In 2015, Cook County became a partner site of the MacArthur Foundation’s Safety and Justice Challenge, which aims to reduce unnecessary incarceration and racial disparities in U.S. jails. Cook County stakeholders, community groups, and technical advisors meet regularly to plan and implement innovative strategies to safely reduce the population in the Cook County Jail and reduce racial and ethnic disparities within that population.
The Cook County Safety and Justice Challenge is led by representatives from the Office of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County; the Justice Advisory Council (on behalf of the Cook County Board President); the Cook County Sheriff’s Office; the Cook County State’s Attorney; the Cook County Public Defender; the Chicago Police Department; the Clerk of the Circuit Court; the Cook County Health and Hospitals System; and community based providers and advocates in Cook County. Community representatives have been drawn from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), Safer Foundation, Chicago Survivors, Alumni Association, Lawndale Christian Legal Network, The Night Ministry, North Lawndale Employment Network, Apostolic Church of God, and Treatment Alternatives for Safe Communities (TASC).
Additional details about the MacArthur Foundation Safety and Justice Challenge can be found on the MacArthur Foundation’s website here.
Press
For media inquiries, please contact:
Mary Wisniewski, Director of Communications
Office of the Chief Judge
Circuit Court of Cook County
50 W. Washington Street, Suite 2600 Chicago, IL 60602
(312) 603-5160
Feedback/Questions
If you have any feedback on the Safety and Justice Challenge or other questions, please contact us at sj.challenge@cookcountyil.gov