Chicago to expand pilot that pays $1,500 for funerals of homicide victims, $1,000 stipends for survivors

Chicago to expand pilot that pays $1,500 for funerals of homicide victims, $1,000 stipends for survivors

 

Mayor Brandon Johnson listens to Deputy Mayor of Community Safety, Garien Gatewood during a media event about the Emergency Supplemental Victims Fund Expansion at UCAN in Chicago, June 20, 2024. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

By ALICE YIN | ayin@chicagotribune.com | Chicago Tribune

PUBLISHED: June 20, 2024 at 12:05 p.m. | UPDATED: June 20, 2024 at 12:27 p.m.

Mayor Brandon Johnson will increase the scope of a pilot program that funds basic needs for victims of gun violence and their families, he announced Thursday as the latest update in his public safety plan ahead of the summer.

Under the expansion, the Emergency Supplemental Victims Fund will see another $6.4 million — some of that from federal COVID-19 stimulus dollars — over the next two years and expand from five to 15 community areas. There are three categories of funds: $1,000 for basic needs such as medical expenses, child care and groceries; $1,000 for relocation services to move to a safer place; and $1,500 for funeral and burial expenses.

In touting his announcement, Johnson repeatedly decried his predecessors as “stingy” toward communities on the South and West sides that needed relief from disinvestment and violence the most. The fund in question was started in 2022 under former Mayor Lori Lightfoot and has since doled out aid to almost 400 victims.

“When a 7-year-old is stepping just outside their home and is gunned down, it’s an indication of failures of previous administrations who have been intentional about leaving our communities behind,” Johnson said, referencing a West Side shooting this week.

“These same communities that are experiencing violence are the communities in which pensions were raided. … This crisis did not show up with simply a bullet. This crisis showed up when previous administrations decided to give up on these communities, and they have demonstrated and shown disdain for our people.uto (225p22ing fine

Relatives of the victims of two fatal Boeing 737 MAX crashes asked the Justice Department on Wednesday to seek a fine against the plane maker of up to $24.78 billion and move forward with a criminal prosecution. J

For gun violence survivors to be eligible, they must live in one of 15 neighborhoods: Gresham, Austin, Chicago Lawn, East Garfield Park, Englewood, Grand Crossing, Humboldt Park, Back of the Yards, Lawndale, South Shore, West Englewood, West Garfield Park or West Pullman. The maximum amount those recipients can get is $2,000 per shooting.

For families of homicide victims aged 24 or below, Chicagoans from across the city can apply, for a cap of $3,500 per death. Applicants will work with community nonprofits who receive city funding from the Public Health Department to receive the stipends.

911 dispatcher Keith Thornton Jr. calls Chicago a place that ‘caters strictly to criminals who target the innocent’

CHICAGO (CBS) — Many may remember Keith Thonton , the 911 dispatcher praised for how he coordinated the response the night officers Ella French and Carlos Yanez were shot in the line of duty. Saturday night he was at the helm again when mobs of young people went to The Loop and Millennium Park and a teen was killed.

Sunday Thornton posted on Facebook saying, “Chicago is in a death spiral and has quickly turned into a city that caters strictly to criminals who target the innocent. There is absolutely no accountability and there are no consequences for bad or even deadly behavior. Many parents have stopped parenting and most politicians have forced our police officers to stop policing in such a way that they should.”

More than 1,200 people weighed in on a CBS 2 Twitter poll asking whether the violence in Chicago has affected plans to go downtown.

More than 79% said yes.