Over the weekend, five senators hosted events in their communities to engage with and provide services for their constituents.
On Friday, Senator Laura Ellman (D-Naperville) hosted an event with the Secretary of State’s Mobile Driver Services Unit, which offered residents a convenient way to renew or correct driver’s licenses, renew license plate stickers, and more. About 25 residents took the opportunity to access these services.
Also on Friday, Senator Scott Bennett (D-Champaign) attended an event designating the University of Illinois’ Chez Veteran Center’s as a Purple Heart University for its services to veterans.
“Partnerships like this allow us to bring essential services directly to our constituents,” Ellman said. “Whenever I have the chance to bring services right to our residents, I'm going to jump on it.”
“It was an honor to attend the U of I’s Chez Veteran Center,” Bennett said. “As the largest student veteran center in the country, it gives veteran students a community on campus, and this designation is a recognition of all its important work.”
SPRINGFIELD –Illinois now allows student-athletes to be paid for the use of their names, image, or likenesses because of ex-NFL and Northwestern University alum State Senator Napoleon Harris, III (D-Harvey).
“Finally student-athletes will receive some financial benefit for the use of their names, images, and likenesses,” Harris said. “Their schools will no longer receive all the financial benefits. The students deserve compensation from the hard work of being a college athlete and making their schools millions of dollars.”
Read more: Illinois allows student-athletes to be compensated
SPRINGFIELD – After an unprecedented 14 months for the Illinois Department of Employment Security with thousands of residents out of work due to the COVID-19 pandemic, bipartisan support for major reforms produced House Bill 2643. Sponsored by Assistant Senate Majority Leader Linda Holmes (Aurora), the lead Senate Democrat on the Unemployment Insurance Agreed Bill process, the overhaul package was signed into law by the governor Friday.
“Business and labor groups, IDES, and Democratic and Republican members worked in a bipartisan fashion to craft this omnibus approach,” Holmes said. “It targets the weaknesses revealed in a system that wasn’t designed to address the wave of job losses, thousands of people calling with problems who couldn’t get answers, and fraudulent claims all hitting the state at once.”
House Bill 2643 revises the Unemployment Insurance Act, allowing IDES to communicate with legislators’ offices about specific constituent cases, and requires IDES to give more information to those issued overpayments and their right to appeal (originally in Senate Bill 2466 from Sen. Ram Villivalam).
SPRINGFIELD – In an effort to expand the rights of survivors of sexual assault, State Senator Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) sponsored a law requiring hospitals to use the Illinois State Police online evidence tracking system and establishing a set of crime victims’ rights.
“Survivors of sexual assault need to know health care professionals and law enforcement officials are providing them with information on all available resources at their disposal,” Villa said. “It takes a brave person to come forward to report assault, and survivors deserve to feel at ease by staying in the loop on charging decisions and other updates to their cases.”
In 2020, the Illinois State Police launched an online tracking system for sexual assault evidence collection kits that allows survivors of sexual assault to track evidence in their cases, but not all hospitals in Illinois opted to participate. Villa’s law requires all hospitals to enter collected sexual assault evidence into the tracking system and requires health care facilities or law enforcement to provide survivors information on how to use the tracking system.
Read more: Survivors of sexual assault have more rights under Villa law
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