
Lawmakers file transit reform bill, but don't yet address fiscal cliff
But the bill, filed just days before the scheduled adjournment of the spring legislative session, does not include a proposal for how those reforms will be funded as Chicago-area transit agencies face an impending $771 million fiscal cliff at the end of this year.
Transit agencies have warned that they would have to dramatically slash service if legislators don't find funding to plug the budget gap, which comes as COVID-19 relief funding runs out. The agencies have said they will need to start planning for those cuts soon, though lawmakers could punt the issue to later in the year.
More than 50 'L' stations could close or see service slashed, and more than half of the CTA's bus routes could be eliminated entirely in that 'doomsday' scenario, the Regional Transportation Authority has warned. On Metra, trains could run only once an hour on weekdays and service on the Metra Electric's line to Blue Island could be cut entirely. Pace bus service in the suburbs could be eliminated entirely on weekends.
Under the legislation filed Wednesday, the RTA would be renamed the Northern Illinois Transit Authority. Notably, the bill does not consolidate the region's transit agencies under a single regional agency — a proposal opposed by labor groups, which instead supported a proposal that would boost coordination between the agencies.
Still, it makes a number of other changes after months of negotiations, including establishing a new law enforcement task force to address safety concerns and revising the balance of power on the boards that govern one of the largest transit systems in the country.
The makeup of the entities overseeing governance and policies of the system has been a key point of negotiations, and the proposal released Wednesday seemed to weaken the influence of Chicago's mayor.
NITA would also oversee a law enforcement task force throughout the transit systems to address safety concerns for riders and workers.
The major public safety change to the systems would be the creation of the single task force that would be led by the Cook County sheriff's office with assistance from Chicago police, Metra police and other local law enforcement agencies within the system's purview.
Within a year, the task force would vote to implement a sworn law enforcement officer program on public transit in the region, as well as a crime prevention plan to protect riders and workers, the legislation says.
The 'primary mission' of the task force would be the 'preservation of life and reducing the occurrence and the fear of crime on the public transit system,' according to the bill text.
For years, crime on the CTA — as well as the perception of crime — have been nagging concerns for riders. The rate of reported violent crime on trains spiked as the pandemic drained trains and buses of many riders, and though it has since gone down, it remained higher than pre-pandemic levels during the first half of 2024.
Through June 2024, there were about 5.1 violent crimes per million rides, comparable to the same timeframe in 2023 but well above the years before the pandemic. In the first half of 2019, for instance, 2.5 violent crimes were reported per million rides, a September 2024 Tribune analysis of CTA ridership and city crime data showed.
Updated CTA crime statistics were not immediately available from the CTA or CPD. But Chicago overall has seen a drop in nearly every major crime category this year with nearly five months in the books. For instance, homicides were down 23% from the previous year and robberies were down 36% during that period. Total shootings were also down by 33% in the last year.
The legislation suggests that the task force could develop a data-driven policing approach by focusing its crime-fighting efforts on hot spots known for violence, property crimes such as robbery and theft and 'code of conduct' crimes, according to the measure. The unit could also partner with faith-based and community groups, and help people experiencing homelessness find shelter and appropriate social services.
The legislation would also require the creation of a 'transit ambassador' program by June 2026. Transit ambassadors would be workers dedicated to assisting passengers throughout the system, including by helping to connect them with social or medical services as needed. The ambassadors would also liaise with law enforcement and help ensure riders follow transit system rules, the legislation said.
Under the proposal, the CTA board would move away from a seven-member structure with a majority appointed by the mayor to six members, with half appointed by the mayor and others appointed by the governor and Cook County Board president.
The proposed makeup of the NITA board would also newly allow the governor to appoint five people, in addition to existing members of the RTA board that are currently appointed by the Cook County Board president, the mayor of Chicago and the collar counties. Many members of the CTA, Metra and Pace boards would also serve on the NITA board.
The bill also charges NITA — the newly named and empowered RTA — with setting fares and schedules 'so that the public transportation system in the metropolitan region operates on a one-network, one-timetable, one-ticket model for transit users.'
Specifically, the NITA in coordination with the boards would need to implement by February 2030 a single payment system for the region. Currently, CTA uses a different fare system than Metra.
The RTA has previously said the ability to integrate fares, and keep them relatively low, will depend on whether the state addresses the expected financial shortfall at the end of this year, which the legislation being considered so far does not address.
At an unrelated event at the Illinois State Library in Springfield, Gov. JB Pritzker told reporters he only briefly saw the new bill but said his focus is the importance of addressing the governance issues.
'People should be able to get on a bus, a train, transit of any sort, and not have to worry about which ticket they have and the transfers that they may need to make and think about what the services are that RTA or that CTA are providing,' he said. 'They should just be able to get on and go where they want to go. And that has not been happening with the governance that we've had up to now.'
In a statement, RTA spokesperson Tina Fassett Smith said the agency was still reviewing the legislation and intended to do a 'complete analysis' before making public statements about its substance.
'It is clear from initial review however, that this bill does not contain any new funding,' she said. 'Reforms alone cannot close our fiscal cliff, and riders will need to brace for service cuts in 2026 if the state does not provide funding certainty by May 31st.'
Representatives for the CTA, Metra and Pace did not provide comment on the legislation Wednesday.
It's not clear yet if lawmakers will address the funding concerns before the end of the spring legislative session on Saturday.
But in an interview, Tim Drea, president of the Illinois AFL-CIO, which has helped lead a coalition of labor groups heavily involved in the transit negotiations, said the organization would not back a bill that doesn't come with funding for transit.
'Revenue and reform go hand and hand,' Drea said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Precinct DTLA, well-known gay bar, warns it could close after former employee claims discrimination
A downtown Los Angeles bar known as a haven for the gay community is warning it could soon shutter as it faces a costly legal fight with a former employee. 'We're a couple of slow weekends away from having to close our doors,' owners of Precinct DTLA wrote Friday on Instagram. 'Like many small businesses, we've taken hit after hit — from COVID shutdowns and ICE raids to citywide curfews and the ongoing decline of nightlife. But what we're facing now is even more devastating.' In May, Jessica Gonzales sued the bar, its owner, manager and an employee, alleging she faced discrimination and harassment as a cisgender, heterosexual woman and was subjected to an unsafe work environment. Gonzales, who worked at the bar on Broadway for eight years, claimed that when she reported employees and patrons were having sex in the bar, its owner told her to 'stop complaining.' According to a complaint filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Gonzales was required to work the coat check for Precinct DTLA's weekly 'jockstrap / underwear party' without receiving pay. She said the bar's manager eliminated the coat check fee, believing it would 'incentivize more patrons to drop their pants.' Gonzales claimed the environment grew so hostile she needed to bring stress balls to work. One day, her complaint said, another employee grabbed her stress ball and refused to give it back to her. In a struggle over the stress ball, Gonzales claims the employee broke two of her fingers. According to her lawsuit, Gonzales was effectively fired after the incident, in part because Precinct DTLA's owner and manager wanted to replace her with a gay male employee. 'These claims are completely false,' the bar's representatives wrote on Instagram. In the post, they added that the lawyer representing Gonzales 'appears to have a clear anti-LGBTQ agenda.' 'There are multiple reports — including from individuals who previously worked with him — that he used anti-LGBTQ slurs in written emails while at his former firm,' they wrote on Instagram. Gonzales is represented by John Barber, court records show. The Times reported in 2023 that Barber and his colleague, Jeff Ranen, regularly denigrated Black, Jewish, Middle Eastern, Asian and gay people in emails they exchanged while partners at Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith. After Barber and Ranen left to start their own firm, Lewis Brisbois released scores of the lawyer's emails, which showed the men regularly used anti-gay slurs to refer to people, The Times reported. In a joint statement at the time, Barber and Ranen said they were 'ashamed' and 'deeply sorry.' Barber didn't immediately return a request for comment Saturday. In the Instagram post, Precinct DTLA's representatives said defending themselves from Gonzales' allegations was 'draining us emotionally and financially.' 'Come to the bar,' they wrote. 'Buy a drink. Order some food. Tip the staff. Show up.'


Time Magazine
5 hours ago
- Time Magazine
Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies
President Donald Trump's firing of the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Friday afternoon just after she delivered a negative jobs report echoes the impulse of many leaders to shoot the messenger. Trump declared, 'I've had issues with the numbers for a long time. We're doing so well. I believe the numbers were phony like they were before the election and there were other times. So I fired her, and I did the right thing.' While Trump may or may not be friends with Vladimir Putin, he is clearly following the Russian President's HR staffing guidelines to eliminate lieutenants who bring bad news. As we've documented before, the Federal State Statistics Service (Rosstat) has a long history of manipulating official economic statistics to please Putin, 'bending over backward to correct bad numbers and burying unflattering statistics' under the pressure the Kremlin has exerted to corrupt statistical integrity, especially since Putin's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The reliability of official statistics from China has also been brought into question, leading analysts to rely on a wide range of unofficial or proxy indicators to gauge the true state of the Chinese economy. Even China's former Premier, the late Li Keqiang, reportedly confided that he didn't trust official GDP numbers. Read More: What to Know About the Jobs Report That Led Trump to Fire the Labor Statistics Chief Like other strongmen, Trump has repeatedly shown a pattern of manipulating data to suit his preferred narrative. Trump's surprise firing of BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer has quickly caught the attention of technical market analysts and economists on both sides of the political spectrum. One side cheers the push to disrupt a slow, bureaucratic federal agency. The other side shouts in dismay over concerns about yet another example of Trump politicizing an apolitical institution. Both responses are warranted. The accuracy of BLS data has long been questioned as major revisions only come in months later. To their credit, the BLS, in addition to other statistical agencies, has publicly recognized a need to modernize its methodology. Unfortunately, though, the severity of job revisions has worsened since the COVID-19 era, with no successful program to address the issue. The downward revision on Friday of more than 250,000 jobs marked the most significant adjustment since the depths of the pandemic. However, Trump's accusations against the BLS of rigging the job numbers to make him and the Republican base look bad, and his subsequent firing of McEntarfer based on a belief that BLS revisions were politically motivated, are yet another step closer to authoritarianism. Introducing his latest conspiracy theory, the President went even further by suggesting McEntarfer, whose career spans two decades across Republican and Democratic Administrations, rigged the numbers 'around the 2024 presidential election' in then-Vice President Kamala Harris' favor. Trump conveniently fails to mention that his definition of 'around' was back in August 2024. Recall, the 2024 presidential election was a full three months later in November. Revisions are not unusual behavior by the BLS. They are a critical part of the natural process for developing an accurate picture of the largest, most dynamic economy in the world. The average size of job revisions since 2003 is not insignificant at 51,000 jobs. And, despite what Trump may want Americans to believe, his tariff policies have created an unprecedented level of uncertainty in the U.S. economy, comparable only to that of 2020, with many economists expecting a recession to follow as a result. Bloomberg reporting has pointed to a possible connection between the severity of negative job revisions and recessionary economic environments. The BLS has also been subjected to DOGE-led hiring constraints and other resource rescissions. In addition, the Trump Administration's disbanding of the Federal Statistics Advisory Committee in March both eliminated one of the main engines for enhancing agency performance and, perhaps, in what should have been a concerning harbinger, abolished the canary in the data integrity coal mine. Complaints about BLS methods are legitimate, like the reliance on enumerators over scanner data, and deserve attention, but this is not how to fix it. Read More: What Trump's Win Means for the Economy This is far from the first time Trump has subordinated statistical integrity to political theater. From crowd sizes to weather forecasts, vote counts to tariff formulas, Trump has discarded facts for fictions that play to his political favor. Trump doesn't just bend the truth—he twists the numbers until they resemble propaganda and then silences those who disagree. As CBS News titan Edward R. Murrow warned 65 years ago: 'To be persuasive, we must be believable. To be believable, we must be credible. To be credible, we must be truthful.'


San Francisco Chronicle
6 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Myanmar military courts sentence 12 to life for human trafficking, including Chinese nationals
BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar military courts have sentenced a dozen individuals — including five Chinese nationals — to life imprisonment for their involvement in multiple human trafficking cases, state-run media reported Saturday. According to the Myanma Alinn newspaper, the convictions stem from a range of offenses including the online distribution of sex videos and the trafficking of Myanmar women into forced marriages in China. In one case, five people — including two Chinese nationals identified as Lin Te and Wang Xiaofeng — were sentenced to life imprisonment by a military court in Yangon, the country's largest city, on July 29. They were found guilty under Myanmar's Anti-Trafficking in Persons law for producing sex videos involving three Myanmar couples and distributing the footage online for profit. In a separate case, the same court sentenced a woman and three Chinese nationals — Yibo, Cao Qiu Quan and Chen Huan. The group was convicted of planning to transport two Myanmar women, recently married to two of the convicted Chinese men, into China, the report said. Additionally, three other people received life sentences from a separate military court for selling a woman as a bride to China, and for attempting to do the same with another woman. In another case, a woman from Myanmar's central Magway region was given a 10-year sentence on July 30 for planning to transport two Myanmar women to be sold as brides to Chinese men, the report said. Human trafficking, particularly of women and girls lured or forced into marriages in China, remains a widespread problem in Myanmar, a country still reeling from civil war after the military seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021. The persisting conflict in most areas of Myanmar has left millions of women and children vulnerable to exploitation. A 2018 report by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Kachin Women's Association Thailand (KWAT) — which works to prevent and respond to trafficking in northern Kachin and Shan states bordering China — estimated that about 21,000 women and girls from northern Myanmar were forced into marriage in China between 2013 and 2017. In its latest report published in December, KWAT noted a sharp decline in the number of trafficking survivors accessing its services from 2020 to 2023. It attributed the decline to the COVID-19 pandemic and border closures caused by ongoing conflict following the army takeover. However, it reported a resurgence in 2024 as people from across Myanmar began migrating to China in search of work. Maj-Gen Aung Kyaw Kyaw, a deputy minister for Home Affairs, said during a June meeting that the authorities had handled 53 cases of human trafficking, forced marriage and prostitution in 2024, 34 of which involved China, according to a report published by Myanmar's Information Ministry. The report also said that a total of 80 human trafficking cases, including 14 involving marriage deception by foreign nationals, were recorded between January and June this year.