Broadview's village lobbyist and local officials said House Bill 5024, a state measure written with Broadview's concerns in mind, passed both chambers of the Illinois Legislature and was awaiting the governor's signature.
"We crafted it for Broadview," Maize Jackson said, describing HB 5024 as statewide legislation designed to give municipalities additional control over where federal detention centers can be established. Jackson said the village worked with Speaker Chris Welch and Senator Kimberly Lightford to advance the bill out of both chambers and that the measure is now on the governor's desk.
Jackson said the bill was intended to limit the ability of the federal government to expand detention facilities into neighborhoods like Broadview's and that the change was the mayor's primary legislative win this session. She also described recent appropriations and rollovers that benefited Broadview — including roughly $2 million secured with advocacy by local legislators and $250,000 for library improvements — and said her office tracked and opposed a set of bills that would have undermined local control.
Residents who live near the existing facility described personal disruption from expanded federal activity and welcomed the legislature's action while noting federal law remains outside the state's direct control. The mayor and lobbyist urged residents to contact federal representatives as well as state legislators to sustain pressure and to participate in local civic processes.
Jackson said she will provide the village board periodic reports of her Springfield activity and that the administration will work to publish plain‑language summaries for residents.