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*** UPDATED x1 - Equality Illinois ‘alarmed’ over possible Harris appointment *** Personal PAC warns Democratic committeepersons about Sen. Napoleon Harris

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was wondering if this was coming. Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…

As the Cook County Committeepeople consider the slating and appointment of a new Cook County Clerk this week, Personal PAC would urge them to examine each candidate’s record on protecting abortion rights. The Cook County Clerk’s office serves an enormous role in both the health of our democracy, and the most personal moments of our lives, administering birth, death, and marriage records. It is important that the candidate appointed to, or slated for, this position supports the fundamental right to bodily autonomy.

One candidate, Senator Napoleon Harris III, has repeatedly shown through his no votes in the General Assembly on the Reproductive Health Act, HB 40, and the repeal of parental notification that he does not support the right to bodily autonomy. He has not stood with Personal PAC and our many allies and partners as we have worked to expand abortion access in Illinois.

Moving forward, Personal PAC intends to endorse in committeeperson races, as the slating and appointment processes are vital components of keeping Illinois 100% pro-choice. Committeepeople who support Senator Harris’s candidacy for such an important role will not be considered as 100% pro-choice incumbents in their next race for Committeeperson.

Expect a vote this Friday. I’m hearing that Cook County Board President and party chair Toni Preckwinkle wants to appoint Chief Deputy County Clerk Cedric Giles to fill the office vacancy through the end of the term.

Other candidates for the ballot appointment include Cook County Commissioners Kevin Morrison and Donna Miller, as well as MWRD Commissioner Kari Steele, although there might be a legal issue with doing that.

By the way, the office vacancy vote will be one vote for each committeeperson. The ballot appointment will be done on a weighted vote.

*** UPDATE *** Equality Illinois CEO Brian C. Johnson…

“It is with great alarm that we hear that Senator Napoleon Harris is under consideration for appointment to the vacancy for Cook County Clerk.

“Senator Harris has one of the worst voting records for LGBTQ+ equality among current Democratic Senators. In particular, he has failed to vote for some of the most essential bills advancing full equality for LGBTQ+ people, including:

    • Marriage Equality (SB 10) 2013
    • Gender identity in Death and Funeral Instructions (HB 3552) 2015
    • Birth certificate modernization (HB1785) 2017
    • Panic Defense Ban (SB 1761) 2017
    • Inclusive Curriculum Bill (HB 246) 2019
    • LGBTQ+ Older Adults Bill (SB 1319) 2019
    • HIV decriminalization (HB 1063) 2021
    • Birth certificate modernization (HB 9) 2023

“As you can see, Sen. Harris has refused to vote for marriage equality, either birth certificate modernization laws, or the gender identity in death law. Given his refusal to support the full dignity of LGBTQ+ people in these critical areas, we are alarmed over the possibility that he might serve in a position with tremendous authority over birth, death, and marriage certificates.”

  14 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago

As calls to oust the leader of the struggling Chicago Transit Authority grow louder, Mayor Brandon Johnson appointed a politically connected pastor who has no professional transportation experience to the CTA’s oversight board last week. […]

Eaddy served on the Chicago Police Board for a decade until last fall, when the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability didn’t recommend retaining him. He also serves on the Illinois Medical District Commission, a post he was appointed to by Gov. JB Pritzker. He supported Johnson in the mayoral election.

Calls and emails to Eaddy’s church weren’t returned Friday. The Mayor’s Office didn’t respond to questions about how Eaddy was identified for the position and how his background helps the CTA. […]

Out of more than 50 appointments to the CTA board over the past 40 years, only three were transportation experts, Block Club reported. The city and governor’s office won’t explain how they identify and interview prospective board members.

Eaddy replaces Rev. Johnny Miller of Mt. Vernon Baptist Church, whose term had expired. Miller was appointed to the CTA board by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016.

* Healthy Illinois…

The Healthy Illinois Campaign is releasing a report on The Benefits of Health Coverage for Immigrants in Illinois that shows how two state programs for uninsured immigrant adults and seniors, provide financial, health and social benefits to individuals, their communities and society at large. The research briefing by the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois Chicago, which authored the data review report, will be presented at an in-person event hosted at the North Lawndale Employment Network. GCI’s presentation will be followed by a panel discussion on the report’s contents, its significance and next steps.

WHO: Program Presentation: Samantha Sepulveda, UIC Great Cities Institute
Panel Moderator: Ere Rendon, vice president of Immigrant Justice, The Resurrection Project
Panelists:

    - IL State Rep. Lilian Jimenez, D-4
    - IL Senate District 20 Democratic nominee Graciela Guzman
    - Glo Choi, organizer, HANA Center
    - Edith Avila Olea, MPP, policy manager, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant & Refugee Rights

WHEN & WHERE: 8:30 a.m., Friday, April 26, Registration & Light refreshments
- Program 9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m
- North Lawndale Employment Network, - 1111 S. Homan Avenue, Chicago
- The briefing will also be accessible online. To attend either one, register here.
WHY: The report analyzes data that demonstrates the value of health coverage programs for immigrants excluded from federal Medicaid. Providing health coverage benefits not only individuals who can’t get coverage, but their children, their families, the communities where they live and the state healthcare infrastructure.

The report found that Illinois was once a state that led in providing health coverage to low-income immigrants, including being the first state to expand coverage to undocumented children in 2006. But the state’s pause in enrollment for immigrants ages 42-64 and capped benefits for those 65 and older take away Illinois’ recent status as a nation-leading state in providing these benefits to immigrants, regardless of their immigration status.

* WICS

The Illinois State Fair invites the public to a 100 Days Out celebration on Tuesday, April 30 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Reisch Pavilion on the Illinois State Fairgrounds.

The celebration will be a preview into the food and drinks sold at the Illinois State Fair, which will run August 8-18. […]

Discounted State Fair mega passes, jumbo passes, admission booklets and parking passes will also be available for purchase during the event.

“We are proud to showcase the Illinois State Fairgrounds following a $58 million investment in improvements,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “This 100 Days Out celebration offers a preview of the 2024 Illinois State Fair, which promises to be the biggest and best yet.”

*** Statewide News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker says state ‘obviously’ needs to change 2010 law that shrunk pension benefits: “We need, obviously, to make some changes to Tier 2 to make sure that we’re meeting the Social Security Safe Harbor,” the governor said at an unrelated news conference late Thursday night in his Capitol office. “We don’t yet really know what that’s going to cost.” Earlier in the day, Pritzker’s top budget advisor, Governor’s Office of Management and Budget Director Alexis Sturm, told a House committee that the governor was “open to that conversation” about increasing the cap on Tier 2 pension earnings to match Social Security.

* Cook County sheriff Tom Dart | I support Karina’s Bill to help police protect domestic violence survivors: Orders of protection, also called restraining orders, suffer from one obvious shortcoming: They do not allow police to search for and seize firearms; instead, they usually rely on the subject to voluntarily turn them in to police or give them to someone else. That is why I strongly support Karina’s Bill, legislation drafted by domestic violence advocates that provides police with real authority to remove firearms from the subject of an order of protection.

* Tribune | Kroger and Albertsons propose selling off more Illinois stores in bid for merger approval: In September, the grocery companies said they planned to sell off the Mariano’s brand name and 14 Kroger-owned grocery stores in Illinois. At the time, a spokesperson for Kroger-owned Mariano’s confirmed that at least some Mariano’s stores would be sold. On Monday, the company said its Illinois divestitures would include a total of 35 Kroger and Albertsons-owned stores. […] The companies now plan to sell a total of 579 Kroger and Albertsons stores in markets where they overlap to C&S Wholesale Grocers, a New Hampshire grocery supplier and operator, for $2.9 billion. Under the initial divestiture plan, announced in September, C&S had planned to purchase 413 stores for $1.9 billion.

* Crain’s | J&J, Kenvue ordered to pay $45M to Illinois family in baby powder suit: Jurors hearing the case in Chicago late Friday concluded Kenvue was 70% responsible for the death of Theresa Garcia, a mother of six and a grandmother, who died in 2020 after developing mesothelioma, a type of cancer linked to asbestos exposure. Her family alleged J&J and Kenvue’s predecessor firm sold their talcum-based baby powder knowing it was tainted with asbestos, according to court filings.

* SJ-R | Passover begins April 22. Here’s everything you need to know about the 8-day celebration: Passover commemorates the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt as told in the Torah, or the first five books of the Old Testament. The name “Passover” comes from the Israelites marking the doors of their homes with lamb’s blood so an avenging angel, sent by God, would know to pass over them.

*** Earth Day ***

* 21st Show | Earth Day 2024: The current state of our environment: To start our show off, we’ll cover the current state of Illinois’ environment, followed by the biggest environmental challenges we’re facing worldwide. We’ll also look back to the 70s and see how environmentalist movements have changed since then, and learn if nuclear energy is considered green energy. To close off our show, we’ll hear from our guests if doomers are right about Earth’s future, or if you should remain optimistic.

* ABC Chicago | Registration for Aurora free electronics recycling event opens Monday: Mandatory registration for the recycling drive starts Monday at 9 a.m. The city says registration capacity is typically reached in 24 hours. The first 2,000 people to register will get a spot in the drive-thru, which is happening on May 4 at the Route 59 Metra Station.

* NBC Chicago | Earth Day: How one grocery shopper takes steps to avoid ‘pointless plastic’: Nature wraps bananas and oranges in peels. But in some modern supermarkets, they’re bagged or wrapped in plastic too. For Judith Enck, that’s the epitome of pointless plastic. The baby food aisle is similarly distressing for her, with its rows and rows of blended fruits, vegetables and meat in single-use pouches that have replaced glass jars. Less than 10% of plastic is recycled. Most is buried, burned or dumped. Recycling rates for glass, aluminum and cardboard are far higher. And cardboard or paper packaging is biodegradable.

* Students: Earth Day was born on college campuses. Now our universities must divest from fossil fuels: The fight against fossil fuels is a fight against the cycles of injustice that uphold and are sustained by extractive industries, including the military-industrial complex, which is fueling the genocide in Gaza, and prisons and jails — which are in the 90th percentile or more for pollution-related cancer risk and proximity to hazardous waste. We follow in the footsteps of the first Earth Day, not to repeat it but to reclaim it. We are building a multiracial, cross-class movement to destroy fossil fuel influence in our politics and institutions and center the communities most affected by the climate crisis.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | UChicago Promised $15 Million For South Side Violence Prevention. It’s Given Less Than $3 Million: The Violence Intervention Fund — launched following the deaths of three students — was a commitment to groups that organize youth activities, mentorship and more. Two years in, grantees say the university stopped communicating about the program.

* Crain’s | With the DNC approaching, Johnson puts Dems in a tight spot on Gaza: “We have not experienced any rift with the mayor’s office,” DNC Chair Minyon Moore said when asked whether there was a rift between the official party platform and the host mayor when it comes to the war in Gaza. “They have been great partners to us,” she added. “And we expect that to go on to the end of the cycle.”

* Block Club | $70 Million More For Migrant Housing, Services Approved By City Council: Alderpeople on Friday voted 30-18 in favor of the added spending, which will come from the city’s “assigned fund balance reserve” from 2022, according to budget officials. The allocation follows a joint $250 million pledge in February from the state of Illinois and Cook County for shelter and other services for migrants coming to Chicago and Illinois.

* Block Club | Police Watchdog Defends Handling Of Dexter Reed Case Amid Criticism From City’s Top Cop: Following the release of body camera footage of the shootout earlier this month, Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten has commented publicly on the incident multiple times, including during an appearance on a sports commentator’s show. Her comments — some of which raised questions about the officers involved — have come as her agency leads the investigation into the fatal shooting. The body cam footage, released April 9 by COPA, shows police stopping Reed’s car in Humboldt Park March 21 before a gunfight ensues. Reed shot first, injuring an officer, the agency said. Four other tactical officers on the scene returned fired, shooting 96 bullets in 41 seconds, including three shots after Reed was laying “motionless” on the ground outside his car, Kersten said.

* WTTW | Taxpayers Spent at Least $5.6M to Settle, Defend Lawsuits Accusing CPD Officers of Misconduct During Protests, Unrest in 2020: Analysis: Nearly $2 million of that toll went to pay private lawyers to defend the conduct of CPD officers from late May until mid-August 2020, one of the most tumultuous periods in Chicago history, according to records obtained by WTTW News through a Freedom of Information Act request. Chicago taxpayers paid a premium to hire private attorneys to defend the conduct of CPD officers even though two probes found officers beat protesters with batons, doused their faces with pepper spray, used racial slurs and mocked the push for racial justice and police reform. In many cases, that conduct violated protesters’ First Amendment rights and involved unjustified and excessive force, according to the probes.

* Block Club | Off-Duty Officer Luis Huesca Fatally Shot In Gage Park: “Our city is grieving, and our condolences go out to their entire family as well as Luis’ fellow officers and community,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said in a statement. Snelling said Huesca was on his way home after working. He was in his uniform, though wearing something that “covered it up,” Snelling said.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago Police Officer Luis Huesca, shot and killed Sunday, had eulogized fallen colleague last year: Just a year ago, Huesca eulogized one of his best friends – a fellow Chicago Police officer who was shot and killed in the line of duty. It was just last year when Officer Huesca appeared in a tribute video for his good friend and colleague, Officer Andrés Mauricio Vásquez Lasso, who was shot and killed while responding to a domestic violence call on Spaulding Avenue near 53rd Street March 1, 2023.

* Tribune | Chicago police officer killed in Gage Park had spoken just last year at memorial for fellow officer: According to Tribune reports, Huesca is the third Chicago police officer to be shot — and the first fatally — this year. On Jan. 8, a veteran police officer was shot in the leg during an exchange of gunfire with a burglary suspect in the Gold Coast neighborhood. On March 21, an officer was shot by a civilian who was also critically wounded during an “investigatory stop” in Humboldt Park.

* Crain’s | Housing affordability in Chicago lowest it’s been in 17 years and likely longer: For condos and townhouses, aka attached housing, the index showed affordability was at its second-lowest on record. But combined with a dip of several points in the affordability of houses, it brought the city’s housing market overall to a 17-year low. It’s likely that the March figure is also lower than affordability was in the years before CAR’s data, because mortgage interest rates, a key component of affordability, have been higher in recent months than any other time since early 2000.

* Crain’s | Ex-Citadel exec’s trading firm expanding, moving to revamped Loop tower: The lease adds to recent momentum for a Canadian developer Onni Group, which is in the middle of a bold $140 million overhaul of the Randolph Street tower, recently rebranded as The Bell. Onni bought the historic 853,000-square-foot Illinois Bell building in late 2021 for $166 million, then began a massive renovation to add new amenities and lease it up, despite office demand getting hammered by the pandemic-fueled remote work movement. The downtown office vacancy rate recently topped 25% for the first time ever.

* WGN | Answering questions about climate change using exhibits at Chicago’s Museum of Science & Industry: Great Lakes ice was the lowest ever recorded at only 3% for the season, a stunning value considering the average since 1973 has been about 40% coverage. The chance of a white Christmas is going down, and both this year and last, the seasonal snowfall total has been about half of the average.

* Crain’s | Could Chicago become the next backdrop for the iconic Sundance Film Festival?: The city’s tourism arm, Choose Chicago, announced a partnership with Sundance set to take place in June that will include free and paid programming as well as four film screenings. With the partnership, the organization says that it seeks to elevate and highlight Chicago’s film community and bring more cinema enthusiasts to show the city “as an essential hub for independent film,” the organizers said of the event.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | LGBTQ+ students, parents frustrated about Prairie State College’s graduation venue: On its website, the church writes that it does not recognize marriage that is not between a man and a woman, believes “the Bible teaches that homosexuality is a sin,” and does not “condone the homosexual lifestyle.” When she found out in December that her school had chosen to hold graduation at a venue that opposes non-heterosexual relationships, graduating student Rebecca Fassbender filed a complaint with the school’s Department of Equity and Inclusion. “I received what I see as a generic response and quite dismissive,” said Fassbender, of Park Forest, who identifies as lesbian and is president of Prairie State College’s Pride Club. “It included some things about their budget and that this location needed to be within district and within their budget.”

* ABC Chicago | Cook County Democratic Party accepting County Clerk applications following death of Karen Yarbrough: The Cook County Democratic Party has told interested candidates to email their resume by Wednesday. The party will then host a meeting on Friday to hear from the candidates and take two votes. One vote will be for an interim clerk, and another vote will be to place a Democratic candidate on the November ballot to serve the final two years of Yarbrough’s unexpired term.

* Daily Herald | ‘Like losing a friend’: Shoppers say goodbye to Stratford Square Mall on final day: Officials now hope to redevelop the 275-acre property with restaurants, entertainment venues, retail outlets, housing and pedestrian-friendly green spaces. The village is working with an architect to develop a plan and officials say they will incorporate community feedback in their decisions.

* Crain’s | Wayfair opening its first-ever retail location in Wilmette: The 150,000-square-foot store in Wilmette — about half the size of an average Ikea — will be located in Edens Plaza at 3232 Lake Ave. and will feature an on-site restaurant called The Porch, the company announced. The space will also include a design studio, where customers can get home design advice, according to the company’s website.

* ABC Chicago | Arlington Heights square dancing club celebrates 75 years: “It’s phenomenal that a club has lasted for 75 years,” Arlington Squares President Denise Hopkins said. “We started in 1948. We’ve been continuously dancing since then. We’re actually the longest continually dancing club in the state of Illinois.” On the occasion , the nationally-renowned Jet Roberts called the shots, which was a treat even for those who’ve danced for decades. “Well I’ve been dancing for over 40 years, and I love the caller,” square dancer Cynthia Suchy said. “He’s fantastic. His voice is great. He’s exciting.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘A very emotional day’: Arcola pays tribute as lost sailor finally laid to rest: Charles D. Brown enlisted in the Navy in 1938. He was just 19 years years old when he started working aboard the U.S.S. West Virginia. Brown was among the 2,400 men that were killed during the attacks on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The U.S. Navy was unable to identify him, so he was buried in Hawaii as an unknown. In 2022, a Department of Defense search resulted in a DNA match: Charles Darling Brown of Arcola, Illinois.

* WSIL | Over 140,000 people visit Poplar Bluff during eclipse: The Poplar Bluff Chamber revealed that 145,000 people visited Butler County in four days surrounding the eclipse. The day of the eclipse accounted for 45,900 of those people. The Chamber partnered with a company to use geofencing and cell phone data to come up with these numbers. Poplar Bluff further reported it saw a $9.6 million boost to the economy from the increased tourism.

* WCIA | EIU announces plans to offer direct admission to more high school seniors: More schools in Central Illinois have agreed to allow Eastern Illinois University to guarantee direct admission for its “high-achieving” students after completing six semesters. University officials announced an agreement with the Regional Office of Education District #12 on Monday. ROE #12 includes schools in Clay, Crawford, Jasper, Lawrence, and Richland counties.

*** National ***

* NYT | Justices Appear to Side With City Trying to Regulate Homeless Encampments: The justices appeared split along ideological lines in the case, which has sweeping implications for how the country deals with a growing homelessness crisis. The conservative majority appeared sympathetic to arguments by the city of Grants Pass, Ore., that homelessness is a complicated issue that is best handled by local lawmakers and communities, not judges.

* Politico | Tax breaks to hire local journalists approved in New York, a national first: Lawmakers and independent media companies praised the tax break, which will designate $30 million a year to the program, called the Local Journalism Sustainability Act. “A thriving local news industry is vital to the health of our democracy,” bill sponsor Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal, a Manhattan Democrat, said in a statement. “It’s our responsibility to help ensure New Yorkers have access to independent and community-focused journalism.”

* WaPo | They fled Venezuela — and transformed D.C.’s food delivery scene: For most, food delivery offers far more autonomy over their schedules and pay than other industries. But they acknowledged numerous hurdles — for instance, the lack of access to health insurance, which heightens the financial risks of any accident. Expenses such as “renting” food-delivery accounts and financing mopeds add to their burdens. And while some drivers say that their ability to deliver food quickly has been praised by customers and restaurants, some D.C. residents have publicly expressed frustration at what they say is erratic and unsafe behavior on the mopeds.

* WSJ | States Aim to Combat Private-Equity Healthcare Takeovers: Statehouses across the country are enacting laws to curtail private-equity healthcare acquisitions, part of a political backlash against corporate consolidation in the medical sector. More than a dozen states have passed laws to require corporate buyers such as private-equity firms to notify states of planned healthcare acquisitions. In some cases, these laws let state authorities block deals if they consider them against the public interest.

* WaPo | California wants Big Tech to pay for news. Google is fighting back: Now, Google is taking its resistance a step further, by completely blocking news links for California-based news organizations from showing up in search results for some Californians. Google won’t say how many people it is blocking news for, but called the move a “short-term test” in a blog post announcing it earlier this month. Politicians and news publishers have shot back. “This is a dangerous threat by Google” that is “clearly an abuse of power and demonstrates extraordinary hubris,” said Mike McGuire, a Democratic state senator in California who is sponsoring the bill.

  6 Comments      


A helpful White Sox disaster visualization

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ungood indeed…

Use this as a Major League Baseball open thread.

  36 Comments      


Pritzker addresses ‘hysteria’ over asylum-seekers

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s second Q and A of the day

Q: You’ve said Illinois is a sanctuary state, but counties are passing anti-sanctuary measures. How do you respond?

Pritzker: I don’t think I’ve ever used that language, and you can go back, six years, five and a quarter years in office, and when I ran. But if I have, forgive my, it would be once perhaps.

The truth is that the Trust Act, which is a bill, a law that went into effect before I became governor, signed by the prior governor, is what’s in place in Illinois. And essentially, the idea here is that someone who is living here, who has been undocumented, may have been here for years, getting pulled over because they were speeding, should not be a reason to now pull somebody out of their car, arrest them and send them to ICE, the federal level, and have them deported.

That oftentimes people are living here not just peacefully but productively. And that over time, people have applied for and gotten permanent residency, or citizenship, we should have a system like that - once again, by the way that people can apply for go through a process and it’s not a very good one as it is we need comprehensive immigration reform. But I believe that that’s a law that’s been good for Illinois, the Trust Act.

Now, one other comment that I would make. There’s a lot of hysteria that’s going around about the fact that we have legal asylum seekers, they have papers, they’re here legally in this country while they get a hearing, while they wait for a hearing. And that we’re, you know, trying to provide them, those who don’t have work authorization and we’re trying to get more work authorizations for them because there are jobs available in Illinois for them. But we’re just trying to provide them with some basic humanitarian care. And we’ve done that, I believe.

I’ve seen the hysteria on Facebook and gets promoted sometimes about that. ‘Oh busloads of people are being shipped from Chicago to some other places in Illinois.’ That’s not happening. It hasn’t happened. It’s not going to happen.

We are receiving busloads of people from the state of Texas without any prior notice of their arrival sometimes in the middle of the night. Why do they do that? Because they want to cause chaos. We have managed to rein it in so that it’s not chaos.

And indeed, our goal here is to help people get to their hearings to get determined whether they actually can have legal asylum and stay in the United States or be deported by that hearing. But it’s our job, I believe, to act in a humanitarian fashion. It’s what Illinois, I believe stands for, it’s who we are as Illinoisans. And we will care for them. You know, we believe that comprehensive border security as well as immigration reform will help us manage this in years going forward, but we’re going to do everything we can right now.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  7 Comments      


*** All clear *** Capitol Building evacuation order issued (Updated)

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an email…

IL Capitol Police: This is an evacuation alert for the Capitol Building. Please evacuate the building in a calm manner.

Stay tuned. This is the third incident in recent weeks.

…Adding… A bit more info…


…Adding… All clear…

ILSOS Capitol Police: IL Capitol Police: An all clear has been given for the Capitol Building. Resume normal operations.

  10 Comments      


Illinois Credit Unions: Member Driven Financial Cooperatives

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Feigenholtz predicts Healthcare Protection Act will ‘fly out of the Senate’

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Our old buddy Mark Maxwell questioned the governor today about the Senate prospects for his Healthcare Protection Act, which passed the House with a bipartisan majority last week….

Q: I don’t know that you can get through the Senate without the approval of the Insurance Chair Napoleon Harris. The insurance industry has invested a lot in his political career. In fact, no other industry has given more to his campaigns than insurance has. How do you convince him that he should put your political agenda before that of his and his allies?

Pritzker: Well, let’s be clear, first that Senator Harris fights hard for the people of his district. And we share a lot in common in terms of wanting to lift up, particularly in patients and those who may be suffering.

And I’ve talked to him about this bill. He understands and believes that there are important advances that need to be made. So I’m anticipating, actually his support for this bill. I’m hopeful that the people that are on the committee, or on the committees that will consider this all understand that this is something that is very popular, it’s something that’s very important for the future of health care in the state of Illinois and that it will pass one way or the other.

And I’ve said, I’m not going to give up on this. We’re putting shoulder to the wheel. I don’t think we’re going to have to go into another session in order to get this done.

I actually think there’s great momentum for this. And as we’ve seen, there’s bipartisanship, too, and I’m very pleased about that.

The bill could also be sent to the Senate Executive Committee.

* Sen. Sara Feigenholtz was asked about the Healthcare Protection Act on Paul Lisnek’s WGN show

This is a universal problem of having claims rejected, prior authorization. It’s probably the number one stressor for our doctors and it’s not a productive way for them to spend their time. The bill is gonna fly out of the Senate, I predict.

* If you haven’t yet, I’d highly recommend reading Peter Hancock’s Healthcare Protection Act explainer

Pritzker first outlined the initiative during his State of the State address in February. It targets many of the “utilization management” practices insurance companies use to hold down costs by either denying claims or steering patients toward lower-cost options.

For example, the bill would require health insurers to use “generally accepted standards of care” when deciding whether to cover treatments recommended by a doctor.

It also bans a practice known as step therapy that is used in some prescription drug plans. That, practice, sometimes referred to as “fail first” therapy, requires patients to demonstrate that a lower-cost drug that is part of an insurance company’s preferred drug list is ineffective before the company will approve paying for a different drug prescribed by the patient’s doctor.

It also prohibits insurance companies from requiring prior authorization before covering the cost of in-patient psychiatric treatment. In circumstances where prior authorization is necessary, companies would be required to publicly post it on their websites.

In addition to those restrictions, the bill would require insurance companies to conduct internal audits of their own provider networks every 90 days. Those audits would ensure that the providers listed still participate in the network and that the network has enough providers in various practice areas to meet the needs of patients.

There’s lots more, so go read the rest.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The left’s city hall tactics won’t work in Springfield (Updated x3)

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Just eight of 78 Illinois House Democrats openly sided last week with the once-indomitable Chicago Teachers Union.

The CTU hotly opposed a bill to halt all public school closures and prevent disproportionate budget cuts and changes to admissions criteria at Chicago’s selective-enrollment schools, until a fully elected Chicago school board is seated in 2027. The final roll call was a lopsided 92-8.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, whose popularity has plummeted along with his Statehouse influence, ought to take this as a warning not to follow the CTU’s example. And so should some other Chicago-based organizations.

The floor vote capped increasingly frenetic and bitter attempts to derail the legislation, including the CTU’s legislative director calling the bill “racist” last week, even though it had been amended to change the budget cut language and expand the closure moratorium to all schools — a provision that the teachers union had demanded just last month.

Several House Democratic members said privately they’d received angry and even threatening calls from CTU leaders demanding they abandon their promised support for the bill.

Others said they were upset that the union’s flip-flop was eerily similar to what happened in the Senate last year, when the Democrats bowed to the CTU’s demands and dumped their plan to pass a phased-in elected school board, only to watch the CTU rail against their fully elected school board bill that the union had demanded days before.

I asked Gov. J.B. Pritzker after the vote for his thoughts on the CTU’s labeling the bill as racist.

“That kind of criticism is uncalled for,” he said. “We don’t need that.”

Asked if he thought the tactic had hurt the CTU’s roll call, Pritzker said, “I do. I think that when you take it to that extreme, I think there are people that — you heard some of that discussion on the floor by members — that … some were between offended and outraged by what was said.’’
An in-your-face approach

This was not only a major loss for the CTU, it was also a strike against the increasingly divisive, angry and in-your-face approach that has been prevalent at Chicago’s City Hall, which lefty activists are now trying to bring to Springfield.

Last month, for instance, an organizer for Chicago’s Raise the Floor Alliance laid out a “plan of escalation” in an email that targeted Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, D-Glenview, for her refusal to hold a hearing on a major part of the group’s legislative agenda, “Work Without Fear.”

The plan of escalation started with Gong-Gershowitz being approached by a handful of people the following morning, and then escalated to bringing in more than 100 people to directly confront Gong-Gershowitz after a committee hearing that afternoon.

The organizer also laid out a plan for activists to approach a different legislator “in a significantly friendlier way” to thank her for her support, which seemed to more than just indicate that the action against Gong-Gershowitz was not going to be friendly. The organizer claimed in the email that the bill’s sponsors were on board with the plan, but one aghast sponsor firmly stepped in to stop the group from carrying it out.

Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, sponsored the selective-enrollment bill. She said she didn’t think the strategies used by activists in the City Council could work at the Statehouse but agreed those actions are increasing in Springfield.

“This is a really close-knit body,” Croke said. Unlike the Chicago City Council, she said, “We basically live together for six months, and people really take these relationships seriously.”

Croke also told me that some of her colleagues approached her on behalf of opponents to ask for changes. And when those changes were made, those same members were approached again by the opponents and pushed for even more changes. Croke said some of her colleagues didn’t appreciate the methods.

The chair of the House Progressive Caucus, Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, said during debate that Croke had changed her bill after he requested that the closure moratorium for selective-enrollment schools be expanded to all schools until the board was fully elected, “because that’s what I’ve been fighting for for all these years, that the people who are gonna decide about closing our schools are the people who should be accountable to us, they should be people we voted for.”

Guzzardi continued with a message to Mayor Johnson: “And I feel that way whether the mayor is a person I never met before or is a dear friend of mine who I worked my ass off to get elected, who’s the man sitting in the fifth floor right now.”

Discuss.

…Adding… Stacy Davis Gates told reporters this about the bill

This is insidious. This is ridiculous. This is vapid. And I think we sent out something that says this is gonna have racial disparate impact, which makes it a racist bill.

A Racial Impact Note was requested by the bill’s opponents, but this is what the note actually said

Pursuant to 25 ILCS 83/110-10 the State Board of Education does not believe HB 303 as amended would pose a racial impact as it would not change the existing procedures or operations of any attendance center within the district.

Simply asking for a Racial Impact Note is not the same as getting a note which confirms your contention.

…Adding… Fran Spielman asked Stacy Davis Gates how she proposes to fund the CTU’s long list of union contract demands

Well, you know, that’s an interesting question to pose to a president of a union. That’s a question that we posed to the Governor of Illinois. We have a progressive governor of Illinois who has his sights set on higher office. Wouldn’t it be a wonderful story to tell that he is fully funding the Chicago Public Schools after really a lifetime in Chicago Public Schools always been underfunded?

* Fran then asked how the governor can do that “with all the other budget pressures that he, at the state, is facing?“…

Well, that’s a question for the governor, Fran. That’s not a question for me.

It’s not alone, by any means, but the CTU has historically relied on “magic money” to make its arguments.

If progressives want these great things, then they need to start coming up with do-able revenue sources.

But the question for the CTU’s president is why the union thinks the city’s schools should be fully funded under the evidence-based model before the rest of the state’s schools are.

* Meanwhile, the CTU’s vice president accused the governor of “white-washing”

Yeah, that’ll work.

…Adding… I just noticed that Senate President Don Harmon is now the chief HB303 sponsor in his chamber. Hmm.

  47 Comments      


State’s opioid settlement bureaucracy is a tangled, ineffective mess

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The state is in line to eventually receive $1.3 billion from opioid-related legal settlements

Overall, Illinois has received more than $200 million from the largest national opioid settlement to date, according to the KFF Health News’ tracker. The estimated future payout from that settlement is more than $572 million, according to KFF. Additional smaller settlements will bring in hundreds of millions more over almost two decades.

But, as Olivia Olander reports, the state has thrown together a bureaucratic hodge-podge that has managed to distribute just $5 million since 2022.

* Go read the rest

The process for distributing money from the remediation fund to community organizations is complicated, involving dozens of people and a handful of entities meant to ensure the money is used responsibly. An explanation of the process provided in one advisory board Zoom meeting included two slides, 10 steps and nearly a dozen acronyms.

Strategy ideas initially go through the office of State Opioid Settlement Administrator Wilkerson, then through the board tasked with making recommendations. Those recommendations are taken up by a steering committee led by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, then reviewed by the attorney general’s office. The division of IDHS tasked with substance use strategizes for the plan’s implementation, then forwards it to yet another entity that handles the actual notice of funding opportunity and selection of grantees.

Only at that point would groups doing the actual work to fight the epidemic actually see the money.

All of the money so far has gone to programs previously funded by the state. Werning said organizations like his own that focus on harm reduction — seeking to reduce the physical and societal harms of opioids and keep users alive, as opposed to an abstinence-based approach — should be in line for more funding.

An illustration of the state’s process…

  5 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Jackie Haas…

Today, House Bill 4059, filed by State Representative Jackie Haas (R-Kankakee) passed the House with a unanimous vote of 104-0.

“The passage of House Bill 4059 is the first step in addressing the critical shortage of licensed daycare providers in the state of Illinois,” said Rep. Haas. “This bill ensures the Department of Children and Family Services continues to host at least two licensing orientation programs in each district for individuals interested in becoming daycare providers.”

House Bill 4059 will ensure there is access to programs statewide by requiring the Department of Children and Family Services, or any State agency that assumes daycare licensing responsibilities, to host licensing orientation programs at least twice annually in each representative district in the State.

Rep. Haas continued, “If we want to address the shortage of daycare providers, we need to start by creating pipelines for interested applicants from all corners of Illinois. Addressing this shortage is a bipartisan issue that affects every district in the state, and I look forward to seeing the legislation receive similarly high support when it’s taken up by the Senate.”

* Windy City Times

Thursday night, House Bill 5417, the Connection to HIV Testing and Linkage to Care Act, or the HIV TLC Act, championed by State Representative Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago) passed the Illinois House of Representatives with a bipartisan, unanimous vote of 106-0.
Supported by AIDS Foundation Chicago (AFC) and a coalition of community organizations, HB 5417 contains provisions that mandates insurers and Medicaid cover home test kits for sexually transmitted infections including HIV without cost-sharing, creates eight Rapid Start for HIV Treatment pilot sites, and ensures the availability of HIV/AIDS education in county jails. Justice-involved people incarcerated or in reentry are considered vulnerable to HIV. […]

Increasing access to testing and linkage to care, especially when prioritized among the Black, Latinx and LGBTQ+ communities disproportionately impacted by HIV, moves Illinois closer to zero new HIV transmissions by 2030,” said AFC’s Senior Director of Policy & Advocacy Timothy Jackson. “We thank Rep. Cassidy for her unwavering leadership in getting HB5417 voted out of the House, and we look forward to working with Senator Lakesia Collins on the next steps of the legislative process.” […]

Senator Lakesia Collins (D-Chicago) is the lead sponsor of House Bill 5417 in the Illinois Senate. If House Bill 5417 is passed by the Illinois Senate and signed by Governor Pritzker, Illinois would become only the 2 nd state to mandate insurers cover at-home STI/HIV testing kits without cost-sharing (California).

* Sierra Club…

Today, the Illinois State House passed HB3141, which directs state agencies to develop climate conscious standards for the purchase of building materials for use in state-funded infrastructure projects. The initiative, which is dubbed “Buy Clean,” will establish a maximum acceptable Global Warming Potential (GWP) for purchases on infrastructure projects to encourage investments in companies that use clean processes to produce goods.

“Illinois has led the way on climate and clean energy policy, and we can also show leadership in how we build our infrastructure. ‘Buy Clean’ standards will help us invest in the future of our state while also taking us one step further toward achieving our carbon reduction goals,” said Sierra Club Illinois Director Jack Darin. “Facilities that produce iron, steel, cement, and aluminum are foundational industries in our economy, but are challenging to decarbonize and produce a range of adverse environmental and health impacts. When Illinois buys clean materials, we ensure that taxpayers’ dollars will support Illinois businesses producing these products in ways that reduce pollution and create jobs. We urge the Senate to approve this legislation this Spring.”

“Illinois is a leader on climate action, and setting standards for the building materials we use in state construction projects allows us to utilize our purchasing power to support businesses producing high quality, low carbon products,” said State Representative Diane Blair-Sherlock, the chief sponsor of HB3141. “I’m pleased to work with the Illinois Department of Transportation, Central Management Services, and the Capital Development Board on this plan for setting standards for sustainability in Illinois infrastructure projects.”

* WGEM

It may soon be illegal in Illinois to deny someone a job or promotion due to their family responsibilities.

The Illinois state House of Representatives passed a bill Friday adding family responsibilities to the state’s workplace discrimination law, the Illinois Human Rights Act.

Under current state law, employers can deny someone a job or promotion because they believe someone’s family responsibilities could impact their performance. The bill would make that practice illegal.

Opponents, however, argue it will lead to more lawsuits, hurt business and that the bill is unnecessary because the state already has strong workplace discrimination laws.

* Rep. Bradley Fritts…

Yesterday, House Bill 5011, introduced by State Representative Bradley Fritts (R-Dixon) passed the House floor with a unanimous vote of 108-0.

“I am thrilled with the passage of House Bill 5011,” said Rep. Fritts. “This bipartisan bill, crafted with collaboration from the Comptroller’s office and the Township Officials of Illinois, will help save money for taxpayers in townships by changing the requirements on yearly audits.”

Under current law, every township in Illinois with combined revenues over $850,000 is required to pay for a yearly audit performed by a Certified Personal Accountant. House Bill 5011 will change the requirement to once every four years for townships that generate a revenue of less than $1.4 million per year and every two years for those that generate more than 1.4 million per year.

* American Heart Association

In a bold move to save lives, the Illinois legislature is moving toward passage of a landmark bill. Sponsored by Rep. Laura Faver Dias, HB5394 mandates that schools throughout the state have plans in place to respond to cardiac arrests of students or staff with CPR and AEDs. Such plans are known as cardiac emergency response plans or CERPs. Much like fire drills, these plans allow schools to assume responsibility and facilitate training for cardiac emergencies. In 2022, according to Illinois Heart Rescue, cardiac arrests affected more than 109 people under age 18 in the state. Currently, only about 40% of people who experience an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) get the immediate help that they need before emergency services arrive.

In an emotional testimony during the bill’s hearing, cardiac arrest survivor and school principal Dr. Heather Baker recalled, “I dropped dead on the floor at school as a school administrator at the age of 28. I had zero pre-existing conditions or warning signs and dropped dead mid-sentence in a meeting with several other administrators. I am alive today because my coworkers had been CPR and AED trained one month prior, and they knew how to enact a cardiac emergency response.”

According to Rep. Faver Dias, “This legislation will save lives. A coordinated plan to provide CPR to those in cardiac arrest in our schools ensures that our kids and educators are safe while they focus on learning. We’ve worked closely with school principals, cardiac arrest survivors, physicians and public health advocates to make this happen and this is a win for all our communities.”

Part of a wave of similar legislation throughout the Midwest, this latest vote is a movement towards greater education and awareness about the need for CPR training. From Michigan to Kentucky, Kansas and Illinois, the Association is proud to work directly with schools, advocates and legislators to safeguard young people and educators.

According to American Heart Association Senior Regional Lead for Government Relations, Lauren Peters, “We’re excited for this bill to move on to the Senate and then be signed by the Governor. With the passage of HB5394, more than 20% of our state population that walks through the doors of thousands of schools each day – including students, teachers, administrators and support staff – will be equipped to act in a cardiac emergency. They’ll also have the knowledge that if they ever find themselves in need of help, no matter where they turn, they’re in good hands.”

* Center Square

In the latest push for health insurance reform, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is taking aim at what he calls “predatory health insurance practices” with his Healthcare Protection Act.

Among other things, the legislation would ban step therapy, the tactic insurers use to require people to receive less effective drug treatments before moving to options initially prescribed by doctors. It also includes new requirements for insurers to offer enough in-network doctors to meet patients’ needs. […]

Pritzker plans to tour the state this week to publicize the legislation.

Additionally, the measure mandates that all insurance companies regulated by the state of Illinois disclose treatments requiring prior authorization, facilitating consumers’ ability to compare plans when seeking coverage. Short Term Limited Duration insurance plans, often called “junk insurance,” will also be barred.

* WSPY

The Illinois House of Representatives unanimously passed legislation on Tuesday that would have Illinois recognize June 27th as National PTSD Awareness Day. House Bill 4928 is sponsored by State Rep. Harry Benton of the 97th district in Plainfield.

Benton says that people across the state suffer from PTSD, or post traumatic stress disorder, and his bill aims to promote better recognition of the effects that it can have on individuals. Benton says that it is also important to recognize those who provide assistance to PTSD patients, including friends, family and other caretakers.

Millions of Americans suffer from PTSD, which can affect individuals who were a part of or near a traumatic event. Many PTSD cases involve veterans, assault victims and first responders.

After passing the House, the bill now heads to the Senate.

* Rep. Brandun Schweizer…

State Representative Brandun Schweizer (R-Danville) passed his first bill out of the Illinois House of Representatives Friday afternoon.

HB 3504 was filed to prevent a problem between State insurance and Carle Clinic in the sponsor’s district. System members went to the hospital and were unaware that they were no longer covered in network. The bill provides that at least 60 days prior to the effective date of any changes to the coverage or benefit recipient cost share for TRS benefit recipients, the Department of Central Management Services shall post those changes on its website. The representative believes the transparency afforded by this bill is necessary for members.

The bill passed unanimously on a vote of 106-0 and will now head to the Senate for their consideration.

  8 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Johnson sticking with CTA president for now as Gov. Pritzker calls for new leadership. Block Club

    - Pritzker, speaking at a Thursday news conference, stopped short of saying he thinks CTA President Dorval Carter should be fired — instead saying there should be “new leadership” at the transit agency.
    - “It’s my job to determine the leadership of the CTA, that is my job,” Johnson said when asked about Prizker’s comments. “If people want to be mayor, they should run for it.”
    - The governor appoints three members to the CTA’s seven-member board, while the mayor appoints four.

* Related stories…

* Democrats for the Illinois House…

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch was unanimously recommended to serve as the new Proviso Township Committeeman in a meeting held this evening of the Executive Committee, replacing the late Karen Yarbrough.

With the support of every local mayor, labor leaders from throughout the state, and active Democrats throughout the township, the Proviso Township Democratic Organization (PTDO) recommended to the Cook County Democratic Party that Speaker Welch be named Proviso Township Committeeman. Their recommendation is expected to be ratified by the full Cook County Democratic Party on Monday.

“Karen Yarbrough was a trailblazer for our region who worked hard each and every day to grow our party and ensured that local residents knew that our party stood up for working people,” said Welch. “It is an honor to follow in her footsteps and to have received such unanimous support from my friends and neighbors.”

Welch was born and raised in Proviso Township where his deep roots have motivated his work in the community for over 20 years. Before being elected State Representative, Welch served on the Proviso Township High School Board after graduating from Proviso West, where he played baseball. He and his wife are raising their two children in the community.

PTDO President Clarence Thomas, who stepped in initially to fill the role of Committeeman, understood that Welch could carry on the legacy of Karen Yarbrough, while also bringing new ideas to the party and engaging new members.

“We were saddened by the loss of our dear friend Karen,” said Thomas. We were so close, and Karen left huge shoes to fill. The entire organization believes that Speaker Welch is best able to serve as Committeeman and continue making Proviso Township a strong, united organization.”

Cook County Board Chair Toni Preckwinkle congratulated the Speaker and PTDO on what could be a game-changing appointment.

“Speaker Welch and I have a longstanding working relationship,” said Preckwinkle. “He has always been a trusted friend and staunch advocate. We both fight passionately and fervently for our party and our people. I am proud to have him join Cook County Democrats. I look forward to working with the Speaker and the party in supporting Proviso, electing more Democrats, and supporting a successful campaign for Biden Harris 2024.”

Governor Pritzker is touring the state this week to amplify the Healthcare Protection Act. The governor will give remarks at Belleville Memorial Hospital today at 10 am. Click here to watch.

*** My top picks ***

* SJ-R | ‘One of the nicest people I ever met.’ Longtime Springfield photojournalist dies at 78: Milner, a longtime presence around the State Capitol Building and Springfield with his camera, died April 17 after a recurrence of pancreatic cancer. He was 78. A memorial service is set for Butler Funeral Home, 900 S. Sixth St., from 4 to 7 p.m. April 23. […] James Milner said he and his father were bowled over by the support at the capitol and at another open house several weeks ago.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton Village Hall hit with federal subpoenas amid ongoing probe into Mayor Tiffany Henyard: A spokesperson for the FBI confirmed in a written statement that agents were “conducting court-authorized law enforcement activity” in Dolton on Friday, but declined to comment on the nature of any investigation pursuant to Department of Justice policy. One of the sources said the investigation into Henyard is still in its early stages, and no charges are imminent.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Groups battling opioid crisis express frustration over state’s speed in distributing millions of dollars from legal settlements: The payouts stem from multistate agreements with major drug distributors, manufacturers and household names such as CVS, Walgreens, and Johnson and Johnson. Payments started in 2022 and will continue well into the next decade, and offer the potential for a significant investment in harm reduction and treatment efforts. Nationwide, more than $50 billion is expected from the settlements, according to KFF Health News, which tracks the money. But so far, the flow of settlement money to organizations in Illinois has remained barely a trickle. A complex bureaucratic process for distributing the funds has put only a tiny fraction of the money into the hands of organizations dealing with the crisis.

* Daily Herald | ‘Proactive’ measure or ‘government overreach’? Lawmakers weigh ban on corporal punishment in private schools; most already prohibit it: State Rep. Margaret Croke, a Chicago Democrat, drafted the legislation after seeing an uptick of public schools in neighboring states such as Missouri reinstituting the practice. “I haven’t found recent instances here, but I don’t feel bad about being proactive,” Croke said. “We saw recently New York decided to take similar action.”

* Rockford Register Star | Illinois election authority wants voters’ personal information removed from media websites: The State Board of Elections said it did not provide data to the media group for the stories. […] Through communications with a representative of the media group, the board of elections believes the company combined 2016 and 2020 data sets for its voter stories. It used a copy of the 2016 voter file to obtain the birthdates and many of the street addresses it has published.

* Sun-Times | Ballot bypass? Illinois sees lowest presidential primary voter turnout in decades: Chicago may have avoided surpassing 2012’s bleak low-turnout record of 24.6%, eking out a final turnout of 25.8%. But statewide, just 1,518,856 of the 7,965,287 registered voters in Illinois cast ballots in the March 19 primary. That resulted in a statewide voter turnout of 19.07%, the Illinois State Board of Elections said Friday in releasing its certified election results.

* Sun-Times | Illinois House Speaker Emanuel Welch travels to Washington on fundraising trip: On Monday afternoon, Welch raises money for his People for Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch committee, with the ask ranging from $1,000 for a ticket to $68,500, the contribution limit, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections, for a political action committee per election cycle. The event, at the Washington Hilton, is timed to coincide with the North America’s Building Trades Unions 2024 legislative conference and is taking place at the same hotel. Illinois state Treasurer Mike Frerichs is scheduled to speak to the conference Tuesday.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago police mourning Officer Luis Huesca as search for Gage Park shooting suspect continues: Officer Huesca was two days shy of his 31st birthday when he was shot and killed early Sunday morning as he was arriving home from his shift, according to CPD. […] “He was a great officer,” CPD Supt. Larry Snelling said. “A great human being. And his family is dealing with a lot right now.”Mayor Brandon Johnson released a statement saying in part, “I met with Officer Huesca’s mother and uncle this morning and assured them that they have the full support of my administration as they deal with this unspeakable loss. Our city is grieving, and our condolences go out to their entire family as well as Luis’ fellow officers and community.”

* Tribune | Chicago to have one unified system for homeless and migrants, city and state officials say: The “One System Initiative” will shift a “permanent shelter management to the non-profit workforce,” Illinois Department of Human Services spokesperson Daisy Contreras said in a statement. Currently, the city contracts with Favorite Healthcare Staffing, whose sizable overtime has contributed to tens of millions of dollars in city payments to the firm staffing the city’s migrant shelters. The state’s office to prevent and end homelessness will lead the initiative with more than 25 community-based agencies participating, Contreras said. Planning sessions are set to begin at the end of April and go through the spring.

* Tribune | Johnson safety plan slow out of the gate, but mayor vows ‘root causes’ approach will work: A year after he took office, however, Johnson’s plan is still in its early stages, and crime remains a stubborn scourge across the city. And his move away from investing more in policing to address the problem has further enflamed opponents who have long distrusted his approach. In the West Side field house, the reality of Chicago’s violent streets was reflected in participants’ grim tone as they set about brainstorming how to make the mayor’s plans reality.

* Block Club | After Demands For Accountability, CHA Boss Agrees To Testify Before City Council Committee : Alderpeople called on CHA leaders to answer questions after an investigation by Block Club Chicago and the Illinois Answers Project found the agency was sitting on hundreds of empty and deteriorating homes.

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker says protests will be permitted, but safety will be maintained at DNC: In an interview with Dana Bash on CNN Sunday morning, Pritzker stressed that groups gathering in Chicago this August will be allowed some protests – to a point. “Look, we believe in free speech, and we’re going allow people to protest, and, you know, say whatever it is they want to say,” Pritzker said. “But the reality is we’re also going to make sure that people have ingress and egress and that they’re safe in our state.”

*** Downstate/Suburbs ***

* WTTW | Judge Tosses Large Portions of Evanston Residents’ Lawsuit Over Northwestern’s Ryan Field Deal: Judge Pamela McLean Meyerson on Friday agreed to dismiss three of four counts brought by a group of 13 residents who live near the stadium and who had asked the court to invalidate Evanston City Council’s 5-4 vote to change the city’s zoning law, allowing the renovated facility to host as many as six concerts per year. “I will note, as I said upfront, this case is not over,” Meyerson said after delivering her ruling, “that count one, the constitutional claim, remains pending.”

* Tribune | Wind and solar in limbo: Long waitlists to get on the grid are a ‘leading barrier’: Both projects have been approved by the Lee County Board. But neither can be built, according to a county official, due to PJM Interconnection, a powerful but little-known entity that controls access to the high-voltage electric grid in northern Illinois. “There isn’t anything we can do to help the state move forward (with its clean energy goals),” said Lee County Zoning Administrator Alice Henkel. “This is all PJM. They have the control.”

* NBC News | In Superman’s ‘hometown,’ a pastor vows to fight Satan’s influence at the local library: The dispute has pitted the city’s mayor, a member of Eastland Life Church, against his own library board of trustees. It led to the abrupt dismissal of the library director, who accused the board of punishing her for her faith. And last month, it drew scrutiny from the state’s Democratic secretary of state, who said the events in Metropolis “should frighten and insult all Americans who believe in the freedom of speech and in our democracy.”

* Daily Herald | Kane County GOP elects chair to second two-year term: Andro Lerario has been reelected for another two-year term as chair of the Kane County Republican Party. Precinct committee persons reelected Lerario, who ran without opposition, at the Kane GOP convention Wednesday in St. Charles.

* Shaw Local | How hops grown by McHenry County College students became beers at Woodstock brewery: For the first time last year, McHenry County College students learned how to grow hops and saw their harvest used to brew two beers now sold for a limited time at a Woodstock brewery. An MCC graphic arts student also designed the beer label. The two varieties of beer brewed and sold at Holzlager Brewing Co. made from MCC’s hops are the MCC Wet-Hopped American Light Lager and a dry-hopped beer, Agrarian American Pale Ale. The taste is a refreshing brew, featuring a blend of earthy and citrus notes, and both “are very well received,” said Travis Slepcevich, owner of Holzlager Brewing Co.

*** Sports ***

* Sun-Times | Sky operating chairman/co-owner Nadia Rawlinson confident in team’s direction: ‘This is our era’: The Sky are without a franchise star after trading Kahleah Copper to the Mercury at her request this offseason. What they do have, however, is a blank slate with two newly drafted twin-tower powerhouses in Kamilla Cardoso and Angel Reese and a coach in Teresa Weatherspoon who seems to exemplify Chicago.

* Tribune | Bill Tobin, longtime Chicago Bears personnel man who played a major role in building the Super Bowl XX champions, dies at 83: Tobin, who was the Chicago Bears vice president of player personnel from 1986-92 after joining the organization in 1975, died Thursday, the Cincinnati Bengals announced. He was 83. “Bill was relentless in pursuing a single goal: making the Bears better,” Chairman George McCaskey told the team’s website Friday. “He had a keen eye for talent and he passionately advocated for players he believed in. He helped build the greatest team in NFL history — the ’85 Bears — and for that we are forever grateful.”

  19 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comment      


Capitol Complex bomb threat “not deemed credible” after lockdown, sweep

Sunday, Apr 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sent earlier…

* Just in from the SoS…

Earlier today, the Illinois Secretary of State police responded to an Illinois State Police call of a bomb threat outside the Capitol in Springfield. A lockdown of the Capitol complex was initiated and a sweep was conducted for explosive devices. The threat was ultimately not deemed credible and the Capitol was reopened at 1:59 pm. We will provide more information as it becomes available.

  2 Comments      


PREVIOUS POSTS »
* *** UPDATED x1 - Equality Illinois 'alarmed' over possible Harris appointment *** Personal PAC warns Democratic committeepersons about Sen. Napoleon Harris
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
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* Pritzker addresses 'hysteria' over asylum-seekers
* *** All clear *** Capitol Building evacuation order issued (Updated)
* Illinois Credit Unions: Member Driven Financial Cooperatives
* Feigenholtz predicts Healthcare Protection Act will 'fly out of the Senate'
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
* The left's city hall tactics won't work in Springfield (Updated x3)
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* It’s just a bill
* Open thread
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