FAQ

Why have I never heard of the Police District Council?

It was created by a new ordinance passed by the Chicago City Council in July 2021 as a new model for police oversight, accountability, and public safety.

What is the Police District Council?

The Police District Council will be comprised of 66 members, 3 elected representatives from each of the city’s 22 Police Districts.

Per the City of Chicago website, the Police District Council will have several key roles in supporting public safety and community involvement:

  • Gathering community input on police policy and public safety concerns from people in their district via monthly meetings
  • Collaborating with citizens and police officers to better implement community policing initiatives and restorative justice programs
  • Meeting quarterly to identify public opinion trends across the city
  • Nominating candidates for the newly-created Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability (CCPSA), and
  • Meeting yearly to make priority recommendations for the CCPSA

How will my Police District be represented in the Police District Council?

Residents of the 18th Police District will vote for three (3) representatives from their District on the Municipal Election Ballot in February 2023.

How do I know what Police District I’m in?

The 18th Police District consists of the entire area South of Fullerton Ave and between the Chicago River and Lake Michigan. It includes most of Lincoln Park, Old Town, the Gold Coast, Mag Mile, River North, River East, and Streeterville. For more info refer to our posted map of the 18th as well as the CPD website here.

When was the election for Police District Council?

The Police District Council was held on February 28th, 2023.

If you have additional questions that you would like me to post answers to here, please submit a contact form

Hi Friends and Supporters,

On March 14th, 2023, the final votes were counted, and I am very excited to share that we received the highest number of votes for the 18th District for the Chicago Police District Council!

Our election success could never have been possible without your incredible support throughout our campaign. You hosted meet and greets, gathered signatures, fundraised, passed out palm cards, emailed your friends, supported me at three debates, and voted! You believed in our campaign, and even more so, in this city. Together, we will create a safer Chicago.

In the coming weeks, I will be relaunching this website to provide opportunities to get involved, understand the policing and safety framework/laws in Chicago, and stay updated on news and resources.

There will be opportunities and a need for all of us to get involved, roll up our sleeves, and create the change that we believe in. I humbly ask for your continued support and involvement.

I am deeply thankful to you, and I am honored to work on behalf of our communities.

Hi, I’m Brad!

My wife, Hayley, and I were born and raised in the city of Chicago. To us—and our two young children—Chicago is home, and we could not imagine raising our children anywhere else. But like many of you, we are worried about our family’s safety. It has always been against my very nature to stand by and do nothing as things around me get worse. As the city faces new waves of crime and an uncertain policing landscape, I am ready to continue to roll up my sleeves to improve our city.

Growing up, I witnessed a Chicago that frequently battled crime, including areas of the 18th district. I attended the Lasalle Language Academy, a Chicago Public School in Old Town, for elementary school. I went to LaSalle in the late 1980s–mid 1990s, at a time when crime was rampant throughout the city.  I quickly became aware of two very different worlds—one inside the walls of LaSalle, a wonderful, diverse school where all of us became friends through our commonalities, and one outside the building, where we went home to different neighborhoods with different experiences. The Chicago I went home to was one in which my community, family, and city provided me with great opportunities. My friends, many of whom came from lower income communities, saw Chicago as a place that binds and closes one’s imagination and possibilities.

I believed in the potential for a better city, and I still do.

Throughout my career, I have taken every possible opportunity to work with countless advocates and dedicated civil servants to improve areas of the city. My many years of work and field-tested expertise with supporting our youth have prepared me to competently advocate on behalf of our district’s safety at this time of crisis.

I am a licensed attorney, having graduated from Northwestern Law School in 2009.

After graduating from law school, I led Chicago Public Schools’ anti-violence task force, in which we developed and launched three initiatives focused on reducing gang violence: Culture of Calm (which implemented several initiatives, such as restorative justice and in-school suspension, within 40 high schools), Safe Passage (which supports student safety through safe walking routes between gang boundaries), and wrap-around mentoring for 10,000 students most at risk of becoming victims of gun violence. We tracked considerable progress through these initiatives, with many high schools still utilizing the programs that we implemented across the school district.  Our success was the direct result of focusing resources, utilizing proven intervention and restorative justice approaches, and collaborating regularly with CPD, CPS, local religious institutions, businesses, and community leaders, and several other city, county, and state agencies and organizations. No solution to a problem of this size can be solved without a fundamental belief in collaboration.

For the past 7 years—and counting—I have co-led a locally-headquartered education business, Academic Approach. We work with schools and students from all socio-economic backgrounds across Chicago and the country. While we are known throughout the 18thdistrict for our 1-on-1 tutoring services, we are even more widely known throughout the Chicago Public Schools in the south and west sides where we provide in-depth support for teachers and students.

In many ways, Lincoln Park High School (one of our district’s high schools) represents the obstacles and opportunities that we face when trying to reach our community’s children. As an elected community representative on the Local School Council for Lincoln Park High School, I primarily focus on the school’s safety strategy, help oversee the facilities, and provide oversight of the school’s budget. Last year, our high school students—like elsewhere in Chicago—struggled with a lack of mental health support and safety. They needed to be better cared for, and in turn, they needed to show up to school ready to learn. This year, we invested in social-emotional support so that students feel better cared for and teachers have the support in the classroom to continue to excel in their instruction. We also invested in restorative discipline so that students better understand our expectations while also being kept within our school community and not pushed away. As a result, we have seen positive impacts on students’ mental health and an increase in student safety.

While faced with the complex goal of making this school safer, we not only created a multidisciplinary strategy, but also implemented concrete programs and foundational changes to the approach inside one of the most socio-economically and racially diverse high schools in the country. Our police district’s issues are complex and robust, and require that level of thoughtfulness, inspiration, planning, and execution.

As elected director of my Lincoln Park neighborhood association, I am closely involved in overseeing our neighborhood safety strategy. I am also a member of the Old Town Triangle Association Safety Committee, and I serve on the advisory board of the Chicago Children’s Advocacy Center, a multi-disciplinary center that brings together child-protection, law enforcement, and healing services to respond to, treat, and prevent child abuse.

But my most important roles are those of husband to my wife, Dr. Hayley Silver, and father to our two young, adorable children. The love I have for my community and my city are only compounded by the love I have for my family. I think that this is what drives all of us to strive for a better Chicago—the fundamental need to guarantee our children an environment that provides them with opportunities and keeps them safe.

I firmly believe that creating a safer Chicago is reliant upon our schools, our police, our park district, our CTA, our public housing, our healthcare system, our support for parents, and countless other factors that set the tone for how our city operates. I will bring my purposeful voice and emphasis on collaboration to our support of local police, and beyond, to our City’s over-arching safety strategy. We need people who have the vision, creativity, and knowledge on implementing and supporting our communities to invest in everyone’s future.

Thank you for your ongoing support of these initiatives!
Brad Kessler