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Juanita Irizarry

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Juanita Irizarry
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Candidate, Cook County Board of Review District 1
Elections and appointments
Next election
March 17, 2026
Education
High school
Kelvyn Park High School
Bachelor's
Greenville University, 1989
Graduate
Harvard Kennedy School of Government, 2007
Personal
Birthplace
Greenville, IL
Contact

Juanita Irizarry (Democratic Party) is running for election to the Cook County Board of Review to represent District 1 in Illinois. She declared candidacy for the Democratic primary scheduled on March 17, 2026.[source]

Irizarry completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Juanita Irizarry was born in Greenville, Illinois. She earned a high school diploma from Kelvyn Park High School, a bachelor's degree from Greenville University in 1989, and a graduate degree from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government in 2007. Irizarry's career experience includes working in nonprofits, philanthropy, and government. She has been affiliated with the following organizations:

  • Harvard Kennedy School Journal of Hispanic Policy
  • Common Cause Illinois
  • Metropolitan Planning Council
  • United Way Chicago
  • Near Northwest Neighborhood Network
  • Humboldt Park Empowerment Partnership Steering Committee[1]

Elections

2026

See also: Municipal elections in Cook County, Illinois (2026)

General election

The primary will occur on March 17, 2026. The general election will occur on November 3, 2026. General election candidates will be added here following the primary.

Democratic primary

Democratic primary for Cook County Board of Review District 1

Incumbent George Cardenas (D) and Juanita Irizarry (D) are running in the Democratic primary for Cook County Board of Review District 1 on March 17, 2026.


Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Endorsements

Irizarry received the following endorsements. To send us additional endorsements, click here.

2015

See also: Chicago, Illinois municipal elections, 2015

The city of Chicago, Illinois, held elections for city council on February 24, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was November 24, 2014.[2] In the general election for Ward 26, incumbent Roberto Maldonado defeated Adam Corona and Juanita Irizarry.[3][4]

Chicago City Council, Ward 26, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngRoberto Maldonado Incumbent 52.3% 3,466
Juanita Irizarry 33.9% 2,248
Adam Corona 13.9% 919
Total Votes 6,633
Source: Chicago Board of Election Commissioners, "Official general election results," accessed July 9, 2015


Campaign themes

2026

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Juanita Irizarry completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Irizarry's responses.

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I’ve fought for fairness and stood up for everyday people my entire life. As a housing expert, non-profit leader, and lifelong devotee to justice, I have taken on billionaires, corrupt politicians, special interests, and won. Now, I’m running for the Cook County Board of Review to make big corporations pay their fair share in property taxes and to deliver real relief for working families.

I grew up in Humboldt Park, and was raised in a household rooted in service. My parents turned their apartment into a community hub, tutoring neighborhood kids, teaching them how to garden, and sharing fresh produce with families in need. Even as renters, they showed me that stable housing builds strong, connected families. Now, I want to bring that same community service mindset to the Board of Review. I will bring equity, transparency, and accountability to our broken system—that, for too long, has only served the powerful few while the many are left behind.

As your Commissioner on the Board of Review, I will continue to fight for working families, unlike my opponent who has put billionaires and corporations before working families–causing everyday people to carry the financial burden.
  • Make Billionaires & Corporations Pay Their Fair Share.

    Too often, corporate landlords and large developers pay less than their fair share, while working families are left to make up the difference. Between 2021 and 2023, homeowners paid $2 billion more to cover corporate tax breaks granted by the Board of Review. As your next Commissioner on the Board of Review, I will: End backroom deals that give massive tax reductions to commercial properties while homeowners pay more. Ensure equitable access to free property tax appeal clinics to help homeowners and small businesses across the district. Require complete transparency in Board of Review decisions by publishing every appeal and its justification online for public review.

    And more...
  • Protect Homeowners & Seniors with Transparency and Accountability. Too many families are being priced out of their homes because of rising property taxes. Homeowners deserve a fair, transparent system that protects them from sudden spikes and long-term displacement. I will: Protect homeowners and seniors from unfair tax increases by expanding outreach and workshops to explain assessment changes and appeal information in neighborhoods most at risk of displacement, and by publishing the data used to justify large commercial property tax decreases. Implement reforms to correct the systemic bias in the assessment and appeals process, to solve for long-standing inequities that have consistently overcharged communities of color. And Much More...
  • Reform a Broken System. The current Board of Review favors those with power, money, and political influence. Real reform means standing up to that system—I have been doing that my entire career. Real reform means a system that helps working families, not Billionaires, and not Corporations. I will: Never accept campaign donations from property tax attorneys. Strengthen ethics and oversight of the Board of Review to eliminate pay-to-play politics and ensure decisions are based on facts, not favoritism. Expand the authority of the Office of the Independent Inspector General so every property tax appeal can be reviewed with true transparency and accountability. And Much More...
I am passionate about healthy, sustainable communities, with housing affordability and stability policy issues at the core of this passion.
The Board of Review is a check within the property tax system. It is one of the only independent bodies where taxpayers can challenge government valuations without going to court. The Board’s rulings directly impact individual taxpayers and community revenue stability.
Elected officials should act with integrity, be accessible, honest, responsive, and committed to the communities they serve.
The Board of Review’s core responsibility is to provide an accurate, accessible, and fair appeal process for property taxes.
The Board of Review can reduce or increase assessments after community input. The Board also sets transparency standards that identify “pay to play” loopholes for political insiders and large corporations. The Board can, and should be, a watchdog on fairness.
Experience is always helpful, but not as important as accountability to taxpayers and commitment to reform systems that aren’t working.
Housing policy expertise, understanding of economic realities across communities, experience navigating complex systems, and collaboration with community organizations as well as other government agencies.
The Board of Review impacts whether families remain in their homes, schools and other public services are funded equitably, and whether billionaires are awarded “sweetheart deals” at the expense of others.
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22nd Ward IPO
Though many people are impressed with how my leadership and courage manifested in stopping Hollywood billionaire George Lucas and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel from privatizing private lakefront land in my role as Executive Director of Friends of the Parks, I am particularly proud of fighting and winning a legal battle against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to shut down a toxic waste dump on Chicago’s lakefront in an environmental justice community on the Southeast Side.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.


See also


External links

Footnotes