Chicagotalks » Elizabeth Beyer http://www.chicagotalks.org Community & Citizen journalism for your block, your neighborhood, our city Fri, 24 Dec 2010 16:57:49 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.3 Abortion protesters a familiar sight outside clinics /2010/12/03/abortion-protesters-a-familiar-sight-outside-clinics/#utm_source=feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=feed /2010/12/03/abortion-protesters-a-familiar-sight-outside-clinics/#comments Fri, 03 Dec 2010 13:00:06 +0000 Elizabeth Beyer /?p=10675 On a cold, damp autumn morning in Chicago, a small group of women stands in protest outside of a Planned Parenthood clinic on the near North Side.

Members of the Pro-Life Action League pray in low tones while clutching rosaries and offering fliers to the people who pass through the clinic’s doors. They make no effort to approach the women.

Corrina Gura, projects coordinator for the organization, has protested outside the near North Side clinic almost every Saturday morning for a year.

“[Women are] not warned going into it that [abortion] is a procedure that could really harm them,” said Gura.

Gura disbursed religious pamphlets aimed at dissuading women from getting an abortion. The leaflets outlined abortion malpractice lawsuits and the side effects of birth control.

The tactics used by Gura — which she calls educating the public — are considered by others to be insulting and invasive.

Max Rowser, a 27-year-old father of two, sat in the foyer of a family planning clinic near the intersection of West Washington and North Desplaines streets and recounted his experience with abortion protesters later that morning. As he and his girlfriend approached the clinic, he said, they were met with members of the Pro-Life Action League. They were much more combative than the North Side group, Rowser said.

“They said, ‘Oh you’re not going to be a stand-up guy, you don’t want to stand up for what you believe in?’ as if they knew what I was believing,” said Rowser. “I feel if a person made it this far, it’s not going to be too much you can do to stop them when they’re already at the door.”

According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, an agency that tracks abortions and other women’s health procedures, about 1.3 million abortions are performed in the United States each year, making it one of the most commonly performed surgeries in the country. Some volunteers would like to see those number decreased.

Eric Scheidler, executive director of the Pro-Life Action League, said the goal of the organization’s “sidewalk counseling” is to offer help to women who seek an abortion. Scheidler said members of his organization are instructed to reach out to women with compassion and not to intimidate. However, others say methods used by the Pro-Life Action League resemble coercion rather than education or assistance.

“What if she was on the seesaw, saying maybe I should or maybe I shouldn’t? That’s all she needed to hear was the stuff that they were saying. We’d have been gone,” said Rowser about his girlfriend.

According to Scheidler, the main organization the Pro-Life Action League rallies against is Planned Parenthood. He referred to Planned Parenthood as “an outrageous force of evil in the world” and made the generalization that the decision to have an abortion is one “that almost no woman wants to make.”
Despite statements by its members that the Pro-Life Action League does not have religious affiliation, the website outlines the organization’s connection to the Catholic Church.

“The case I would make against abortion is based strictly on science and reason. Religion may have inspired me, but that may not be the case I’m going to make to people,” said Scheidler. He referred to abortion as an easy way out for doctors who find it difficult to care for a mother and fetus.

Lara Philipps, communications and marketing manager for Planned Parenthood, said the clinic requires and provides counseling for women considering abortion. During the counseling session, women are provided with non-biased medically accurate information to allow them to make the best decision for themselves, Philipps said.

“I think their actions are intimidating and do interfere with women’s access to critical health care services,” said Philipps about the protesters.

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Ald. Carrie Austin Calls on Educators, Parents to Curb Youth Violence /2010/10/20/ald-carrie-austin-calls-on-educators-parents-to-curb-youth-violence/#utm_source=feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=feed /2010/10/20/ald-carrie-austin-calls-on-educators-parents-to-curb-youth-violence/#comments Wed, 20 Oct 2010 12:00:59 +0000 Elizabeth Beyer /?p=9954 By Elizabeth Beyer and Nancy Traver

Educating people of all ages would be the most efficient way to curb violence on Chicago’s Southside, according to Ald. Carrie Austin.

Ald. Carrie Austin (34th)

“We’re trying to work at the core of why our areas are so violent now,” said Austin, 34th Ward alderman and chairwoman of the city council’s budget committee. Austin, 61, talked with a Columbia College journalism class Monday morning.

“We have to teach them a different way of having to react; that’s education,” said Austin about the young people in her ward.

The 34th Ward gained national attention in September 2009 after the beating death of a Fenger High School student was caught on a cell phone camera.  Austin said the incident was not related to Fenger.

Apathy is a major cause of violence in the 34th Ward because the only future the children see for themselves is in drug trafficking and gang activity, Austin said.

“When you try to tell a young man who is pushing drugs [to] earn an honest dollar, what do they tell you? ‘I make more in a day than I can in a whole entire honest week,’” she said. “How do you get that individual away from that kind of mind set?”

According to Austin, the school system is in place to turn youth away from drugs and street violence. She said she works closely with the school principals of the 34th Ward to ensure they have everything necessary to educate their students.

Education should not stop with children, she added.

“Most of the young people that we target have not always had a good upbringing. That’s education of the parents,” said Austin. “You can’t put all the blame on the child.”

Austin said parents need to be taught how to raise their children properly.

A mother of seven, Austin grew up across the street from the Cabrini Green housing projects and attended Chicago public schools on the near North Side of Chicago.

“I’ve been on the South Side longer than I’ve been on the North Side, but my roots come from the north,” said Austin. She said she has lived in the 34th Ward for 40 years.

Austin said she never planned to be an alderman, but fell into the job after the death of her husband, Lemuel Austin, who was alderman at the time of his death in 1994.  She had served as ward secretary under her husband.

Austin began her political career in 1971 as an election judge. She was appointed chairman of the Budget and Government Operations Committee by Mayor Richard Daley in May 2007.

Looking toward the mayor’s race, Austin said she was “devastated” when Daley announced last month that he would not run for a seventh term. “I had the rug pulled out from under me when I heard the announcement,” she said. “I feel [Daley] is sympathetic to the city and knows its heartbeat.”

She added that Daley is “not perfect,” but everyone is “subject to mistakes.”

Austin questioned whether mayoral contender Rahm Emanuel has an existing network of support in Chicago. She praised Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart for his handling of the Burr Oak Cemetery, where employees were caught selling grave sites and removing the remains of people buried there without the knowledge of their family members.

Austin attended DePaul University and said she was “a breath away from becoming a dietician” but had to leave school to take care of her children.

“My intent was to be the best mother, the best wife that I could be,” said Austin. She said she raised her seven children “pretty much by myself.” She has 28 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Austin said she was very proud to see the opening in June of the Marshfield Plaza Mall on the city’s far South Side.

One of her aides, who declined to give her full name, called Austin a “strong advocate for her community. She has fought hard for the economic engine of her community. She’s a uniter.”

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