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She’s out now

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The big hush-hush story of last fall was that right-wing, anti gay rights Republican Alan Keyes had a lesbian daughter.

It was hush-hush because she wasn’t totally “out.” No longer. From the Equality Maryland website

Valentine’s Day Rally in Annapolis

Featuring Maya Marcel-Keyes, daughter of Alan Keyes and a self-described young queer anarchist who grew up in Darnestown, MD. Maya is speaking publicly for the first time about LGBT issues. Don’t miss this important rally at 5 p.m. in front of the state house on February 14, also featuring Judy Shepard and other community leaders.

  4 Comments      


They’re just so darned cute

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

My Carbondale nieces, Rosalee and Isabel, got to meet Barack Obama today. Their proud father, Devin, sent some photos this afternoon.


(Photos by Roger Darrigrand / Miller Newspapers)

All my nieces are unbelievably cute, by the way. I don’t play favorites. But these pics are politically related, so I’m posting them.

UPDATE: A photo of Rosalee and Isabel made it into the Marion Daily Republican’s story about Obama’s visit.

  Comments Off      


Ouch

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The chairman of Rockford’s airport authority apparently doesn’t mince words.

The governor didn’t mention that city’s airport in his State of the State address yesterday, instead throwing his support behind building a third airport in the south suburbs. Rockford’s airport is growing, but is still a backwater enterprise.

“It’s hard for me to believe that any governor could be less informed about the potential of the Rockford airport than George Ryan. However, here comes Rod Blagojevich,” said Mike Dunn, airport authority board chairman.

“I would recommend to the governor that he spend less time on political patronage with Jesse Jackson, senior and junior, and concern himself more with the population growth in the northwest suburbs along the Interstate 90 and 88 corridors,” Dunn said.

Harsh.

Mayor Doug Scott, a former state Rep. and a friend of the governor’s, was more diplomatic (although it wouldn’t be hard to be more diplomatic than Dunn).

“I think there are things the state will do with our airport, and the fact that it didn’t merit a mention in the State of the State speech doesn’t mean they’re not going to work with us,” Scott said.

  2 Comments      


They want ideas

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

I hope they didn’t pay some politically connected advertising “expert” too much for this slogan:

Governor Rod Blagojevich, Illinois State Fair Manager Amy Bliefnick and Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Chuck Hartke today announced the theme for the 2005 Illinois State Fair and Twilight Parade — “All Roads Lead to the 2005 Illinois State Fair.” […]

In her first year as State Fair Manager, Bliefnick is asking visitors what they want to see at the Illinois State Fair. Illinois residents are asked to e-mail their suggestions to statefair@agr.state.il.us.

Get to it.

  1 Comment      


Friday Topinka blogging

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

This surreal photo was snapped at a conference in Bloomington. It’s been hanging on Kurt Erickson’s Statehouse office wall for a while, and I thought it would be perfect for our weekly ritual.

Many thanks to Erickson, the Pantagraph’s Statehouse bureau chief, and to Daily Herald state government editor John Patterson for scanning the pic and e-mailing it to me.

She kinda looks like the Wizard of Oz. “I’ll grant your wishes. But first, bring me the broom of the Wicked Witch of the West!”

  7 Comments      


Yeah, but wait until they hear his lame jokes

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

If you can’t pass a bill in Illinois, maybe Vermont will cooperate (from a press release).

Governor Rod Blagojevich today sent letters to Vermont House Speaker Gaye Symington and Governor Jim Douglas urging them to pass and sign legislation that would authorize Vermont to join the I-SaveRx prescription drug program. […]

Vermont’s Senate Finance Committee introduced Vermont’s legislation after the Food and Drug Administration turned down a request for the state to set up a pilot program to allow the import of prescription drugs from countries like Canada.

  2 Comments      


The QC’s Hatfields and McCoys

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Did Mike Jacobs try to end the feud between his family and Rep. Mike Boland (D-East Moline)? (Thanks to a commenter for the tip):

Mike Jacobs said he hopes to bury the political hatchet with Rep. Boland.

“I left 32 messages with him and he never called me back. Finally, I sought him out at an event and told him that I didn’t want this feud to continue. He listened to what I had to say. I can’t think of any reason he would want to have a feud with me,” Mr. Jacobs said.

Um, I can. Mike ran an opponent against Boland in the primary last year, and the guy has already announced that he’s running again. Boland’s reluctance to talk might be understandable. But this feud has been going on for almost 20 years. Maybe they should both get over it.

Jacobs will be appointed soon to replace his father, newly retired state Sen. Denny Jacobs.

  14 Comments      


Say one thing…

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Buried way down in the Tribune’s State of the State story today was this tasty little tidbit (emphasis added):

Perhaps one reason for a change of heart is the lack of legislative success that followed last year’s education focus, where he held up a sheaf of 2,800 pages he said represented the state’s burdensome school regulations. The legislature gave him only modest powers to reshape that bureaucracy.

Six months after he gained control of the [State Board of Education], not a page of regulations has been removed, and the staff he ridiculed has been trimmed by only three people, to 492 from 495.

He complained so loudly about the board’s overstuffed staff, but he’s only managed to reduce the headcount by three? I wonder if gross payroll has risen, since many of his new hires were political hacks brought in at high salaries.

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Southern story outlines DNR problems

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Les Winkler at the Southern apparently never got the directive to go easy on the Blagojevich administration. Winkler, the paper’s outdoors writer, continues to complain about the governor’s cuts to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources budget.

Winkler snagged an internal DNR memo with some explosive content.

The memo, written by Mike Conlin, Director of Resource Conservation and Wildlife at the request of IDNR Director Joel Brunsvold, addressed the critical issues and concerns for Fiscal Year 2006.

“The effects of these cutbacks will impact all (Office of Resource Conservation) programs statewide,” Conlin wrote. “The office has attempted to balance the previous reductions as much as possible to minimize the impact.

“However, the quality, timeliness and diversity of services to the public will undoubtedly suffer from additional cuts of this proportion.”

Winkler constrasts this memo to public statements by DNR spokesman Joe Bauer back in December:

“We picked positions that we thought we would best be able to absorb with other IDNR personnel… That means we would be able to carry on the duties of those laid off with other people picking up the slack, in their respective departments.”

But Winkler goes on to quote from the memo about the problems facing the department.

The memo said staff and budget reductions would affect a wide range of services including: Reduction in fish production; deer and wild turkey harvest reporting; chronic wasting disease surveillance; natural area stewardship (including eradication of invasive species); and monitoring, management and recovery of threatened and endangered species.

“The recent layoffs and proposed budget cuts seriously jeopardize ORC’s and DNR’s ability to administer and implement critical programs such as CREP (Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program); Illinois Rivers 20/20 and Farm Bill programs,” the memo stated.

And it gets worse:

“Staff levels are so low that we are being forced to think about giving up programs that bring in hundreds of thousands of federal dollars simply because we no longer have the staff to administer the program nor enough staff to implement the program,” the memo said.

  4 Comments      


Not enough

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Illinois Academy of Family Physicians is not happy (from a press release):

The states went to war against the tobacco industry with a lawsuit, suing the manufacturers for knowingly deceiving the public about the harm of tobacco use and hooking people on a product that caused the premature and painful death of millions. In 1998, the $209 billion tobacco Master Settlement Agreement was signed between 46 states and the U.S. tobacco industry. […]

In fiscal year 2001, Illinois tobacco control programs shared a $46 million allocation which built the tobacco control foundation in communities in every part of the state, even though we were still $23 million below the CDC’s minimum funding recommendation. And then the cuts began; year after year, more money was chopped from the tobacco fund. Jobs were lost, programs ended and the foundation crumbled. This year, our state tries to battle the tobacco industry’s $535 million Illinois advertising budget with a paltry $11 million, less than one-fifth of the CDC’s bottom line number that would allow us to make progress. Illinois uses patchwork, band-aid attempts to battle the world’s biggest and richest killer. […]

The Master Settlement Agreement is a dedicated funding stream for tobacco education, prevention and cessation initiatives. Even in difficult times of budget deficits, Illinois and other states have a moral obligation, especially to our children, to use a reasonable portion of this money for this purpose.

  Comments Off      


More SOTS

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

If you missed the State of the State address, you can watch the streaming video or read a transcript here. Thanks to a commenter for reminding me about this.

  4 Comments      


React

Friday, Feb 4, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Media reaction was decidedly mixed to the governor’s State of the State address.

For months, the Southern Illinoisan has beat up the governor for ignoring its forgotten part of the state, but the paper completely changed its tune after the governor spent a couple of days touring the area.


THUMBS UP
… to Gov. Rod Blagojevich for including in his State of the State address on Thursday remarks about his “great visit” to Southern Illinois a few weeks ago. In the address, the governor spoke fondly of the visit and meeting with community leaders who have developed “a shared regional vision for the growth of their economy.” Come back soon, governor.

It’s all I can do to resist calling the Southern’s staff a bunch of hayseeds for allowing themselves to be wowed by a single visit by Dear Leader. I definitely have to give credit to the guv for turning that paper around, though. Whatever he did, he needs to keep doing it.

“Legislators say Blagojevich all talk, little action,” is the headline in the Morris Daily Herald.

The best lede of the day was in the Sun-Times:

Gov. Blagojevich on Thursday outlined a modest vision for the spring legislative season in a State of the State address that lacked demons as much as detail.

Nice turn of a phrase.

The Daily Herald headlined their story, “Legislators left looking for details.”

The State Journal-Register’s story was headlined, “Low-key, low-cost plans; Blagojevich takes a more modest tone this year.” Its editorial was more skeptical:

It always is difficult to critique State of the State speeches. It’s kind of like trying to judge a car by the quality of its wax job. We won’t start to see what’s really under Blagojevich’s hood until Feb. 16, when the governor delivers his annual budget address, where he will need to start matching dollars to his State of the State vision.

The Bloomington Pantagraph’s headline was, “Governor sticks to positives,” but the subhed was, “Lawmakers: Address short on key details.” The paper also ran a positive editorial:

Did we hear a new Gov. Rod Blagojevich Thursday? A governor more willing to be cooperative? A governor who singles out others for praise? A governor who is more punctual and more to the point?

If so, the state of the state could indeed be growing stronger.

  2 Comments      


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