Several public commenters used the Cook County Board’s public comment period to press for funding and to relay personal legal grievances.
Pastor Sandy Norman, who said he does violence-intervention work, urged commissioners to view community-based intervention (CBI) programs as frontline services that need reliable funding rather than allowing the same small set of organizations to receive the bulk of resources. "When you're a person that have had to go through trauma... these are things that I deal with firsthand," Norman said, asking the board to consider different perspectives when distributing CBI and mental-health funds.
Taiwan Sims described a personal legal case that she said began with a police report filed on 03/22/2023. Sims cited two case numbers (25120458301 and 25120869201), said she attempted to file for an independent order of protection that was denied, and stated she faces a court date on 03/19/2026. Sims asked the commissioners to take action, saying she hoped bringing the materials to commissioners would prompt assistance.
Other public commenters used the microphone to criticize county leaders and raise broader political claims; those remarks included accusations that were not addressed in the transcript by county officials. The board did not issue responses on the record to the allegations and did not record staff commitments or votes specifically tied to the requests during the meeting.