by Rhonda Pettaway Ansier
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"I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat." - Will Rogers
by Rhonda Pettaway Ansier
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We had a great time at our first Trivia Night of 2022 with questions about music from the 70s and 80s. Curt Alliaume failed to notify us that he was a DJ in a former life. He knew all the answers and we had to break his knuckles after round one so he wouldn’t win all the prizes!
But seriously, in true socialist form*, after wiping the floor with us after round one, Curt graciously let others type in their answers first and even offered
clues when others were stumped. Other winners were Maryann Vazquez, Chris Patterson, and Sue Quigley. Even our pop culture-agnostic newsletter editor almost answered a question. Wait ’til next time!
Many thanks to our sponsors Amy Chavez, Barb O’Meara, Sadia Covert, Chris Patterson, and Lisa Rose!
* Joking!!!





Cary Weisgram of York Township Democrats will be offering his four-week course in map-making once again. This time around, participants will not have to juggle the holidays with figuring out census tables. If you fell off last time, you’re welcome to come back and join. The class will be conducted on Zoom Wednesday nights at 8pm from February 9th through March 2nd.
If you attended this class last time and enjoyed the content, please help spread the word. Cary is looking for all data nerds everywhere, but especially those who are volunteering with progressive organizations and other cool local causes who would benefit from doing spatial analysis.
Cary is a precinct committeeperson, and newly elected School District 44 board member. He helped organize the voter file, provide logistical maps and targeted voter metrics for seven candidates in the last municipal election. He wants to share as much of what he knows about data analysis and visualization with as many local progressive activists as possible.
Here’s the registration link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwsduqrrz8rGtcHkCks2o4upW0A_x8N_pZN
Some folks are understandably intimidated by the prospect of collecting petition signatures. My approach is to call ahead to retired Democratic couples in my precinct. We make an “appointment” and I drive over with a whole stack of petitions. Their hands get tired signing so many petitions, so we are calling it “petition hand” —sort of like “tennis elbow.” We do the signing in different environments—with hat and coat outside on a porch, or double-masked up and in their homes—however they are most comfortable.
I’m usually a procrastinator, but I started making a list of my “for sure Democrats” first. Once I got the petitions organized and on a clipboard, I started out, and it became a lot of fun.
Dems deliver! This is certainly true on the DuPage County Board. As Chair of both the Judicial and Public Safety and the Health & Human Services Committees, I’m proud to share the achievements of the first ever majority Democratic County Board.Our Board exerted tremendous effort judiciously allocating $179M in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) grants under the leadership of Finance Chair Liz Chaplin. In addition to supporting struggling businesses, we chose to support impactful projects that will benefit the County for years to come.
On Human Services, made up wholly of Democrats, we won bipartisan support for $10.8M funding for mental health and substance abuse programs, food insecurity, and preventing homelessness. Prioritizing preventing homelessness, HHS collaborated with PADS, committing $5M, renovating a hotel into a homeless shelter. While we wish residents would never experience the difficulties of homelessness, we recognized early on in the pandemic that a hotel room was preferable in privacy, health, and safety to mobile shelter, especially for families.
As a pro bono attorney, it was a priority to assist pro se clients during eviction processes. Our Community Services division added outreach to educate residents on options and funded Prairie State Legal attorneys, and DuPage Bar mediators as advocates in the eviction court. I can report that, according to Illinois Department of Housing figures, DuPage County leads the state in court-based rental assistance. DuPage has administered $24.5M in federal grants toward rent assistance, preventing eviction for over 2,500 residents.
The DuPage County Care Center takes wonderful care of our seniors and vulnerable residents, largely low-income residents, and will receive $20M for much-needed structural and aesthetic improvements. The goal? Attracting and serving as a valuable nursing resource for more County residents.
And despite Republican aspersions, Democrats strongly supported law enforcement with millions spent funding criminal justice supports such as body cameras, officer training, and wages. In Judicial and Public Safety, we approved funding for a much-needed build-out of the Judicial Center. Our bipartisan team worked with the Chief Judge, Probation, State’s Attorney, Public Defender, selecting a $19 M plan to address long-standing space challenges and newer legislative requirements. When the county-wide MERIT task force requested a command center and armored vehicle, I urged JPS members to consult law enforcement partners. The result? Democrats unanimously approved MERIT’s request.
So, if anyone asks- Yes, Democrats do deliver.
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