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| 1 |  | SENATE RESOLUTION   | 
| 2 |  |     WHEREAS, The Racial Equity Rapid Response Team (RERRT) was  | 
| 3 |  | formed at the request of the City of Chicago Mayor's Office  | 
| 4 |  | under the leadership of Mayor Lori Lightfoot in March 2020;  | 
| 5 |  | and   | 
| 6 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT was co-convened by West Side United, an  | 
| 7 |  | organization consisting of a collaboration of hospital  | 
| 8 |  | partners, including Ascension Illinois, Cook County Health,  | 
| 9 |  | Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, the Rush  | 
| 10 |  | University Medical Center, the Sinai Health System, and the  | 
| 11 |  | University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System; and   | 
| 12 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT was established in order to mitigate a  | 
| 13 |  | data-driven response to the high rates of COVID-19 mortality  | 
| 14 |  | and to save lives and lessen further harm to Black and Latinx  | 
| 15 |  | communities; and   | 
| 16 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT formed coalitions between government  | 
| 17 |  | agencies, health care providers, and community organizations  | 
| 18 |  | to identify needs and disparities by gathering community  | 
| 19 |  | insight, to advocate for resources, and to champion reliable  | 
| 20 |  | data and information in order to better promote healthy  | 
| 21 |  | behavior; and   | 
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| 1 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT partnered with 21 health care providers  | 
| 2 |  | to proactively contact patients in communities that were most  | 
| 3 |  | impacted by COVID-19, connecting with approximately 75,000  | 
| 4 |  | patients; of those who provided race/ethnicity information,  | 
| 5 |  | 48% self-identified as Black and 40% self-identified as  | 
| 6 |  | Latinx; and   | 
| 7 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT consisted of several key local  | 
| 8 |  | partners, including the City of Chicago Mayor's Office, the  | 
| 9 |  | Chicago Department of Public Health, West Side United, the  | 
| 10 |  | Civic Consulting Alliance, the Rush University Medical Center,  | 
| 11 |  | the Sinai Urban Health Institute, the University of Chicago,  | 
| 12 |  | Advocate Health, the University of Illinois Chicago, Austin  | 
| 13 |  | Coming Together, the Greater Auburn Gresham Development  | 
| 14 |  | Corporation, South Shore Works, Enlace, Latinos Progresando,  | 
| 15 |  | the Northwest Side Housing Center, ChiByDesign, the Southwest  | 
| 16 |  | Organizing Project, the Chicago COVID Response Fund, and the  | 
| 17 |  | Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation; and   | 
| 18 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT, in partnership with the Civic  | 
| 19 |  | Consulting Alliance, facilitated collaboration between health  | 
| 20 |  | care providers, which culminated in an unprecedented joint  | 
| 21 |  | statement being released in June 2020, in which 40  | 
| 22 |  | institutions spoke in a unified voice to declare racism a  | 
| 23 |  | public health crisis and pledge collective action to improve  | 
| 24 |  | health equity; and   | 
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| 1 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT worked to ensure testing sites were in  | 
| 2 |  | historically underserved communities, resulting in eight  | 
| 3 |  | testing sites in RERRT target locations and mobile testing  | 
| 4 |  | sites, which made testing more accessible to these  | 
| 5 |  | communities; and   | 
| 6 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT, in partnership with local and national  | 
| 7 |  | philanthropic organizations, secured financial support for  | 
| 8 |  | those most impacted by COVID-19, including $3.1 million in  | 
| 9 |  | grants secured by partners, $155,000 in rent assistance, and  | 
| 10 |  | cash assistance in the amount of $120,000 for 120 individuals  | 
| 11 |  | ineligible for federal stimulus dollars; and   | 
| 12 |  |     WHEREAS, Within the first two months of its launch, the  | 
| 13 |  | RERRT distributed critical resources to communities, including  | 
| 14 |  | 130,000 masks and 13,000-plus meals, reaching 8,000 households  | 
| 15 |  | and more than 2,000 seniors; the team also enabled public  | 
| 16 |  | access to COVID-19 data by way of a Slalom dashboard that  | 
| 17 |  | provided testing, case, and death rates by race/ethnicity and  | 
| 18 |  | at the zip code-level, thereby establishing Chicago as a  | 
| 19 |  | national leader in data transparency; and   | 
| 20 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT further commissioned the Driving  | 
| 21 |  | Equitable Resource Distribution report, which was compiled by  | 
| 22 |  | ChiByDesign, proposing five strategies and 14 guiding  | 
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| 1 |  | principles to ensure cross collaboration between businesses,  | 
| 2 |  | governments, and philanthropic organizations; and   | 
| 3 |  |     WHEREAS, The work of the RERRT evolved to focus on vaccine  | 
| 4 |  | equity through the creation of Protect Chicago Plus, a plan  | 
| 5 |  | based at the Chicago Department of Public Health and designed  | 
| 6 |  | to provide consistent access to vaccines for Chicagoans,  | 
| 7 |  | especially those in low vaccinated areas, to make vaccines  | 
| 8 |  | available where people live, work, and play, and to focus  | 
| 9 |  | energy and resources on the lowest vaccinated communities; and   | 
| 10 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT inspired the creation of six Healthy  | 
| 11 |  | Chicago Zones (HCZ), a network of hyper-local partnerships  | 
| 12 |  | established to achieve the Healthy Chicago goal of closing  | 
| 13 |  | Chicago's racial life expectancy gap, ensuring that community  | 
| 14 |  | members have the power and resources to identify local assets  | 
| 15 |  | and develop solutions that meet their most pressing health  | 
| 16 |  | needs; and   | 
| 17 |  |     WHEREAS, The RERRT ultimately became a model worth  | 
| 18 |  | replicating in other cities, including New York City, which  | 
| 19 |  | was struggling to address inequitable health outcomes,  | 
| 20 |  | including COVID-19 and beyond, and the systemic issues that  | 
| 21 |  | underpin them; therefore, be it   | 
| 22 |  |     RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED FOURTH GENERAL  |