Represented by the MacArthur Justice Center, BGA and DuPage County service provider Radical Hospitality Ministries, has filed suit against elements of the judicial branch to force compliance with transparency requirements under the SAFE-T Act.

For years, BGA has been working to bring transparency and accountability to Illinois’ judicial system. But not only have the courts avoided providing basic information to the public, they have also been violating the law.

Now, the MacArthur Justice Center is representing the BGA and Radical Hospitality Ministries to sue several government agencies that hold the data the public deserves to have access to.

As BGA Policy has written about before, under the SAFE-T Act, the courts were required to begin collecting county-level data throughout Illinois on various metrics relating to the new pretrial release system after the end of cash bail.

The courts not only failed to begin data collection on time, they are still not publishing reports or analyses on all of the metrics they are required to collect data on. Particularly troubling for many advocates of the SAFE-T Act has been the lack of data surrounding the use of electronic monitoring, especially given the expansion of an electronic monitoring program under the Office of Statewide Pretrial Services.

This lawsuit lays bare the injustices and inequities behind the courts’ lack of transparency. Without the data the courts are mandated to report, journalists, researchers and the public have no way of knowing how the implementation of Illinois’ laws are unfolding. Not only that, but service providers, such as BGA’s co-plaintiff Radical Hospitality Ministries, don’t have access to the data they need to help identify client needs and evaluate the full effectiveness of their pretrial programs.

It is BGA’s goal that not only will this lawsuit force the government to follow the SAFE-T Act, but that it can even overturn the wrongful ruling that precluded the judiciary from Illinois’ Freedom of Information Act, finally bringing the courts out of the shadows and into the full sunshine of Illinois’ greatest transparency law.

— BGA Policy

Bryan is a Public Policy & Government Affairs Professional with many years experience advocating for change by way of regulation and the legislative process. Born and raised on Long Island, Bryan spent...

Sophia Van Pelt (pronouns: She/Her/Hers) graduated from Illinois State University in 2017 with a Bachelor of Social Work degree. Her policy classes sparked an interest in policy analysis which led to her...

Geoffrey Cubbage is a policy and budget analyst focusing on the Illinois General Assembly and Chicago's City Council. Prior to joining the Better Government Association in 2022, Geoffrey served as Director...