Being human
To whom it may concern:
Every day at Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, we teach about the dangers of intolerance and indifference through the lens of the horrific history of World War II and the Holocaust. Our museum was founded by Holocaust survivors who keenly felt the confusion, pain, anxiety and fear of being separated from their families, a trauma that haunts them even today.
While the current immigration situation is not comparable to the Holocaust, when we see forcible separation of families at our own nation's border, we must speak out. America was founded on shared values of democracy, respect for human rights, the importance of family, and compassion. The separation policy did not reflect these values. Today President Trump responded to public pressure and signed an executive order to end this troubling policy.
History shows us that when we identify, ostracize and cast as "other" our fellow human beings, we begin a process of dehumanization. We do not believe we are heading down the road of the atrocities we saw in the 20th century because of the rights we hold dearfree speech, holding officials accountable, and having a system of checks and balances. We are proud of these structures and institutions and must work to maintain them. And sometimes this requires speaking out.
As Rabbi Joachim Prinz said at the March on Washington in 1963, "When I was the rabbi of the Jewish community in Berlin under the Hitler regime, I learned many things. The most important thing that I learned under those tragic circumstances was that bigotry and hatred are not the most urgent problem. The most urgent, the most disgraceful, the most shameful and the most tragic problem is silence. A great people which had created a great civilization had become a nation of silent onlookers. They remained silent in the face of hate, in the face of brutality and in the face of mass murder. America must not become a nation of onlookers. America must not remain silent."
Today, peoples' voices have been heard. The pressure of citizen constituents was felt all the way to the oval office. Going forward, we must continue to be upstanders and remain diligent in defending our common humanity.
Fritzie Fritzshall, Holocaust
Survivor and Museum President;
Susan Abrams, Museum CEO;
Marcy Larson, Vice President of Marketing and
Business Development,
Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center
Skokie
Child care
To whom it may concern:
Dear Gov. Rauner, Speaker Madigan, Senate President Cullerton and Minority Leaders Durkin and Brady:
You are the parents of 17,000 children who receive protective services from the state, as well as another 3,000 who are at risk of being removed from their homes. These children have experienced signi cant abuse, neglect and trauma, wounds that will heal only with the expertise of dedicated professionals.
As Illinois' elected leadership, you have the moral, legal and financial obligation to ensure the well-being of these children. But their care is in crisis. You are the only ones who can fix it.
We represent the private social service agencies in Illinois; we are responsible for more than 80 percent of the day-to-day parenting of these children for you. We provide intact family services, foster care and therapeutic foster care, permanent placement into adoptive families, and residential services.
These children only have us to care for them. Our work is complex and important but its sustainability is threatened because the state of Illinois does not want to pay for it.
Only twice in the last 17 years have we received an increase in our reimbursement rate. We are encumbered from paying livable wages to our experienced professional staff; someone with a bachelor's degree receives an average salary of $13.88/hour, which hovers just above minimum wage.
Our highly trained, skilled employees have had enough, and they are leaving. Turnover averages about 42 percent across the state as our social workers seek out jobs that pay far more competitive wages. The loss of veteran social workers erodes our clinical expertise and harms your children in many di erent ways. Long-term relationships that are critical to providing successful child welfare services are at risk. Children are spending too much time in foster care before being moved to adoptive homes. Young adults are aging out of residential services with few skills and little or no path to success.
Illinoispreviously an innovator in child welfare servicesnow performs worst in the nation on key statistics related to safety and timely permanency.
This crisis will only worsen as the opioid addiction epidemic spreads. Based on current trends, the number of children requiring protective services could jump by as much as 20 percent in the next year as their parents undergo medical treatment or even enter the criminal justice system.
Our work is not sustainable if we cannot invest in the training, support and supervision of our social workers and pay them the salaries they deserve.
We know Illinois can, once again, succeed at child welfare. We believe a strong public/private partnership can create systemic improvement so Illinois can re-emerge as a leader in protecting children.
We can't do it without you. We are asking you for an immediate rate increase and a long-term financial aid.
We ask you to ensure the well-being of your 20,000 children. We ask you to sustain our work and improve child well-being. Without your help, these children are at risk, and they will suffer.
Signed by the following providers:
Jason Keeler, Allendale Association
Gary Huelsmann, Caritas Family Solutions
Rev. Msgr. Michael Boland, Catholic Charities of the
Archdiocese of Chicago Debbie Reed, Chaddock
Matt George, Children's Home Association of Illinois Cathy Krieger, Children's Place Association
Nancy Ronquillo, Children's Home & Aid
Dan Kotowski, ChildServ
Marlin Livingston, Cunningham Children's Home
Ken Withrow, Evangelical Child and Family Agency
Merry Beth Sheets, Hephzibah Children's Association Christopher L. Cox, Hoyleton Youth and Family Services Andrea Durbin, Illinois Collaboration on Youth
Mary Ann Berg, Indian Oaks Academy
Howard Sitron, Jewish Child and Family Services
Kathy Grzelak, Kaleidoscope
Ron Little, Kemmerer Village
Kara Teeple, Lawrence Hall
Tina Maraccini, Little City Foundation
Mike Bertrand, Lutheran Child and Family Services of Illinois
Mark Stutrud, Lutheran Social Services of Illinois Toleda Hart,
MYSI Corporation
Doryce McCarthy, OMNI Youth Services
Dennis Wiley, Onarga Academy
Todd Schultz, One Hope United
Annetta Wilson, Sankofa Safe Child Initiative
John Shadowens, Spero Family Services
Dianne Schultz, The Baby Fold
Patricia Fox, The Center for Youth and Family Solutions Marc Fagan, Thresholds
Zack Schrantz, UCAN
Rea Hobbs, Volunteers of America of Illinois
Rick Velasquez, Youth Outreach Services
Kathleen M. Wright, Youth Service Bureau
Organizations in support of the coalition's request:
ACLU of Illinois
Civitas ChildLaw Center
April Curtis, Foster Care Alumni of America National
James McIntyre, Foster Care Alumni of America Illinois Chapter O ce of the Cook County Public Guardian
Voices for Illinois Children