PACT: Public Action for Change Today
ABOUT PACT: WHAT WE ARE DOING

ABOUT PACT

WHAT WE ARE DOING

Real victories on young adult issues.

The power of young people telling their own stories has proven an advantage in winning real political victories in Illinois.

  • $42 Million in restored college financial aid funding at the state level, for low- and middle-income students. PACT leaders organized field trips to the state capital and eventually got a public meeting with the Governor to win his commitment to restore $38 million that had been cut just 2 years prior.
  • Health coverage for young adults. In addition to writing their own bill, which is still being debated, PACT leaders negotiated a deal between a local agency and the City Colleges of Chicago to provide health referral services to more than 120,000 students.
  • Legislative victories. PACT leaders united from Christian, Muslim, Jewish, and Hindu faiths (with the help of young Sudanese refugees) to add their voice to two successful campaigns on Pay Day Loan Reform and divestment from Sudan.
  • Young Adult-Led Trainings for Police Officers. PACT leaders have begun youth-police dialogues in 6 of the most violent police districts in the city. This fall, we are piloting a program for local youth and young adults to train officers on the community resources available to young people and how they can show young adults more respect.
  • Voter Turnout. This fall, PACT is turning out 14,560 young adult voters for the upcoming Gubernatorial election, as a way to get a commitment from both major candidates to work with its leaders after the election on our agenda.

A training ground for future organizers and activists.

Through a tried and true combination of training, action, leadership, and mentoring, PACT is educating a generation of young leaders (5,227 have been through at least one of our trainings) in Chicago. In addition, 12 of our top leaders have become professionals in the non-profit sector as organizers or in related social justice fields.

Cross-cultural communication.

The only requirement for a new PACT leader is that he or she be willing to work with folks across different race and class backgrounds. Right now, there are very few opportunities available to young adults – especially outside of the liberal college atmosphere – where cooperation is not only encouraged or discussed, but fundamentally required. It is written into the PACT constitution that no new campaign will be formed without leadership from 3 of its Caucuses and approval of all eleven. The Christians Caucus (predominantly Evangelicals) and the LBGT Caucus were two of the primary leaders of PACT's youth homelessness campaign. The Voter Power strategy was authored by a young Muslim, a conservative Jew, and a leader who subscribes to no religion. The Education Funding Reform team is led by North Suburban whites, South Side blacks, and Latinos. These collaborations, and the opportunities for education and transformation that they engender, are the norm for the organization.

Slow change to the public debate.

More than most groups in society, there are few mouthpieces for serious youth and young adult influence in government. Public officials know to call a union to learn what teachers or janitors think. They call the Chamber of Commerce to find out what businesses think… but decisions affecting young adults do not get made by us, or with our input, because we do not organize and demand to be heard. Through over 250 meetings with public officials on a wide range of issues, we are beginning to change the political culture in Chicago. Officials like Sen. Jacqueline Collins, Rep. Julie Hamos, CPS Director Arne Duncan, and Ald. Manuel Flores know to call us on young adult issues.

NEWS

10.19.2006
The new PACT website is up! Take a look around!

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PACT

Public Action for
Change Today

220 West Kinzie St. 5th Floor
Chicago, IL 60610

TEL: (773) 425 1946
FAX: (312) 245 9744
EMAIL Stephen Smith