What’s New

Zach LaVine and the Chicago Bulls are currently a messRyan Heckmanon November 19, 2022 at 4:53 pm

The season has taken an ugly turn for the Chicago Bulls. On a night the team was playing a 4-11 Orlando Magic club at home, the Bulls were supposed to be able to right the ship.

That was a nice idea, in theory, at least.

The Bulls came out giving up 37 points in the first quarter to a Magic team that was given open look after open look, and knocked them down. Orlando was in control for most of the game and, when things got close later on, it was the Magic who saw one of their young, rising stars make a play.

Jalen Suggs buried a three to win it for the Magic after Nikola Vucevic missed free throws that could have iced this one. It was a difficult pill to swallow. Now, the Bulls are losers in six of their last seven games and sit at 6-10 on the year.

One thing about this particular matchup, though, was that Bulls fans saw Zach LaVine get benched with 3:43 to play in the fourth — and he did not return.

Zach LaVine’s benching only further proves that Billy Donovan and the Chicago Bulls are a complete and utter disaster at the moment.

To that point in the game, LaVine had shot just 1-for-14. Donovan told reporters after the game that his decision to bench LaVine was due to that exact reasoning. LaVine had a bad night. It happens. Donovan felt that Ayo Dosunmu was playing better, so he made the substitution.

Zach LaVine on getting benched down stretch: “That’s Billy’s decision. He’s gotta lay with it. Do I agree with it? No.”

— K.C. Johnson (@KCJHoop) November 19, 2022

But, Donovan’s decision also comes with some possible long-term effects. He benched a guy who is in the initial year of a super max contract, and is supposed to be one of the faces of this franchise. Now, whether you believe he can be that guy or not, Donovan’s decision is going to ring loudly in that locker room.

Over the course of the end of last season, we started to see signs of Donovan losing this team. They fell apart down the stretch, and not just because they lost Lonzo Ball. This team has enough talent to be far more competitive than they have showed recently.

One of the biggest problems with Donovan has been failing to make adjustments, and that can be said for any time during games. But what’s most alarming is his lack of emotion and action when the Bulls are bleeding runs.

Seeing Donovan continue sitting down, chewing his gum and remaining almost too calm while his team is getting blasted during a run by the opposition is not ideal. His calm and composed manner is one thing, but to be that laid back and almost carefree during some difficult moments seems to be pushing it.

Donovan doesn’t seem to have “it” anymore. And with his latest decision potentially affecting how the locker room views him, the Bulls are going to have to take a long, hard look at whether or not they believe Donovan is still their guy.

Read More

Zach LaVine and the Chicago Bulls are currently a messRyan Heckmanon November 19, 2022 at 4:53 pm Read More »

Surprise, delight, and joy

Five long fluorescent lights shone brightly overhead, illuminating six clothing racks of assorted styles on the second floor of the Center on Halsted, where gods closet was hosting its November pop-up. DJ Blesstonio stood in black pants and red stiletto boots behind a table, noodling with his DJ comptroller, intently bopping his head while a dark remix of Drake’s “Chicago Freestyle” combined with Jersey club remix blasted through the speakers, complimenting the already ecstatic energy in the space. 

A mix of twenty guests and stylists mingled and excitedly grasped onto new items of clothing as they encountered them. Most were trying on items in the open space and either modeling for people whose opinions they sought on the outfit, or for the tall mirror so that they could judge themselves. 

Wing Yun Schreiber (they/he), a 28-year-old who tends bar in the West Loop and does communications for a local church, founded gods closet in January 2022. The organization provides a community clothing hub and hosts monthly pop-up events that provide gender-affirming clothing to trans and nonbinary people. gods closet (which stylizes its name in lowercase) focuses on college-aged youth and brings LGBTQ+ stylists, makeup artists, tailors, and DJs to their monthly pop-up events throughout Chicago in an attempt to “create a celebratory environment for folks to try on different kinds of gender expression,” said Schreiber.  

Schreiber is light-skinned and stands at five-foot-eight, with short dark hair, and an athletic build. Today, he’s dressed in a black, cropped, fishnet tank top rimmed with pink. Below it is a yellow bra, and above it a “Hello, My name is Wing Yun” announces that he is an organizer for arriving guests. His dark gray bucket hat, an assortment of chain-style jewelry, black cargo pants, and an assortment of tattoos testify to their proclivity for fashion.

Wing Yun Schreiber Debbie-Marie Brown

One might think finding donations of fashionable clothing would be a challenge, but Schreiber says that’s been the easy part because so many LGBTQ+ community members have volunteered their own clothes once they hear about the effort from the organization’s Instagram @godscloset.chi or by word of mouth. 

The team is made of a couple of volunteers plus Schreiber and his friend Stevie (they/them), 22, who helps handle logistical matters such as event planning and social media. Stevie also jumps in at pop-ups as a stylist and occasional DJ. Stevie and Schreiber met at the bar they work at; they’re the only trans people on staff. They soon found they shared a desire for greater community and spaces where they felt more seen. “I have access to, like, a utility van,” Stevie said, which is the core reason for their partnership in the community closet.

gods closet rents storage space, and volunteers help sort through donations for events. Many venues have generously allowed the crew to hold their events free of charge. The group is planning a fundraiser at the SoHo house in January so that they can eventually pay their volunteers. 

When sorting through donations, the volunteer crew is intent on making sure that what they select for a pop-up is cute, trendy, and stylish. Stevie says that when curating the clothes, they always ask themselves, is this something that someone would be excited about getting rather than just something that someone else doesn’t want? “With my work with other volunteer teams it’s like, people, rather than bringing in clothes that they like but haven’t worn in a bit, [they’ll bring] clothes from ten years ago,” Stevie said. “Okay, well, if you don’t want it, somebody else probably doesn’t want it either.”

For Schreiber, one of the sweetest parts of running the pop-ups is watching attendees approach at the end of their shopping, arms full of new outfits, asking, “How much do we owe you for all of this stuff?” 

“And it’s like, nothing, this is all free, as it should be,” Schreiber said. “So just seeing the surprise and delight and joy in people’s eyes when they realize that yeah, that they’re just given access to these things, is really huge.”

Stevie said it’s always fun to put people in clothes that they wouldn’t necessarily grab for themselves, and then watch them try them on and decide to take them home. “I wish that there were more spaces [like this],” Stevie said, “and [that] it was just more prioritized at large for people to be able to get things that they want and need and not have to worry about paying for it.”


There’s still time to get on the ballot in your district.


Black-owned small businesses are still losing out on “social equity” cannabis dispensary licenses.


The festival abolished the usual gatekeeping to book more than four dozen diverse artists at three venues, all in walking distance of one another.

Read More

Surprise, delight, and joy Read More »

Finding euphoriaDebbie-Marie Brownon November 18, 2022 at 11:46 pm

Five long fluorescent lights shone brightly overhead, illuminating six clothing racks of assorted styles on the second floor of the Center on Halsted, where gods closet was hosting its November pop-up. DJ Blesstonio stood in black pants and red stiletto boots behind a table, noodling with his DJ comptroller, intently bopping his head while a dark remix of Drake’s “Chicago Freestyle” combined with Jersey club remix blasted through the speakers, complimenting the already ecstatic energy in the space. 

A mix of twenty guests and stylists mingled and excitedly grasped onto new items of clothing as they encountered them. Most were trying on items in the open space and either modeling for people whose opinions they sought on the outfit, or for the tall mirror so that they could judge themselves. 

Wing Yun Schreiber (they/he), a 28-year-old who tends bar in the West Loop and does communications for a local church, founded gods closet in January 2022. The organization provides a community clothing hub and hosts monthly pop-up events that provide gender-affirming clothing to trans and nonbinary people. gods closet (which stylizes its name in lowercase) focuses on college-aged youth and brings LGBTQ+ stylists, makeup artists, tailors, and DJs to their monthly pop-up events throughout Chicago in an attempt to “create a celebratory environment for folks to try on different kinds of gender expression,” said Schreiber.  

Schreiber is light-skinned and stands at five-foot-eight, with short dark hair, and an athletic build. Today, he’s dressed in a black, cropped, fishnet tank top rimmed with pink. Below it is a yellow bra, and above it a “Hello, My name is Wing Yun” announces that he is an organizer for arriving guests. His dark gray bucket hat, an assortment of chain-style jewelry, black cargo pants, and an assortment of tattoos testify to their proclivity for fashion.

Wing Yun Schreiber Debbie-Marie Brown

“I think my style is a lot about, like, fucking with expectations. There’s ways that I try to match things that aren’t supposed to go together. My favorite thing is to, like, dress up and dress down at the same time.” 

Walking into this trans-centered pop-up is like attending a thrift store on steroids, and that’s intentional. Schreiber said he tries to curate an environment where trans young adults feel comfortable experimenting, and where an array of clothing sizes offer fashionable options for plus-size people. 

This year, gods closet has hosted events around the city to make them accessible to as many Chicagoans as possible: Slomo at Sleeping Village in Avondale, River City Community Church in Humboldt Park, and Hyde Park’s Silver Room.

“Everything that we do is all volunteer- and donation-based,” Schreiber said. “It’s all completely free.”

The year-old experiment in collecting free, fashionable clothes to redistribute to transgender Chicagoans comes out of Schreiber’s own experience being trans. Growing up, he wanted to switch up his gender expression but didn’t feel like he had access to the clothing he needed to do that.

“Sometimes there would be days when I didn’t even feel like I could leave the house because I didn’t have anything that I felt comfortable in,” he said. “And so I was like, damn, this is a problem that probably other trans people have as well . . . in wanting to be read in a genderqueer way, I have really enjoyed getting creative with fashion.”

Schreiber considered the problem and realized that living in a big city like Chicago, everybody must have extra clothing in their closets. So why not repurpose those clothes to create a community hub where others like himself can find clothing that fits their gender expression? 

Schreiber, who attended undergrad at Moody Bible Institute and got their master’s degree at Duke Divinity College, initially wanted to start a church in Chicago. They opted to invest that energy in gods closet, where they can still use practices from their seminary background, such as coming together as a community to share things and support one another, as well as being able to celebrate “the divinity all queer folks share collectively” by hosting an event that facilitates safe gender exploration. 

In department stores or a typical thrift store, trans people might not feel comfortable going to the opposite gender clothing areas in public. Schreiber has experienced this himself.

In contrast, the stylists at gods closet are all queer and trans people. They can recommend clothing based on attendees’ specific preferences, or offer fashionable suggestions. A makeup artist helps people who want to try on a new look, and a tailor is present to alter clothes, if need be, to fit all body sizes. A photographer is on standby to document attendees’ experiences of gender euphoria, or the bliss someone feels when their gender presentation aligns with the gender they identify with.

Zela Cohen (they/them), 22, visits the Center on Halsted youth center daily but returned for the evening after hearing they could grab free clothes in the space. Cohen modeled a sleeveless, black dress and leather jacket for the Reader, a fresh find. “Usually people don’t have sizes that are 3X or 2X. But I was able to find more clothes than I usually am.”

J Fraust is a non-binary stylist and content creator who began androgynous styling three years ago and also attended the Wednesday event after seeing the event flyer circulate online. “It’s easy to style other people for myself, but when it comes to me, sometimes I can struggle with that. And [these stylists]  automatically were giving me all types of tips for more masculine presenting wear, and how to make [my] curve shape look a lot more straight.” 

DJ Lo-Ré-Mii was the first DJ to perform at a November 16th gods closet pop-up event.

Finding euphoriaDebbie-Marie Brownon November 18, 2022 at 11:46 pm Read More »

Op-Ed: Referendum results show Chicago wants treatment, not trauma

In this November’s midterm, Chicagoans in three wards encompassing neighborhoods from Auburn Gresham to Albany Park voted overwhelmingly in support of a referendum asking if the city should reopen its closed public mental health centers in support of a crisis response system that would not involve police. The decisive public mandate was years in the making.

I remember being home for the holiday break from my senior year of college and sitting at my mom’s kitchen table when we read the news about Quintonio Legrier and Bettie Jones in December 2015. Quintonio was a 19-year-old college student, not much younger than I was at the time, also home from college for the holiday break. The morning after Christmas, Quintonio called 911 for help three times. He pleaded with the operator to send the police before being dismissed and ultimately hung up on. Then his father called explaining that his son had “freaked out” and was holding a baseball bat. As the Legrier family navigated what to do, Quintonio experienced an intensifying mental health crisis. 

The family tried to seek help, but was eventually met by police officers who arrived at their door with guns drawn. Neighbor, community activist, and mother Bettie Jones opened the door for officers, presumably with the intent of preventing a police interaction from escalating. Within minutes, CPD officer Robert Rialmo shot Jones once and Legrier six times, killing both of them. Police documents later acknowledged that proper medical care to try to revive them was not delivered after either victim had been shot. 

What the Legrier family reached out for was support finding care and someone to help de-escalate their son’s mental health crisis. What officers delivered was a violent response resulting in two tragic losses. 

Legrier’s story is unfortunately not rare. Policing and other approaches to mental health that meet people in need of care with force or punishment often have incredibly harmful consequences and exacerbate problems. In addition to the alarming rates at which police kill people with mental illness, law enforcement interactions with those in crisis commonly result in a person being injured, incarcerated, or enduring further psychological distress. 

This year, hundreds of volunteers signed up to knock on doors, make phone calls, translate campaign materials, help with data entry, distribute yard signs, and more.Going door-to-door on the hottest days of August and the coldest of October, we heard from longtime residents who remembered the closed clinics in their neighborhood, who knew people who relied on them, who remembered when community fought their closure, and who still believe we deserve mental health centers that are public and accessible to all. We heard from people with a range of experiences how deeply felt the reality of not having someone to call or a place to go in a moment or time of crisis really is. 

One Back of the Yards family spoke about calling 911 for help getting care for a loved one who was having a mental health episode during a gap in access to needed medical care for both their diabetes and mental health. They were then arrested and ended up spending a year in Cook County Jail instead of receiving the medical attention they were looking for. 

On Election night, surrounded by a few dozen volunteers tired from a long day of talking to voters, we started refreshing the Board of Elections website as soon as the polls closed. We had spent the better part of the last six months having thousands of variations of the same conversation that built on over a decade of organizing to reopen the mental health centers and a parallel decade of organizing around the city’s bloated police budget: Would you like to see the City invest more in mental health? Do you support mental health workers instead of police officers responding to mental health crises? Have you lived in the neighborhood long enough to remember the clinic on Woodlawn? Would you like to see the city to reopen the mental health centers they closed down?

The referendum results finally came in at more than 90 percent favoring Treatment Not Trauma, a model for public mental health infrastructure that would include city-run mental health centers and a 24-hour crisis response hotline that would dispatch mental health workers instead of police officers. A concrete proposal by, for, and supported by community, Treatment Not Trauma was envisioned by a coalition of people with mental illnesses, care workers, researchers, and community members with the Collaborative for Community Wellness, and was introduced to city council by Alderwoman Rossanna Rodriguez in 2020. 

There are over 2 million people with mental illness behind bars in the U.S. In almost every state, jails or prisons claim to treat more people struggling with mental illness than hospitals do. In the current landscape, there are far too many ways people in need end up criminalized and further traumatized and never accessing quality care. 

Chicago’s current void of public mental health infrastructure should be understood in the context of how neoliberal reform has manifested locally. Cutting funding for or privatizing public programs and institutions like clinics or schools is part of how political leaders pull the rug out from under working class communities and leave us all more vulnerable to crisis. Steadily increasing funding for police while just about everything else is on the chopping block contributes to the reality that policing and criminal punishment are the default responses to social problems that might better be handled with care or a preventative approach that gets at root causes.

The powerful display of public opinion reflected by the referendum results came ten years after former mayor Rahm Emanuel shut down half the city’s remaining mental health clinics in a supposed move to save a mere $3 million. In the mid-1990s, there were nineteen city-run mental health clinics. By 2012, there were twelve. 

Today there are only five. 

Analyzing behavioral-health related 911 calls by ward and neighborhood, CCW published a report this year that shows that some of the highest concentrations of mental health crisis calls are in the parts of the city where clinics were shut down. These tend to be Black and Brown neighborhoods impacted by other forms of ongoing divestment that have a negative impact on the mental health, stability, and overall well being of communities. What CCW’s research highlights is that one impact of the closure and absence of mental health facilities is that more escalated crises arise where they could have been avoided if there were access to consistent care and other forms of support. CCW’s report reads, “[w]ith the decimation of the public safety net . . .mental health needs often go unaddressed until they reach a point of crisis.”

The campaign for Treatment Not Trauma is as much about crisis response as it is about being part of a robust network of public institutions, systems, and programs Chicagoans could rely on for care in order to prevent as many crises from occurring. It’s a vision for creating mental health centers that could play an even larger role than the clinics that once existed. 

Public mental health infrastructure in Chicago, as outlined by TNT advocates, would include mental health centers that offer more holistic forms of care that certainly don’t involve police or incarceration, but also that don’t overly rely on medication or hospitalization. It would provide accessible therapy and support finding housing and getting other needs met. It would offer peer support teams and resources for loved ones to be supported in playing a role in caring for the people in their lives who need it. It would be trauma-informed and not one-size-fits-all.

Building on Emanuel’s legacy, Mayor Lori Lightfoot has doubled down on an approach to mental health that relies on private providers and police involvement while failing to invest in public institutions. When she ran for office, Lightfoot promised to reopen the clinics “and more” —but quickly backtracked. Private clinics, which are the basis of Lightfoot’s insufficient approach, have simply been unable to meet the scale of need that exists in the way a public system could. That’s not to mention how private facilities tend to underpay and under-resource providers who are then left without what they need to offer quality care.

Chicago communities most impacted by the compounding crises of mental health, policing, divestment, and other forms of structural violence have made our voices loud and clear on this issue for years. When Mayor Richard M. Daley first tried to shut down some of the city’s mental health clinics, community forces came together in protest and were able to effectively stop him. During Emanuel’s time, a movement made up of patients, mental health providers, and community members fought hard to keep clinics open. They persistently and powerfully organized community forums, confronted the mayor at his house, engaged in civil disobedience, and other forms of protest. 

Now, a movement of Chicagoans has again shown that we are backed by the opinions of thousands in calling for Treatment Not Trauma. In the 20th Ward, where community members actually occupied and camped outside of the Woodlawn Mental Health Clinic for a whole summer before its ultimate closure in 2012, this year’s referendum passed by 96 percent. 

The south side’s 6th Ward includes precincts that have the highest concentration of mental health crisis calls to 911 in the whole city. Sixth Ward alderperson, Roderick Sawyer, who chairs the Health and Human Relations Committee, has failed to schedule a committee hearing on Rodriguez-Sanchez’s Treatment Not Trauma ordinance since she introduced it in 2020. Residents of the 6th Ward voted in favor of the referendum by 98 percent.

And in the 33rd Ward on the city’s northwest side, home of TNT champion Rodriguez-Sanchez, it passed with 92 percent support. 

Our communities have voiced a clear desire for a solution that is both incredibly commonsense and wholly different from what we have now. With consensus from communities across the city, Chicago political leaders and hopefuls should take action by getting behind funding and implementing Treatment Not Trauma. And we should see that as one important element of a broader set of needed investments and policies that take responsibility for making and keeping the city truly livable for its Black, Brown and working-class residents.

Asha Ransby-Sporn is a community organizer who served as the field director on the Treatment Not Trauma referendum effort in the 20th Ward.


Voters in three wards will vote on a referendum that would send mental health workers to crises instead of cops.


Significant issues remain around police use of involuntary commitments.


Rahm still hasn’t told the public why he closed mental health clinics.

Read More

Op-Ed: Referendum results show Chicago wants treatment, not trauma Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon November 18, 2022 at 8:02 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon November 18, 2022 at 8:02 am Read More »

The Marvelous Land of Oz, dance openings, and moreKerry Reidon November 18, 2022 at 9:41 pm

Mudlark Theater in Evanston presents The Marvelous Land of Oz, a musical adapted from L. Frank Baum’s second Oz book by Anthony Whitaker. Baum’s story follows Tip, an orphan who goes in search of the long-lost Princess Ozma with companions Jack Pumpkinhead, Wogglebug, and Saw-Horse (with guest appearances by old friends the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman). But he discovers (spoiler alert!) that she is he, and he is she—proof that gender fluidity and trans identity have been a part of youth literature for a long time. Whitaker’s musical, presented in 2013 at New American Folk Theatre, is the first to be produced on Mudlark’s mainstage in 15 years, and it’s very much in keeping with the youth-oriented company’s emphasis on centering stories from traditionally marginalized communities. It opens tonight at 7 PM at the company’s Red Curtain Theater (1417 Hinman, Evanston) and continues Saturday 3 and 7 PM and Sun 3 PM; tickets are $17, and there is also the option to access a prepaid “pay it forward” ticket (or make a gift of such a ticket yourself) at mudlarktheater.org.

Visceral Dance Chicago continues its season with Within, an evening of work connecting the professional company with the trainee program, the studio company, and the work-study programs, choreographed by ten different artists. It fits with the mission for company founder Nick Pupillo, who told Reader contributor Irene Hsiao in 2020, “My dream was to create a space that was inclusive in every way, diverse, but really personable and connected.” Performances tonight begin at 8 PM at the Ann Barzel Theater at Visceral Dance Center (3121 N. Rockwell), and continue Saturday 8 PM and Sunday 3 PM. Tickets are $20 at visceraldance.com.

More dance: Moonwater Dance Chicago wants to Take Up Space with the return of their annual celebration of women choreographers and artists. This year, they’re at Trigger Chicago (2810 W. Addison), and the lineup includes work from Moonwater, Peckish Rhodes Performing Arts Society, Hot Crowd, Trifecta Dance Collective, and Jackie Nowicki of NOW Dance Project. Curtain is 7:30 PM and tickets are $25-$50 at moonwaterdanceproject.com.

Token Theatre, dedicated to challenging stereotypes about Asian Americans, got its start two years ago with a virtual production of Zac Efron, written by cofounders David Rhee and Wai Yim. Tonight at 10 PM and tomorrow at 2 and 4:30 PM, they present When the Sun Melts Away at the Greenhouse Theater Center (2257 N. Lincoln). Inspired by 14th-century Kashmiri poet Lal Ded, the ensemble-devised piece (created by Simran Deokule, Coco Huang, Juliet Huneke, Karina Patel, and Emily Zhang, and directed by Patel) uses Ded’s admonition to “focus on the self” rather than the external as a point of exploration. Artistic director Rhee says, “Lal Ded’s powerful words perfectly encapsulate what so many Asian Americans experience—finding, and sometimes losing, yourself in another world that feels just as nonsensical as your own.” Tickets are $10 and can be reserved at tokentheatre.net.

Read More

The Marvelous Land of Oz, dance openings, and moreKerry Reidon November 18, 2022 at 9:41 pm Read More »

Op-Ed: Referendum results show Chicago wants treatment, not traumaAsha Ransby-Spornon November 18, 2022 at 10:29 pm

In this November’s midterm, Chicagoans in three wards encompassing neighborhoods from Auburn Gresham to Albany Park voted overwhelmingly in support of a referendum asking if the city should reopen its closed public mental health centers in support of a crisis response system that would not involve police. The decisive public mandate was years in the making.

I remember being home for the holiday break from my senior year of college and sitting at my mom’s kitchen table when we read the news about Quintonio Legrier and Bettie Jones in December 2015. Quintonio was a 19-year-old college student, not much younger than I was at the time, also home from college for the holiday break. The morning after Christmas, Quintonio called 911 for help three times. He pleaded with the operator to send the police before being dismissed and ultimately hung up on. Then his father called explaining that his son had “freaked out” and was holding a baseball bat. As the Legrier family navigated what to do, Quintonio experienced an intensifying mental health crisis. 

The family tried to seek help, but was eventually met by police officers who arrived at their door with guns drawn. Neighbor, community activist, and mother Bettie Jones opened the door for officers, presumably with the intent of preventing a police interaction from escalating. Within minutes, CPD officer Robert Rialmo shot Jones once and Legrier six times, killing both of them. Police documents later acknowledged that proper medical care to try to revive them was not delivered after either victim had been shot. 

What the Legrier family reached out for was support finding care and someone to help de-escalate their son’s mental health crisis. What officers delivered was a violent response resulting in two tragic losses. 

Legrier’s story is unfortunately not rare. Policing and other approaches to mental health that meet people in need of care with force or punishment often have incredibly harmful consequences and exacerbate problems. In addition to the alarming rates at which police kill people with mental illness, law enforcement interactions with those in crisis commonly result in a person being injured, incarcerated, or enduring further psychological distress. 

This year, hundreds of volunteers signed up to knock on doors, make phone calls, translate campaign materials, help with data entry, distribute yard signs, and more.Going door-to-door on the hottest days of August and the coldest of October, we heard from longtime residents who remembered the closed clinics in their neighborhood, who knew people who relied on them, who remembered when community fought their closure, and who still believe we deserve mental health centers that are public and accessible to all. We heard from people with a range of experiences how deeply felt the reality of not having someone to call or a place to go in a moment or time of crisis really is. 

One Back of the Yards family spoke about calling 911 for help getting care for a loved one who was having a mental health episode during a gap in access to needed medical care for both their diabetes and mental health. They were then arrested and ended up spending a year in Cook County Jail instead of receiving the medical attention they were looking for. 

On Election night, surrounded by a few dozen volunteers tired from a long day of talking to voters, we started refreshing the Board of Elections website as soon as the polls closed. We had spent the better part of the last six months having thousands of variations of the same conversation that built on over a decade of organizing to reopen the mental health centers and a parallel decade of organizing around the city’s bloated police budget: Would you like to see the City invest more in mental health? Do you support mental health workers instead of police officers responding to mental health crises? Have you lived in the neighborhood long enough to remember the clinic on Woodlawn? Would you like to see the city to reopen the mental health centers they closed down?

The referendum results finally came in at more than 90 percent favoring Treatment Not Trauma, a model for public mental health infrastructure that would include city-run mental health centers and a 24-hour crisis response hotline that would dispatch mental health workers instead of police officers. A concrete proposal by, for, and supported by community, Treatment Not Trauma was envisioned by a coalition of people with mental illnesses, care workers, researchers, and community members with the Collaborative for Community Wellness, and was introduced to city council by Alderwoman Rossanna Rodriguez in 2020. 

There are over 2 million people with mental illness behind bars in the U.S. In almost every state, jails or prisons claim to treat more people struggling with mental illness than hospitals do. In the current landscape, there are far too many ways people in need end up criminalized and further traumatized and never accessing quality care. 

Chicago’s current void of public mental health infrastructure should be understood in the context of how neoliberal reform has manifested locally. Cutting funding for or privatizing public programs and institutions like clinics or schools is part of how political leaders pull the rug out from under working class communities and leave us all more vulnerable to crisis. Steadily increasing funding for police while just about everything else is on the chopping block contributes to the reality that policing and criminal punishment are the default responses to social problems that might better be handled with care or a preventative approach that gets at root causes.

The powerful display of public opinion reflected by the referendum results came ten years after former mayor Rahm Emanuel shut down half the city’s remaining mental health clinics in a supposed move to save a mere $3 million. In the mid-1990s, there were nineteen city-run mental health clinics. By 2012, there were twelve. 

Today there are only five. 

Analyzing behavioral-health related 911 calls by ward and neighborhood, CCW published a report this year that shows that some of the highest concentrations of mental health crisis calls are in the parts of the city where clinics were shut down. These tend to be Black and Brown neighborhoods impacted by other forms of ongoing divestment that have a negative impact on the mental health, stability, and overall well being of communities. What CCW’s research highlights is that one impact of the closure and absence of mental health facilities is that more escalated crises arise where they could have been avoided if there were access to consistent care and other forms of support. CCW’s report reads, “[w]ith the decimation of the public safety net . . .mental health needs often go unaddressed until they reach a point of crisis.”

The campaign for Treatment Not Trauma is as much about crisis response as it is about being part of a robust network of public institutions, systems, and programs Chicagoans could rely on for care in order to prevent as many crises from occurring. It’s a vision for creating mental health centers that could play an even larger role than the clinics that once existed. 

Public mental health infrastructure in Chicago, as outlined by TNT advocates, would include mental health centers that offer more holistic forms of care that certainly don’t involve police or incarceration, but also that don’t overly rely on medication or hospitalization. It would provide accessible therapy and support finding housing and getting other needs met. It would offer peer support teams and resources for loved ones to be supported in playing a role in caring for the people in their lives who need it. It would be trauma-informed and not one-size-fits-all.

Building on Emanuel’s legacy, Mayor Lori Lightfoot has doubled down on an approach to mental health that relies on private providers and police involvement while failing to invest in public institutions. When she ran for office, Lightfoot promised to reopen the clinics “and more” —but quickly backtracked. Private clinics, which are the basis of Lightfoot’s insufficient approach, have simply been unable to meet the scale of need that exists in the way a public system could. That’s not to mention how private facilities tend to underpay and under-resource providers who are then left without what they need to offer quality care.

Chicago communities most impacted by the compounding crises of mental health, policing, divestment, and other forms of structural violence have made our voices loud and clear on this issue for years. When Mayor Richard M. Daley first tried to shut down some of the city’s mental health clinics, community forces came together in protest and were able to effectively stop him. During Emanuel’s time, a movement made up of patients, mental health providers, and community members fought hard to keep clinics open. They persistently and powerfully organized community forums, confronted the mayor at his house, engaged in civil disobedience, and other forms of protest. 

Now, a movement of Chicagoans has again shown that we are backed by the opinions of thousands in calling for Treatment Not Trauma. In the 20th Ward, where community members actually occupied and camped outside of the Woodlawn Mental Health Clinic for a whole summer before its ultimate closure in 2012, this year’s referendum passed by 96 percent. 

The south side’s 6th Ward includes precincts that have the highest concentration of mental health crisis calls to 911 in the whole city. Sixth Ward alderperson, Roderick Sawyer, who chairs the Health and Human Relations Committee, has failed to schedule a committee hearing on Rodriguez-Sanchez’s Treatment Not Trauma ordinance since she introduced it in 2020. Residents of the 6th Ward voted in favor of the referendum by 98 percent.

And in the 33rd Ward on the city’s northwest side, home of TNT champion Rodriguez-Sanchez, it passed with 92 percent support. 

Our communities have voiced a clear desire for a solution that is both incredibly commonsense and wholly different from what we have now. With consensus from communities across the city, Chicago political leaders and hopefuls should take action by getting behind funding and implementing Treatment Not Trauma. And we should see that as one important element of a broader set of needed investments and policies that take responsibility for making and keeping the city truly livable for its Black, Brown and working-class residents.

Asha Ransby-Sporn is a community organizer who served as the field director on the Treatment Not Trauma referendum effort in the 20th Ward.


Voters in three wards will vote on a referendum that would send mental health workers to crises instead of cops.


Significant issues remain around police use of involuntary commitments.


Rahm still hasn’t told the public why he closed mental health clinics.

Read More

Op-Ed: Referendum results show Chicago wants treatment, not traumaAsha Ransby-Spornon November 18, 2022 at 10:29 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »