Bill Text: IL SR0832 | 2023-2024 | 103rd General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Congratulates Joel Africk on his retirement from full-time employment as the CEO of Respiratory Health and commends him on his many years of service on behalf the residents in the State of Illinois and beyond.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2024-04-12 - Resolution Adopted [SR0832 Detail]

Download: Illinois-2023-SR0832-Introduced.html

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SENATE RESOLUTION
2 WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate wish to
3congratulate Joel Jay Africk on his retirement from full-time
4employment as CEO of the Respiratory Health Association and
5commend him for his unwavering commitment to improving the
6health of residents of Illinois; and
7 WHEREAS, Joel Africk is a native of Chicago; he graduated
8from Niles North High School, the University of Illinois
9(Urbana), and Harvard Law School; afterward, he clerked for
10the Honorable Judge Bernard M. Decker and became a partner in
11the Chicago law firm of Jenner & Block, LLP, where he
12represented clients in a broad range of business litigation
13matters from 1984 to 2001; and
14 WHEREAS, Joel Africk became the CEO of the Respiratory
15Health Association in 2002, focusing on creating a safer and
16healthier environment for Illinois families; and
17 WHEREAS, Joel Africk helped pass the Chicago Smoke-Free
18Ordinance in 2005, amending the Clean Air Act to make all
19places of employment 100% smoke-free in the City of Chicago;
20and
21 WHEREAS, Joel Africk's leadership helped pass the 2007

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1Smoke-free Illinois Act, making all restaurants, bars, and
2other workplaces in Illinois 100% smoke-free; the law is
3considered the strongest smoke-free law in the country, as it
4includes casinos and private clubs in its list of required
5smoke-free venues; this policy was supported by more than 450
6organizations and tens of thousands of advocates; and
7 WHEREAS, Joel Africk helped pass the State's first No
8Idling Diesel Law, which limited diesel truck idling in the
9metropolitan Chicago and metro East St. Louis areas to 10
10minutes; following this legislation, the Respiratory Health
11Association along with Citizen Action/Illinois formally
12launched the Illinois Campaign to Clean Up Diesel Pollution,
13with the aim to significantly clean up diesel pollution in the
14State; to date, over 80 public health, community, labor, and
15environmental organizations have endorsed the campaign; in
162008, he helped secure $19.5 million in federal Congestion
17Mitigation and Air Improvement funding to clean up diesel
18engines in the Chicago metropolitan area, the largest amount
19of money the committee has dedicated for diesel cleanup in
20Chicago; and
21 WHEREAS, Joel Africk launched the first annual Living
22Better Together COPD Conference in 2005, the largest patient
23gathering in the U.S., and led a coalition in the development
24of the nation's first statewide COPD plan to reduce

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1COPD-related morbidity and mortality, which improved the
2quality of life for people in Illinois living with COPD; he
3created the COPD Caregiver's Toolkit in 2017, which was
4digitalized and became available nationwide on the National
5Institute of Health website in 2023; and
6 WHEREAS, Joel Africk's effort to ensure smoke-free places
7for Illinois residents enabled the Chicago Parks districts to
8adopt a smoke-free park policy, covering 580 parks, 90
9gardens, 90 museum campuses, 9 lakefront harbors, 9 skating
10rinks, and more than 24 miles of lakefront property, becoming
11the largest smoke-free park district in the country; the
12Respiratory Health Association's efforts, with the help of
13many advocates and institutions, reduced the adult smoking
14rate in Illinois from 20.9% in 2011 to 12.1% in 2021 and the
15statewide youth smoking rate from 12.5% in 2009 to 1.1% in
162021; and
17 WHEREAS, Joel Africk was passionate about raising
18awareness and support for community events that supported the
19mission to create smoke-free environments in Illinois; he
20championed initiatives through creative community events,
21propelling The Witt Hotel and The Hustle, which has raised
22just under $21 million over its lifetime, the Jewelry
23Television, and Catch Your Breath fundraisers and three
24Chicago Auto Show black-tie galas to support the Respiratory

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1Health Association and community efforts in promoting
2Smoke-Free Illinois and patient support programs; and
3 WHEREAS, Joel Africk and the Respiratory Health
4Association worked with Illinois Governor Pat Quinn in 2009 to
5release a Green Construction Executive Order, which requires
6all state-funded road construction projects, in non-attainment
7areas, to use clean construction practices; and
8 WHEREAS, Joel Africk and the Respiratory Health
9Association worked to pass the Climate & Equitable Jobs Act in
102021, which sets Illinois on the path to 100% clean energy by
112050 and commits millions of dollars to quickly expand
12transportation electrification in Illinois; this law has been
13instrumental in closing or preventing 23 coal power plant
14operations; and
15 WHEREAS, Joel Africk was born to Diane (Lazow) and Richard
16Africk, along with younger siblings, Michael Africk and Juli
17Noll; he married Julie Magyar on December 17, 1989, and they
18have three children, Jared (Kate), Megan, and Sarah Africk;
19and
20 WHEREAS, Joel Africk looks forward to spending more time
21with his family, traveling, and cycling in retirement;
22therefore, be it

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1 RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL
2ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Joel
3Africk on his retirement from full-time employment as the CEO
4of Respiratory Health, and we commend him on his many years of
5service on behalf the residents in the State of Illinois and
6beyond; and be it further
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