HEALTH PROGRAM
An update from the
Coalition on Human Needs:
This week, prior to leaving town for the
August recess, both the House and Senate approved proposals to renew the
State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). The Senate voted
68-31 to approve the Senate Finance Committee’s SCHIP package on August
2. The vote signals a firm bipartisan commitment to reauthorize and
strengthen the program. Furthermore, with more than two-thirds of the
Senate voting in favor of the bill (including 18 Republicans), the
Senate has sufficient votes to override a Presidential veto. The House
passed its SCHIP proposal, the Children’s Health and Medicare Protection
(CHAMP) Act of 2007, H.R. 3162, by a vote of 225 to 204 on August 1. The
House vote was far more partisan, with only 5 Republicans joining the
majority. The President has issued veto threats against both bills
because of their funding increases. The President proposes a scanty $5
billion increase over five years – not enough to cover the number of
children now enrolled.
The Senate proposal, S. 1893, provides $35 billion in increased funding
over five years for SCHIP. The increase is financed by a 61-cent tobacco
tax increase. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that under
this proposal four million children who would otherwise be uninsured
would be covered by 2012. The approved Senate Finance Committee package
includes other positive features aimed at strengthening the overall
program and increasing enrollment. (For a detailed summary of the Senate
Finance Committee package, click
here.)
The House bill, however, goes even further than the Senate bill to
strengthen the SCHIP program and cover more uninsured children. The
CHAMP Act, which also contains improvements to Medicare, commits the
full $50 billion over five years set aside for SCHIP in the budget
resolution. The additional funds, primarily paid for by a 45-cent
federal tobacco tax increase and by reducing the subsidies provided to
private insurance companies participating in Medicare, would provide
health insurance to five million more children by 2012, one million more
than the Senate’s bill. The House bill produces greater coverage gains
than the Senate because it contains an additional $15 billion increase,
but also because it expands states’ eligibility options. Under the House
bill states can opt to cover older children (up to the age of 25, phased
in from 2010-2013), as well as legal immigrant children and pregnant
women during their first five years in the United States (currently
states can only cover legal immigrant children and pregnant women after
they have lived in the United States for five years). Like the Senate
bill, the CHAMP Act also grants states the option of covering pregnant
women without having to seek a waiver from the federal government.
The CHAMP Act’s Medicare improvements emphasize preventive care. The
bill allows Medicare to add preventive health benefits without seeking
approval from Congress, and waives deductibles for preventive benefits.
In addition, it makes mental health care more affordable by reducing
co-payment from 50 percent to 20 percent. Rural fee-for-service Medicare
protections are prevented from expiring, and subsidies to help
low-income Medicare beneficiaries pay prescription drug and other costs
are made more available.
There are other provisions in the CHAMP Act that make it a good bill.
The proposal guarantees dental benefits and assures that mental health
care services are treated the same as physical health benefits. It
continues to give states the flexibility of deciding the income
eligibility levels for their SCHIP programs and allows the few states
with parent coverage waivers to continue operating them. No new parent
coverage waivers would be granted unless the state can prove it is
attempting to reach all children under 200% of the poverty line and that
no children would be denied coverage in order to cover adults. Another
positive feature of the bill is that it gives states more flexibility to
address problems created by a burdensome citizenship documentation
requirement in the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2006. The citizenship
documentation requirement has caused thousands of U.S. citizen children
to lose or be denied coverage and has been costly for states to
administer. The CHAMP Act does alleviate some of these problems by
giving states the option to return to pre-DRA rules to prove citizenship
for children and by allowing additional types of documents to prove
citizenship for adults and for those states that decide to continue to
operate under DRA rules. For an in-depth look at this issue, see the
Center for Budget and Policy Priorities issue brief,
New Charges About how
House Children’s Health Bill Affects Undocumented Immigrants are False.
Families USA has produced a helpful comparison of the Senate and House
bills; click here to see their
side-by-side comparison.
What’s next: Differences in the two bills will have to be
resolved by a House-Senate Conference Committee. Bipartisan support will
be needed to pass a final bill and override a potential veto. For now,
the approval of the two bills signifies a major victory for low-income
families and children and health advocates.
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ACTION
ALERT:
TRANSIT |
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Read
a
letter to the editor
from CTBA that appeared in the Chicago Tribune.
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SUPPORT TRANSIT FUNDING NOW!
Bring Illinois into
the 21st Century by supporting sustainable transit funding.
The Northeast region has relied on a 24 year old funding formula that
has not accommodated population growth or the loss of federal operating
dollars eliminated over a decade ago.
Call your
legislators and Governor Blagojevich TODAY to urge them to
support the funding and accountability reforms (SB 572, House Amendments
1 and 2) for the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA).
This is a good solution for the region and the state because it can
reduce congestion and facilitate the movement of goods across the state
and to the rest of the country.
These reforms will:
-
Ensure 5-year
strategic planning cycles that, among other objectives, take into
consideration access to area jobs for low income communities, and;
(Legislation will
eventually include reforms to the CTA pension so that expenditures are
in-line with the new funding package.)
Every Vote Counts. Since
the legislature is now in an overtime session, every bill needs 3/5
majority in order to get passed out of its respective chamber.
That means that your support is more important than ever.
To contact your
state Representative and Senator, click
here. To reach the Office of Governor Blagojevich, call (217)
782-0244 or (312) 814-2121.
RESOURCES:
For more information,
contact Dia Cirillo at 312-332-6522 or
dcirillo@ctbaonline.org.
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NEWS
FROM
CTBA |
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A
MESSAGE TO WEEKLY REVIEW READERS: GOODBYE AND THANK YOU
A message to Weekly Review readers
By Valerie
Chepp, Director of Communications
After 2 ½ years
of serving as the chief writer and editor for the Weekly Review
newsletter, I will be stepping down from my post and passing along
my editorial duties in order to pursue a PhD at the University of
Maryland this fall. I’m thrilled to have had the experience of
writing for this publication and the opportunity to work with so
many of you throughout the process.
Particularly, I
want to thank the many of you that have contacted me, sharing your
thoughts and feedback around the Weekly Review. A weekly
publication is incredible work to sustain, and hearing from so many
of you over the years has encouraged us to know the value and
importance that our weekly publication provides. Please continue to
share your thoughts with us.
I also want to
thank all the guest columnists that have contributed articles to our
newsletter. The Weekly Review was created to function as a
timely news resource and a platform on which to communicate
information on issues related to low income families. Please
feel free to use the Weekly Review to share information about
upcoming events, legislative work, and any other organizational news
that contributes to the well-being of low and middle income
families.
Last but not
least, I want to thank all the great interns that we’ve had over the
years that have helped to get the newsletter out week after week.
Their assistance has been invaluable and does not go unnoticed.
Since I took up
writing for the Review, our circulation has more than doubled and
the list continues to grow. Every week, we have people from all
corners of the state signing up for our publication.
Increasingly, this publication is becoming a collaborative endeavor
among CTBA staff, and we will continue to work hard to bring you this
unique resource.
Please feel free
to contact me or my colleague, Chrissy Mancini, with any questions,
suggestions or thoughts. For the next week, I can be reached
at 312-332-2151,
vchepp@ctbaonline.org and Chrissy can be reached at
312-332-1481,
cmancini@ctbaonline.org.
We thank you,
our readers, for all your support and contributions to the
newsletter. We also
thank the McCormick Tribune Foundation for generously funding the
newsletter for the past three years. We look forward to
continue writing our newsletter and keeping the spirit of the Weekly
Review alive.
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UPCOMING
EVENTS
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CHECK OUT
OUR
WEBSITE TODAY
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WHAT?
Action Out Loud! Youth Activist Training
Camp
WHEN?
August 6-10, 2007
WHERE? Downtown Chicago
Click here for more information.
WHAT?
Illinois Youth - Ready for Life: Teen
Poverty & Youth Development Project
WHEN?
August 7, 2007, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM
WHERE? Illinois Terminal, 45 E. University Ave., 4th Floor,
Rm. 403, Champaign
For more information, click here to view the
flyer.
WHAT?
National field call on the
reauthorization of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act
WHEN?
August 9, 2007, 1:00 PM
The conference call number is 1-888-384-9090 and
participant code is 936635#. If you would like to participate, please
contact Kathleen Rupp
at 202-558-3580 ext 19. Click on the following links to view
What Can Organizations Do
Document, Take Action
Tool Kit,
Link to
the JJDPA online.
If you would like more background information about the JJDPA or to access
the Act 4 Juvenile Justice Fact Book, which contains more detailed
information on the JJDPA and the statement of principles signed by a number
of organizations around the country, please check out the Act 4 Juvenile
Justice website.
WHAT?
Illinois Youth - Ready for Life: Teen
Poverty & Youth Development Project
WHEN?
August 14, 2007, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM
WHERE? UIC Student Center East, 750 S. Halsted, Rm 302, 3rd
Floor Tower, Chicago
For more information, click here to view the
flyer.
WHAT?
Illinois Youth - Ready for Life: Teen
Poverty & Youth Development Project
WHEN?
August 16, 2007, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM
WHERE? Rend Lake College Market Place, 321 Potomac Blvd., Rm.
354 A/B, Mt. Vernon
For more information, click here to view the
flyer.
WHAT?
Moving from Poverty to Opportunity Action
Forum: DeKalb, Kane, Kendall and McHenry Counties
WHEN?
August 16, 2007, 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
WHERE? Gayle's Memorial Missionary Baptist Church - 730 Gillet
Avenue - Aurora
For more information, click here to view the
flyer.
WHAT?
Moving from Poverty to Opportunity Action
Forum: Chicago Southside
WHEN?
August 22, 2007, 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
WHERE? The Englewood Corps & Red Shield Center - 945 W. 69th
Street - Chicago
For more information, click here to view the
flyer.
WHAT? Single-Family Development:
Community Housing Developers Institute
WHEN?
September 11-12, 2007
WHERE?
ICAA Training Facility, 3435 Liberty Drive, Springfield, IL
Contact:
nate@housingactionil.org
or 312-939-6074 x 201 More info:
www.housingactionil.org.
WHAT?
National Association of Social Workers (NASW)
IL Chapter’s Statewide Conference, “Bridging Health Disparities: Help Starts
Here”
WHEN?
September 24-26, 2007
WHERE?
Holiday Inn Chicago Mart Plaza, Chicago, IL
Click here for
more information.
WHAT? Property and Asset Management:
Community Housing Developers Institute
WHEN?
October 16-17, 2007
WHERE?
ICAA Training Facility, 3435 Liberty Drive, Springfield, IL
Contact:
nate@housingactionil.org
or 312-939-6074 x 201 More info:
www.housingactionil.org.
WHAT? Affordable Housing Month
WHEN?
November 1-30, 2007
WHERE?
Public education events and activities to be held throughout the state
Contact:
nate@housingactionil.org
or 312-939-6074 x 201 More info:
www.housingactionil.org.
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For
any questions on information contained in this Weekly Review,
or to JOIN OUR MAILING LIST, please contact Valerie Chepp at:
312.332.2151,
vchepp@ctbaonline.org |
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