A Statement about City of Grants Pass v. Johnson

JULY 1, 2024

As advocates of a more just, racially equitable and restorative community, the Moran Center proudly signed the Juvenile Law Center’s Amicus Brief in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, denouncing the criminalization of those experiencing homelessness, particularly vulnerable youth.

We now strongly denounce the recent holding by the Supreme Court in that case, decided on June 28, 2024. The ruling sets a dangerous precedent permitting the criminalization of those unable to access permanent shelter, needing to occupy public spaces. The decision puts members of our community directly at risk of entering the legal system because of their housing status.

The Moran Center’s School-Based Civil Legal Clinic (SBCLC) remains committed to representing the families of Evanston/Skokie School District 65 and Evanston Township High School District 202 who are facing homelessness and housing insecurity. Learn more here about our free community-based, civil legal services.

Restorative Justice Reflections

Nearly 25 years ago, during the appointment confirming my pregnancy, the astute midwife gently took my hand and said: Now you must start letting go.

And so began my learning (and unlearning) the most powerful life lesson guiding both my parenting and restorative philosophy: Children and restorative practices have their own paths. For both, you must prepare as best as you can. You create conditions and offer guidelines. You give your wholehearted wisdom and your whole heart… and then you let go.

As the Moran Center celebrates “Restorative Justice Month” this year, I’m celebrating – and reflecting on –  five years guiding the Roger Pascal Restorative Justice Initiative. In the hundreds of restorative practices I’ve witnessed – circles for repair, celebration, re-entry/welcoming, community building, etc. – participants have found connection and comfort in unexpected ways and move toward growth and understanding.

This is not to say every practice has been easy. Truth, repair, and real talk are often messy and complex. But when we maintain fidelity to our shared values and guidelines that offer confidentiality, uninterrupted speaking, and radical, deep listening and speaking authentically, people inevitably find the human connections they’ve sought.

I’ve experienced countless humbling, profound, and, of course, surprising moments in circle:

  • People who thought they needed to speak, experiencing deep listening;
  • People who never felt heard, watching as we all listened;
  • People shunned from the community finding a way back in;
  • Children who caused each other profound harm recognizing themselves in each other;
  • Children stunned as their caregivers shared the harms they caused as children, reminding us about second chances and that nobody should be reduced to the worst mistake they’ve ever made;

  • Young adults who caused harm held accountable and still able to move forward, unbound by punitive systemic obstacles that make second chances impossible for so many;
  • Educators centering students’ wisdom by asking them how they learn best and what gets in their way;
  • Elders and emerging adults in intergenerational circles speaking honestly about what divides them, what connects them, and what they can learn from- and with – each other;
  • Colleagues working on the front lines creating a shared space for comfort and healing, reminding each other they’re not alone; and
  • Community members who speak different languages, sharing laughter and surprise in feeling so connected and finding so much in common. 

 

At the Moran Center, I’ve experienced the transformative power of restorative philosophy and practice, strengthening both relationships and community.  And I eagerly want our entire community to experience restorative practices too! So I encourage you to engage with the Moran Center – look for upcoming restorative training opportunities and conversations in the community – and help us build an authentically “Restorative Community.” 

Circle up with us. Pull up a chair, open your heart, and start letting go. ◼️


About Pam 

Pam Cytrynbaum is a longtime restorative circle keeper in Evanston, a veteran investigative journalist, and an educator. As Moran Center’s Restorative Justice Manager, Pam offers community-building circle keeping; provides training, support, and coaching to organizations and community members interested in embedding restorative philosophy and practices within their work and lives; and directs advocacy efforts to promote the adoption of restorative justice practices within public institutions, including schools districts and the criminal legal system.

Pam is thrilled to work with her partner-in-peace, Emeric Mazibuko, Moran Center’s Restorative Justice Coordinator. (link to Emeric’s bio) Together, they guide Moran Center’s Community Peace Builders, a team of community Elders, and emerging adults (link to Peace Builders page) working to embed restorative practices throughout Evanston.

Pam and Moran Center’s Restorative Justice Team work with community-based organizations, schools, court officials, as well as parents and youth to introduce and support restorative practices. She offers informational sessions and circle trainings for schools, parents, and community members on the philosophy and practice of restorative justice, as well as models of implementation.

The Moran Center’s Restorative Justice Team is collaborating with Evanston Township High School District 202 and Northwestern University in several restorative efforts. Pam has led circles and trainings throughout Evanston/Skokie School District 65 schools and co-facilitated victim-offender conferences, community circles, and trainings with the Evanston Police Department. 

As an investigative journalist, Pam served as Senior Editor for Injustice Watch, executive director of the Chicago Innocence Center, associate director of the Justice Brandeis Law Project at Brandeis University, and as a staff writer for the Chicago Tribune. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Chicago Sun-Times. She taught at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and is a proud “Kit-Cat,” having graduated from Evanston Township High School (Wildkits) and Northwestern University (Wildcats). She is most proud of receiving the ETHS Distinguished Alumni Award in 2018 and of being a Mom to an ETHS graduate. 

4 Back-To-School Tips from Education Attorneys

Do you know your child’s education rights?

Our Education Advocacy Program (EAP) attorneys are here with a few pointers for parents of diverse learners who are eager to help their children succeed.

With the new school year in full swing, the Moran Center’s Education Advocacy Program (EAP) is available to help you and your student navigate the special education system, school discipline, and more.


What do Moran Center education attorneys do?

We provide legal advice and representation to families and students in Evanston/Skokie and Rogers Park facing:

  • inadequate special education services;
  • suspension, expulsions, and other discipline issues;
  • bullying, harassment, and discrimination;
  • compensatory education and recovery services issues; and
  • other school-related issues

We also offer “Know Your Rights” trainings on the special education/diverse learner system and school discipline rights for both families and community organizations in Evanston/Skokie and Rogers Park.


Can we help your child?

Don’t hesitate to reach out if you want the Moran Center to offer a “Know Your Rights” training to your organization or families you serve to learn more about parents’ and students’ educational rights.

Families interested in our services or with questions about your child’s education can call our main line (847-492-1410) to complete a prescreen intake. We can also support non-English speaking families through a language line or a Spanish-speaking attorney. 


Our Advice for the School Year

To start the year off right, see below for some of our top tips to support your student this school year.

1. Communicate (via email and/or phone) with your child’s teachers and service providers at least every other week to get updates regarding your child’s progress.

2. Schools must provide parents/caregivers with draft Individual Education Programs (IEPs) and evaluation reports at least three (3) school days prior to a child’s IEP meeting—make sure the IEP team sends you these documents in advance so you have time to review them before the meeting.

3. During your child’s IEP meeting:

  • Take notes, or bring someone with you to help take notes;
  • Ask the team to start the meeting with your child’s strengths;
  • Bring someone to support your viewpoint;
  • Ask questions!
  • Don’t be afraid to disagree, but come to the meeting open to creative and collaborative solutions.
  • Bottom line: You are the most important member of your student’s IEP team

4. If it’s not written down, it didn’t or won’t happen! Be sure any agreements you make with your child’s IEP team are included in the IEP document.


We look forward to working with you this year and providing more families with holistic, community-based educational advocacy!

The Moran Center Education Advocacy Team is:

The EAP team is Luca Guacci (he/they pronouns) Managing Attorney, and Sarah Frudden (She/they pronouns) - Staff Attorney, Evanston, and Andy Froelich (he/him pronouns) Staff-Attorney, Rogers Park

Historic IL Supreme Court Ruling to End Cash Bail Dismantles Economic Barriers to Justice

July 18, 2023

Today, Illinois became the first state to eliminate cash bail. 

“The Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling today is a victory for all Illinois citizens and we support the Court’s decision,” Tom Verdun, Director of Legal Services at the James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy, said.

“It means that most individuals and families in Illinois will not have their lives upended if an individual or a family member is charged with a criminal offense.”

The Moran Center for Youth Advocacy works to build a restorative community, and champions a more equitable criminal legal system. The Moran Center is proud to have served the Evanston community since 1972 and acknowledges that since our founding, the rate of pretrial detention (jailing someone before they go to trial) has multiplied more than 5x what it was forty years ago.

The Pretrial Fairness Act is one step toward correcting the disparate impact of wealth-based jailing, disproportionately impacting Black families in Illinois. Ending money bonds disrupts the system of jailing individuals before trial because of their own economic status, which has been shown to lead to inequalities in justice and affect opportunities for success after incarceration.

To quote the Illinois Record for Pretrial Justice, “[g]iving people the opportunity to stay in their communities while awaiting trial will enable them to keep their jobs, housing and custody of their children, making us all safer. In 2020, Illinois collected more than $120 million in bond money. Ending wealth-based jailing will ensure that families are no longer forced to forego paying rent or to pool funds together to free their loved ones from county jails and will keep desperately needed resources in our communities.”

The Moran Center is committed to providing Evanston youth and their families with the support to successfully emerge from challenging legal situations, tools to make positive life choices, and the ability to thrive in the community.  We are grateful for the passionate network of advocates, legal and mental health professionals, community leaders, and allies who amplify this effort to champion justice and build a more restorative community.

“Today’s ruling is a tremendous legal victory for our clients and community,” Patrick Keenan-Devlin, Executive Director of the Moran Center said. “Pre-trial liberty will not just be a privilege of the wealthy in the State of Illinois.” ∎

My First 30 Days at the Moran Center

A Restorative Start for this Director of Development & Communications

By Rachel J. Solomon (she/her)

image of woman with brown curly hair smiling and wearing a red shirt, this is rachel the author of this piece

I’m honored to introduce myself as the James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy’s new Director of Development & Communications!

I’m an advocate, dog and cat lover, hip-hop head, and Rogers Park-transplant by way of Richmond, Virginia. My passion is raising funds and awareness for drivers of positive social change, having supported remarkable programs in the past that ensure fair housing opportunity, build families through adoption, advocate for survivors of violence, protect animal welfare, and elevate independent media.

I began at the Moran Center on June 1 and an inspiring 30 days followed, introducing me to both the Moran Center and the needs and history of the Evanston community as a whole.

My first week, I was introduced to Evanston Cradle to Career – our community’s collective impact organization. Visiting Evanston’s community hub at 2010 Dewey Street, I marveled at the volume of community-based lifelines centralized in the Foster School building. Weeks later, we celebrated the site dedication for the 5th Ward’s new school, a triumph in educational access for Evanston children.

While youth and emerging adult defense is the cornerstone of the Moran Center, I quickly learned about the breadth of other legal services as well as the agency’s integrated mental health and restorative justice services. The holistic model at the Moran Center recognizes that families can face multiple legal challenges at once, often while still processing traumatic experiences.

The Moran Center’s School-Based Civil Legal Clinic represents families confronting destabilizing events like eviction and child custody disputes. The Criminal Record Relief team removes barriers to employment, housing, and education to support individuals achieve a fresh start.

 “Meet clients where they are” is a restorative mantra at the Moran Center, and I learned that it’s been adopted as a literal approach, too. Adapting to the pandemic lockdown, Moran Center Social Workers began offering (and still offer) “therapeutic walks” to make mental health support more accessible to Evanston youth.

In advocating for individualized learning, evaluations, and environmental accommodations, the Education Advocacy Program gives children managing learning disabilities, mental health challenges, and/or trauma real access to the classroom. Also – this Evanston program is being piloted in my neighborhood!

My month of discovery ended with a three-day staff retreat and training on restorative practices. I learned that relationships are at the core of restorative practices and they are definitely at the core of the Moran Center. ∎


Biography

Rachel J. Solomon (she/her) is the Director of Development & Communications at the James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy. With more than a decade of experience in nonprofit fundraising, media and community engagement, Rachel’s purpose is to fuel community advocacy through philanthropy. She is a member of the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP) and AFP Chicago; and AFP Chicago’s LGBTQIA+ Affinity Group. Rachel volunteers as a therapy dog handler with individuals managing PTSD and substance use recovery, and loves exploring Chicago’s restaurants, music venues, and independent movie theaters.

Moran Center Education Attorney to be Awarded Chicago Bar Fellowship

Andy Froelich, Equal Justice Works Fellow at the James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy, will receive the prestigious $25,000 Kimball R. Anderson and Karen Gatsis Anderson Public Interest Law Fellowship from the Chicago Bar Association and Chicago Bar Foundation.

Froelich and six other awardees will be publicly acknowledged at the CBA & CBF Pro Bono and Public Service Awards Luncheon at the Hilton Chicago on Thursday, July 20, 2023 at 12:00 p.m. CT.

Each year the CBF partners with The Chicago Bar Association to recognize exemplary attorneys in the Chicago legal community. The CBF annually awards one Public Interest Law Fellowship, selecting an individual who demonstrates a commitment to public interest work, academic achievement in law school, and outstanding character & integrity.

“Andy’s big heart is uniquely coupled with his keen legal and community organizing skills,” Patrick Keenan-Devlin, Executive Director of the Moran Center, said. “This has resulted in both personal victories for young people and tangible programmatic achievements to the advancement of restorative justice.”

Starting as a Law Clerk at the Moran Center in January 2020, Froelich was selected for an Equal Justice Works fellowship in 2021 to fund the expansion of the Moran Center’s Education Advocacy Program (EAP) to pilot services in the Rogers Park neighborhood of Chicago.

The goal of this community-based program is to create greater access to education opportunity by providing free legal services to low-income families of youth facing special education and school discipline challenges. Services range from representing students with special needs in obtaining the services they need to succeed in school, to advocating for students facing exclusion from school, as well as equipping caregivers with tools to advocate for their child’s educational rights

Froelich, who works side-by-side with social workers and restorative justice practitioners to advance the Moran Center’s holistic approach to criminal justice form, said the Rogers Park pilot has been an important contribution to education advocacy in Illinois.

“This project has continuously affirmed that comprehensive and community-based education advocacy provides one of the greatest tools a community has to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline,” Froelich said.

In the first year of this pilot, Froelich provided legal representation to 20 children, offered 10 community-based “Know Your Rights” workshops, and attended 45 meetings with 10 partner organizations to build meaningful institutional connections within Rogers Park.

The CBF is the charitable arm of the Chicago Bar Association, and the largest voluntarily supported bar foundation in the country. The generous contributions of thousands of dedicated individuals, more than 200 law firms and corporations, and many other committed partners make the CBF’s work possible. Thanks to that strong support, the CBF awards more than $2 million in grants each year and plays a lead role in a number of innovative access to justice initiatives. 

The James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy (“Moran Center”) provides integrated legal, social work, and restorative justice services to disinvested youth and their families to improve their quality of life at home, at school, and within the community. For more information, visit moran-center.org

SBCLC ERASE Clinic Open to the Evanston Public June 30 at Robert Crown Branch Library

 The Moran Center for Youth Advocacy, in partnership with the Evanston Public Library, AbbVie, and Kirkland & Ellis, will hold a walk-in legal clinic Thursday, June 30 to help people in Evanston and the surrounding areas with sealing evictions and advise on the criminal record relief process.

Residents who wish to take advantage of the Enhance Record And Seal Evictions, or ERASE project, are welcome to meet with School-Based Civil Legal Clinic (SBCLC) volunteer attorneys from 3 – 5 p.m. on Thursday, June 30 at the Robert Crown Branch Library, 1801 Main Street in Evanston. Residents who have questions about the program can send an email to clinic@moran-center.org or call (224) 714-0348.

Having an eviction on your record, even when there has been no court judgment, can make it more difficult for renters to secure housing because the eviction lowers renters’ credit scores and often paints an unfair picture of renters’ ability to pay rent. A new Illinois Law, 735 ILCS 5/9-121.5, which became effective in May of 2021 and expires August 1, 2022, makes it easier to seal a prior eviction record. It does not prohibit landlords from obtaining a reference from a previous landlord, but having an eviction sealed can improve a credit store and make it easier to apply for a new rental agreement. This is not for tenants with a pending eviction. 

Through the ERASE Project, attorneys at the Moran Center will prepare the necessary paperwork free of charge on behalf of residents who wish to take advantage of this temporary law. The Moran Center will refer renters outside of Evanston to the Lawyer’s Committee For Better Housing. Moran Center expungement attorneys will also be available to advise and answer any questions about the process for criminal record relief.  Having a criminal record can also be a barrier to applying for housing.  

The ERASE Project is one of many programs at the Moran Center that helps dismantle systemic barriers to the health, safety, and well-being of young people and their families. One of the only legal aid agencies in the country to integrate legal and therapeutic services, the Moran Center provides community-based legal, social work, and restorative services for youth and families. 

Since its founding in 1981, the Moran Center has been a champion for thousands of disinvested youth and families. The Center’s holistic, healing-centered, client-driven approach advances our vision of a more just, racially equitable, and restorative society.

Download the flyer for the June 30 ERASE Clinic:

My City • Your City • OUR CITY

Safe spaces for our young people from the Evanston Collective

A year ago, Evanston’s youth-serving organizations united in response to escalating youth violence in our community to launch the “My City, Your City, Our City” Safe Summer Initiative. We employed young people to select and approve the activities. We centered their voices. We paid them for their wisdom and energy. Collectively, we then hosted six BLOCK (“Bringing Love to Our City and Kids”) parties and four community-wide events (“First Fridays”). We opened up Fleetwood-Jourdain and Robert Crown, providing safe, public spaces for youth to gather throughout the summer. More than 500 young people regularly attended these events. We held 79 consecutive days and nights of programming. And due in part to this effort, Evanston experienced 0 cases of gun-related, youth violence last summer.

As we prepare for this summer, we recognize the urgency and importance of coming together and providing safe, engaging spaces for youth. Over the past several months, we’ve lost five youth to gun violence, countless other youth have experienced interpersonal, institutional, and communal violence, and three nooses recently dangled in a tree in front of our schools.

As our youth’s attorneys, case managers, coaches, counselors, healthcare providers, and mentors – as their adults – we commit to getting more proximate to our kids this summer. We commit to centering their voices, and their needs. And we, the white members of this coalition, commit to holding ourselves accountable for the scourge of white supremacy which continues to infect everything from our institutions to our personal interactions.

Many in our community are asking right now ‘what can I do?’ Join us. Answer our call to connect and get proximate. Start by attending the First Friday event on Friday, June 3rd from 6-9 pm at Mason Park. Wear orange in recognition of Gun Violence Prevention Day.  Then, join us at one of the many other community events happening this summer…

  • Community Building Equity Summit, Friday, June 10th, Mason Park, 10 am-2 pm
  • Juneteenth Celebration, Saturday, June 18th, Robert Crown (Parade) annd Ingraham Park (Concert), 10 am-6 pm
  • First Friday, July 1st, Mason Park, 5-9 pm
  • National Night Out, Tuesday, August 2nd, Clark Street Beach-Arrington Lagoon, 4-9 pm
  • First Friday, August 5th, Mason Park, 5-9 pm
  • Back to School Event, Saturday, August 13th, Mason Park, 2-6 pm

Tell all the high schoolers in your lives to drop in at Gibbs-Morrison Monday-Friday from 6-9 pm; encourage high school and middle school youth to come by Fleetwood-Jordain on Mondays and Wednesdays from 6-9 pm beginning Monday, June 6th and Robert Crown on Fridays from 6-9 pm. And check out the City of Evanston’s Safe Summer webpage for updated information about My City, Your City, Our City throughout the season.

Not only are we again providing safe, public spaces and a full calendar of activities, but we are also working together to create youth-led communal systems of accountability where young people agree on shared values and ways we treat each other in public spaces. Rather than exclusion and shunning, we will support young people to acknowledge the harms they’ve caused and communally decide on how to repair those harms.

We know that when young people are connected to – and invested in – their community, they are far more likely to be their best selves. When they are heard, valued, and centered, they are highly motivated to remain in community. Connectedness keeps them and all of us safe.

In Proximity,

The City of Evanston’s Youth & Young Adult Division

Connections for the Homeless

Curt’s Café

Erie Family Health Centers

Infant Welfare Society of Evanston

James B. Moran Center for Youth Advocacy

PEER Services

Youth Job Center

Youth & Opportunity United

Evanston Cradle to Career