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Prof fights back with spreadsheet

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

This is what happens when you mess with people who have advanced degrees:

A former Southern Illinois University finance professor has created a tool to help State University Retirement Systems participants see what impact the governor’s proposed pension reforms would have on their retirement pay.

Andrew Szakmary, who is vested in SURS and now teaches at the University of Richmond in Virginia, said he developed the spreadsheet because he was very upset by Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s proposals, particular those that apply to university employees.

“I want to ensure that his proposals become transparent so that SURS members understand how they will be affected,” he said.

Szakmary estimated that his own retirement benefits would be reduced by 17 percent if the governor’s proposal to change the way interest is credited to members’ accounts under the money purchase formula is enacted.

The money purchase option is a pension calculation formula that SURS members may select upon retirement if it provides a better annuity than the regular formula. That is typically the case for about 60 percent of the system’s participants.

The calculator is here.

And a quick note to the News-Gazette’s webmaster: What’s with the lack of spaces between paragraphs? Your paper is difficult to read online.

One more thing while I’m at it. Why isn’t Katie Clements’ column online?

  10 Comments      


Clergy Call on Senate to Pass HB 1100

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

(The following is a paid advertisement):

Yesterday at the Chicago Temple, Bishop Timothy Lyne led a multifaith group of Chicago area clergy to call on the Illinois Senate to pass the Monsignor John Egan Payday Loan Reform Act, HB 1100.

Supporters include:

Father Pfleger, St. Sabina Catholic Church; Bishop Timothy Lyne; Rev. Walter Turner, President of the Baptist Ministers Conference; Lewis Flowers, Austin Community WOC Ministers; Jennifer Kottler, Protestants for the Common Good; Bishop Charles Davis, Indiana Avenue Pentecostal COG; Rev. Joseph Henry, Omega Missionary Baptist Church; Rev. Hillard Hudson, Pilgrim Baptist Church of South Chicago; Rev. Tyrone Crider, Mount Calvary Baptist Church; Rev. Leonard Deville, Alpha Temple; Rev. James Demus, III; Rev. Stanley Watkins; Rev. Sylvia Franklin, Apostolic Faith Church; Rev. Steven Thurston II, New Covenant Missionary Baptist Church Senator Kimberly Lightford; Senator Jackie Collins; Senator Kwame Raoul; Senator James Meeks; Representative. Marlow Colvin; Commissioner Bobbie Steele; Alderman Toni Preckwinkle; Rebirth of Englewood; Citizens for a Better Westside; Lawndale Neighborhood Organization; Ada S. McKinley Community Services, Inc.; Healthcare Consortium of Illinois; Oak Park NAACP; Southside NAACP; Chicago Westside NAACP; Women’s Business Development; Firman Community Services; Rainbow/PUSH; Project IRENE; Women’s Business Development.

  Comments Off      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Christine Cegelis, who ran a strong but unsuccessful campaign against Henry Hyde last time around, posted a diary yesterday at Daily Kos which talked about Hyde’s retirement announcement.

Frankly, I don’t think she has a very good chance now that Hyde is gone, but I’m curious what you think. So, the question today is, can Cegelis win her second time around?

One sidenote: Cegelis must have been caught flat-footed by the announcement (even though we had all heard it would be coming in mid-April) because her website is down for remodeling. Oops.

  31 Comments      


Georgia blogger tries to influence Illinois legislature

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Georgia blogger Straight up With Sherri has posted the e-mail addresses of every member of the Illinois Senate’s Health & Human Services Committee and urged her readers to lobby against a bill that would limit ultrasound tests to doctors and healthcare specialists acting under doctors’ orders.

Pro-life crisis pregnancy centers often use the ultrasound scans to talk women out of having abortions, and the bill, HB 2493, passed the House before the pro-life lobbyists figured out what was going on. I’ve already reported on this bill in the Capitol Fax.

So, if you’re one of those legislators and you all of a sudden start receiving e-mails from Georgia, you now know why.

Straight up With Sherri wasn’t done with her Illinois project, however. She caught Rep. Ron Stephens’ appearance on Scarborough Country this week to discuss the governor’s emergency order on pharmacies and morning after pills.

The Georgian was so impressed that she has asked her readers to e-mail the governor in support of Stephens’ efforts to block the guv’s emergency order.

UPDATE: Prompted by a commenter, I visited the FDA’s website:

It’s risky business taking pictures of unborn babies when there’s no medical need to do so. That’s the word from the Food and Drug Administration, which is concerned about companies trying to turn an important medical procedure into a prenatal portrait tool. […]

As compelling as these sneak previews may be, the FDA is warning women about the potential hazards of getting keepsake videos. The agency also is warning companies against creating them for entertainment purposes. While ultrasound has been around for many years, expectant women and their families need to know that the long-term effects of repeated ultrasound exposures on the fetus are not fully known. In light of all that remains unknown, having a prenatal ultrasound for non-medical reasons is not a good idea. […]

Ultrasonic fetal scanning, from a medical standpoint, generally is considered safe if properly used when information is needed about a pregnancy. Still, ultrasound is a form of energy, and even at low levels, laboratory studies have shown it can produce physical effects in tissue, such as jarring vibrations and a rise in temperature. Although there is no evidence that these physical effects can harm a fetus, the FDA says the fact that these effects exist means that prenatal ultrasounds can’t be considered completely innocuous.

  7 Comments      


AP to start charging for Internet posts

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Hopefully, this won’t deter outlets like CBS-2 Chicago from posting the Associated Press’ Illinois stories online as they come over the wires.

The Associated Press will begin charging newspapers and broadcasters to post its stories, photos and other content online, a pricing shift that reflects the growing power of the Internet to lure audiences and advertisers from more established media.

Tom Curley, AP president and CEO, announced the change Monday at the annual meeting of the 156-year-old news cooperative.

Most of the 15,000 news outlets that buy AP’s news, sports, business and entertainment coverage have been allowed to “re-purpose'’ the same material online at no extra cost since 1995. At that time, graphical Web browsers were just beginning to transform the Internet from an esoteric computer network to a mass medium.

The new pricing policy, effective Jan. 1, begins to shift some of the funding of AP to the growing online market, as technological advances and digital devices are making it ever easier for people to get their news whenever and however they want it.

Note to CBS-2: If you can’t afford to pay the new rates, charge for the service. I know I’d pay it.

  1 Comment      


Labor trouble

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Senate President Emil Jones isn’t the only Illinois Democrat having trouble with labor unions.

The Chicago Federation of Labor’s dynamic president Dennis Gannon unloaded on Mayor Daley yesterday.

Chicago’s most powerful labor leader on Monday issued a thinly veiled warning to Mayor Daley: End the two-year-long negotiating stalemate with unions representing 20,000 city employees or risk the embarrassment that comes with labor unrest when Chicago plays host to the U.S. Conference of Mayors in June.

Chicago Federation of Labor President Dennis Gannon turned up the heat even as he acknowledged that, after 64 bargaining sessions over 24 months, negotiators are finally making progress on work-rule changes and furlough days that Daley says he needs to save $20 million a year.

“If this was normal negotiations on the outside, we would have had this shut down [with a strike or job action]. We cut the city a lot of slack,” Gannon said during a news conference called to announce support from 20 community, business and religious groups.

“It’s not too long down the road here when we’re going to have the Conference of U.S. Mayors in the city of Chicago. I don’t think we want to see anything happen with that. . . . That’s not necessarily a threat [but] it’s something that’s in the back of everybody’s mind on our side. . . . The threat of a strike is a tool. Do we in the labor movement want to use that tool right now with the city? No. But, we want to put this contract to bed. Enough is enough.”

Gannon is an activist president who hasn’t hesitated to plunge in to controversial issues. He’s been arrested at more demonstrations than probably all of his predecessors combined. I don’t always agree with him, but I have a huge amount of respect for him, and if Daley doesn’t settle this contract he will undoubtedly have trouble at the mayors conference.

  10 Comments      


No George?

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Here’s the list of the attendees for today’s dedication of the Lincoln Presidential Museum, provided by the governor’s office. I had heard that George Ryan would be there today, but he ain’t on the list.

Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich and First Lady Patti Blagojevich
President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush
U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D- Illinois), Senate Minority Whip
U.S. Senator Barack Obama (D – Illinois)
U.S. Rep J. Dennis Hastert (R- Illinois), Speaker of the House
U.S. Rep John Shimkus (R – Illinois)
U.S. Rep Ray LaHood (R – Illinois)
Lt. Gov Pat Quinn
Secretary of State Jesse White
Treasurer Judy Barr Topinka
Comptroller Dan Hynes
Senate President Emil Jones (D – Chicago)
Speaker Michael Madigan (D – Chicago)
Senate Minority Leader Frank Watson (R – Greenville)
House Republican Leader Tom Cross (R – Plainfield)
Former Gov. Jim Edgar
Mayor Tim Davlin, City of Springfield
Julie Cellini, chairman, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Foundation
Richard Norton Smith, executive director, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Foundation
Brian Lamb, C-SPAN
Mihan Lee, winner of C-SPAN and Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum essay contest
Rev. Gordon McLean, First Presbyterian Church, Lincoln

That’s too bad about Ryan because even though he tried to pack the place with hacks, the museum and library wouldn’t have existed without his efforts.

Also, notice that they spelled Treasurer Topinka’s maiden name incorrectly. It’s Baar, not Barr.

UPDATE: I received this funny e-mail a few minutes ago.

On the security walk-through yesterday they gave us the seating
assignments for the stage and Speaker Madigan’s name was spelled “Madigin”. I don’t think Mapes found the humor in it.

  17 Comments      


Community WiFi

Tuesday, Apr 19, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

I’m going to be writing more on this topic in the future, but for now, here are several reports that deal with arguments in favor of municipally owned WiFi networks. You can read up if you want and debate it here.

So far, only one proposal has surfaced to ban municipalities from starting their own networks. Sen. Steve Rauschenberger says locals shouldn’t be trusted with the projects.

  4 Comments      


Hyde to retire

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

This was posted on Henry Hyde’s site today:

I have decided not to run for re-election to Congress in 2006. Despite this difficult decision, I still have a job to do through 2006, including a lot of important work to accomplish as Chairman of the House International Relations Committee. The committee’s upcoming schedule includes hearings and legislation about the UN Oil for Food scandal, Arms Export Laws and U.S. public diplomacy efforts abroad, and more. The fiscal 2006 budget process also is in full swing, which means there is a lot of work to do.

At the end of this term, I will have served 32 years in office as representative of the Sixth Congressional District of Illinois. I want to thank the people in my district for their support over the years. I am grateful for the many friends who have supported me since the beginning of my career and the many who have joined with me over the years.

  12 Comments      


Is there a difference?

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Some Chicago journos are upset with Time Magazine for crowning King Daley as one of the best mayors in the country.

Rightfully so. Here are the three mayors whom Time considers the worst. Recognize any similarities to Chicago and/or Illinois?

Dick Murphy / San Diego
When he was elected mayor in 2000, Dick Murphy thought he had his hands full dealing with a troubled ballpark project and sewer spills that were shutting down San Diego’s beaches. But then Murphy, 62, a state superior court judge, became embroiled in an even bigger mess: a $1.35 billion deficit at the city’s public-employee pension fund.

The crisis has so discredited him, he almost lost his job last November to Donna Frye, a last-minute write-in candidate who runs a surf shop. She actually won more votes, but some 5,500 people who wrote in her name failed to shade in an oval box, and the courts ruled the ballots invalid.

It was Murphy’s predecessor who first approved underfunding the pension fund. But when a balloon payment became due in 2002, Murphy dodged it by fashioning another underfunding plan, winning the pension board’s acceptance with a promise to hike pension payouts and give special benefits to the union presidents. Now the FBI, the U.S. Attorney and the SEC are investigating the deal.

Kwame Kilpatrick / Detroit
Equally at home in senior centers and hip-hop concerts, Kwame Kilpatrick, 34, inspired Detroit voters with his energy and determination when he rode into office three years ago. But a cherry red Lincoln Navigator has put a big dent in his reputation. After weeks of denying it, the mayor admitted in January that the city paid $24,995 to lease just such a car for his wife.

That outlay showed what Alan Ehrenhalt, executive editor of Governing Magazine, calls “a tin ear for symbolism,” given that Detroit’s $230 million budget deficit has prompted the mayor to eliminate 3,000 city positions and end 24-hour bus service. It has not helped that Kilpatrick left undiminished his 21-person security detail (the mayor of Chicago, a city with three times the population, has 15 guards). When Gary Brown, the deputy chief of police internal affairs, opened an investigation into misconduct by the security team, Kilpatrick fired him, ostensibly because Brown did not get his chief’s approval for the probe.

John Street / Philadelphia
John Street came into office in 2000 with an ambitious agenda to improve Philadelphia’s worst neighborhoods, and even his critics agree he has made considerable progress. But, says Otis White, of the public-policy consulting firm Civic Strategies, “whatever his grand visions have been, he will not be remembered for them. He will be remembered for the corruption [around him].”

There has been no evidence that Street, 61, himself is corrupt, but federal prosecutors say the mayor’s close friend and fund raiser, Ron White, partially took control of city contracting and turned the process into a naked shakedown for donations to Street’s 2003 re-election campaign. White died before going to trial, but former city treasurer Cory Kemp, a member of Street’s administration, and four other defendants await a jury’s verdict. The scandals have turned Street into a lame duck a year early. “The city is in a kind of suspended animation as long as the trials go on,” says former Philadelphia Daily News editor Zack Stalberg.

We got fundraising cronies coming out our wazoos, crippling deficits, public transportation cutbacks, massive layoffs, huge cost overruns on downtown boondoggles, not to mention no real democracy, and Time complains about a freaking Lincoln Navigator?

The only consolation is knowing, without a doubt, that Time long ago jumped the shark.

  9 Comments      


Breaking news

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

From the Pantagraph:

PONTIAC — A group of Pontiac prison guards are picketing in front of the prison today in protest of a proposal to place them and other state workers on furlough to save the state an estimated $86 milllion.

The guards timed their action to coincide with an annual legislative tour of prisons led by State Sen. Dan Rutherford, R-Chenoa.

The lawmakers were expected to talk about the tour and the potential impact of the furlough plan at the end of the day.

The furlough idea was floated last week by Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration that thinks the $86 million is needed to keep state government operating at current levels.

  29 Comments      


YaGoohoo!gle

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The best of both search worlds.

  2 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

What do you think are the chances that former state Sen. Patrick O’Malley jumps into, and stays into, the governor’s race? Which Repub does it hurt or help the most, and how will he do if he stays in?

  20 Comments      


Good catch

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

From DJWInfo’s blog:

Senator Haine had a fine line during Senate debate justifying a state bill to follow a federal law. You might not like the federal law, but we’ve got to follow it, since Appomattox.

  1 Comment      


There’s that number again

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The rhetorical device “49th out of 50 states” isn’t only used for education funding. From a column by GOP state Sen. Todd Sieben:

Statistics from the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics and the National Conference of State Legislatures show that Illinois is 49 out of 50 states in terms of jobs gained since January 2003. And sadly, we are second in the nation in terms of increases in welfare cases - up 13 percent since November 2003, compared to decreases in all our neighboring states.

Compare Illinois’ poor performance to the employment successes of our neighboring states, who have all enjoyed job growth since January 2003: Missouri +4,700 jobs; Iowa +16,500 jobs; Kentucky +21,300 jobs; Wisconsin +40,000 jobs; and Indiana +54,000 jobs. During the same time period, Illinois lost 40,900 jobs. If Illinois’ job growth had only kept up with the national trends, we would have gained more than 140,000 jobs by now. The current administration’s misguided policies and terrible record when it comes to actual jobs created, rather than “projected” jobs from business development state spending “deals,” has actually cost the state more than 40,000 jobs since January 2003.

  7 Comments      


Mistakes happen

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Oops.

A political action committee tied to Gov. Rod Blagojevich acknowledged it improperly contributed to Rockford Mayor Doug Scott’s re-election campaign.

Move Illinois Forward, a PAC that supports the governor’s political interests, contributed $20,000 to Scott on March 25. But the PAC had previously reported it would not participate in the mayoral election cycle. […]

On Monday, Move Illinois Forward asked the elections board to disregard its nonparticipation report.

  6 Comments      


Separated at birth

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Is Governor Rod Blagojevich the new Clark Kent?

  12 Comments      


Wow

Monday, Apr 18, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Do you realize that Barack Obama’s book, Dreams from my Father, is still on the NY Times bestseller list?

  8 Comments      


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