Chicago Aldermanic Black Caucus

The Chicago Aldermanic Black Caucus is a bloc of aldermen in the Chicago City Council, designed with the goal of "representing the needs and interests of Chicago's Black communities."[1] During the 2019–23 term, the caucus consists of 20 members, out of the council's 50 aldermen.[1][2] As of June 2023, the chair of the caucus is Stephanie Coleman.[3][4]

Chicago Aldermanic Black Caucus
ChairStephanie Coleman
Founded2015; 9 years ago (2015)
Seats in Chicago City Council
20 / 50
Website
Facebook page

Membership

Current members

As of January 2020, the Caucus has 20 members.[1]

MemberWardJoined
Pat Dowell3
Sophia King4
Leslie Hairston5
Roderick Sawyer6
Gregory Mitchell7
Michelle A. Harris8
Anthony Beale9
Stephanie Coleman162019[5]
David Moore17
Derrick Curtis18
Jeanette Taylor202019[6]
Howard Brookins21
Michael Scott Jr.24
Walter Burnett Jr.27
Jason Ervin28
Chris Taliaferro29
Carrie Austin34
Emma Mitts37
Matt Martin472019[1]
Maria Hadden492019[6]

Past members

MemberWardJoinedLeft
Toni Foulkes16[1]2019; lost re-election
Willie Cochran20[1]2019; did not run for re-election

Activity in City Council

2019–23 term

In October 2019, the Black Caucus delayed a vote on a proposed ordinance authorizing legal cannabis dispensaries, expressing concerns that the ordinance would allow medical dispensaries to sell marijuana recreationally without a zoning change and that it did not have sufficient ownership requirements to enable minority business ownership.[7] The ordinance passed despite the Caucus' opposition, although some Caucus members and Mayor Lightfoot did suggest that they would pursue amendments to the state cannabis law.[8] After the city's first recreational dispensary license lottery, where only existing owners of medical dispensaries—who were all white—were eligible, the Black Caucus again proposed stalling sales in order to achieve the state law's social equity goals.[9] In December 2019, Caucus chair Ervin and other members threatened to force a vote on an ordinance to stall sales until July 1 (six months after the originally scheduled date of January 1) in order to demand a minority ownership stake in the market.[10][11] Such a vote to delay sales was held but failed to pass on December 18 in a 19–29 vote, with six members of the Black Caucus splitting to vote against the measure.[12]

See also

References