Lightfoot administration waffles on ending driver’s license suspensions
by Curtis Black, The Chicago Reporter
Ticket fine reform is coming to Chicago driven by research from community organizations, extensiveinvestigative reporting, lawsuits, and a task force led by City Clerk Anna Valencia.
But one key reform — ending driver’s license suspensions for non-moving violations — was blocked in Springfield last month by Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who campaigned in support of the ban but now says she wants to consider it in a broader, “holistic” context.
The larger system, in which steep and rapidly accumulating fines — particularly for failure to purchase a city sticker — and predatory towing practices often seem to penalize people for being poor, certainly merits a clean sweep. Valencia’s recent report provides an impressive range of recommendations for removing barriers to compliance for low-income drivers.
A few of them are included in an ordinance sponsored by Ald. Gilbert Villegas, which would cap late fees, provide for dismissal of city sticker tickets once a driver buys a sticker, and reduce down payments required to enter payment plans, among other provisions.
Valencia’s task force goes further, recommending that the city review a range of policies and practices, including the city’s late fee structure and its towing and impoundment procedures. It also calls for a comprehensive review of the city’s ticketing policies that would include a racial equity assessment to address higher ticketing rates in minority communities and the practice of issuing multiple tickets for missing city stickers. This problem is concentrated in black and Latino communities.
According to advocates, city agency staff issue tickets at comparable rates in various neighborhoods, but tickets issued by police officers are heavily concentrated in minority areas. Valencia’s report recommends considering limiting police to issuing tickets for moving violations.
That’s all worth considering, and it will take time. Meanwhile, though, the issue of driver’s license suspensions has a great deal of urgency.
It’s been pushed for a couple of years by the Transit Table, a coalition of advocacy groups aimed at eliminating transportation barriers to employment, which says the practice “strips people of work opportunities” and “contributes unnecessarily to cycles of debt, poverty, and often leads to incarceration.” It was the top recommendation of a report on how Chicago’s ticketing policies unfairly burden minority communities by the Woodstock Institute last year.
It’s also the only part of the ticket reform agenda that requires state legislation. And it’s a statewide issue, which is why the License to Work Act attracted downstate and Republican support along with backing by the General Assembly’s Black and Latino Caucuses. The bill passed the State Senate and was set to pass the House when Lightfoot’s lobbyists came out against it.