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Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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MedMal reforms kick in

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

ISMIE portrayed this ruling as somewhat of a victory yesterday, claiming that the state had essentially upheld its prior rates. The other side is also claiming victory, however.

Using a new law designed to lower doctors’ costs, state regulators on Tuesday ordered Illinois’ major malpractice insurer to start bringing down rates next year and open itself to more public scrutiny.

ISMIE Mutual Insurance Co. criticized the order as a bad precedent that will interfere with its day-to-day operations. But the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association said it suggests regulators have concerns about how the insurer sets rates.

The order comes as part of a new law meant to lower rapidly rising insurance rates that were forcing some Illinois doctors out of business. The law combines new limits on malpractice lawsuits with stronger state regulation of insurers and doctors.

The state Division of Insurance approved ISMIE’s proposal to keep its overall rates flat this year after large increases in recent years.

But the agency ordered the company to hold its rates steady next year, too, and aim to reduce them by 3.5 percent if that is financially feasible.

Insurance Director Michael McRaith also ordered ISMIE to give more money back to some doctors through dividends and education programs and to provide more information about how it devises its rates.

  5 Comments      


More reform and renewal

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Oy.

Despite falling short of its original promise, the Blagojevich administration has renewed a contract with a politically connected company it hired to sell state sponsorships.

The Illinois Department of Central Management Services recently inked Maryland-based Team Services LLC to a two-year contract extension calling for the company to continue finding businesses willing to pay for the opportunity to place company names on state property and programs.

When originally conceived, the administration talked of generating tens of millions of dollars by selling off the rights to everything from an official state beverage to space on state park maps.

The company received $459,638 for its work in the program’s first two years. The state says Team Services is responsible for generating $1.1 million in revenue for the state. That means the program has resulted in a net gain to taxpayers of just $674,612. […]

CMS spokesman Justin DeYoung said the state renegotiated terms of the contract to eliminate a $15,000 per month retainer fee that Team Services had charged in the first two years of the pact.

Now, the company, which is operated by a former business associate of the governor’s former chief of staff, will work for a 15 percent commission on the amount of corporate sponsorships it generates for the state.

That last paragraph sums up what’s so often wrong with this administration: the lethal combination of cronyism and incompetence. At least they changed the contract’s terms (after doling out 450 large).

  13 Comments      


People in my thoughts

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· Corinne Wood just called. The former lt. governor and state rep. asked me to tell everyone who’ve sent cards, letters, flowers, etc. during her latest battle with cancer that she really appreciated “their well-wishes and their support and their prayers.” Wood said she has “great doctors doing some cutting edge treatments.” Her voice sounded very strong and she was in good spirits. We’re all pulling for you, Corinne.

· My pal Rob Winchester lives in Jerome. His house was damaged in Sunday’s tornado (although, thankfully, not as badly damaged as he originally thought). “I would thank you and everyone for any prayers and well wishes,” he writes. You’ve got it, Rob.

· The tornado tore the heck out of Jerome, and the Jerome Prophet Blog has been down ever since. I sent JP an e-mail yesterday and he wrote back today. He’s back to work, thankful that he and his family (and everyone else) are alive and well, but still has no power and doesn’t think he’ll be blogging in the very near future. Send him some love.

Be very kind in comments, please.

UPDATE: Marie at Disarranging Mine thankfully came through OK, too.

  6 Comments      


A fight for second place?

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

A roundup from the Tribune:

Oberweis, an Aurora businessman who regularly speaks about his opposition to illegal immigration, responded Tuesday to a reporter who asked him to clarify his comments Monday to supporters that he didn’t “believe that the government should be forced to print multiple languages of anything.”

“I don’t think that we should have to print ballots in multiple languages,” Oberweis said Tuesday, “but it’s not a passion issue, it’s not one I go to sleep worrying about.” […]

In Springfield, Brady said the latest poll numbers show his campaign must get to the undecided Republican voters, who he believes are conservative. He held a news conference announcing the Senate Republican Caucus would oppose the use of taxpayer money to fund embryonic stem cell research for the upcoming fiscal year, which begins July 1. […]

Gidwitz also released a new television commercial, running statewide, that reverses his campaign’s trend of ads criticizing his Republican opponents. The newest ad promotes Gidwitz’s record as a businessman and former head of the Illinois State Board of Education.

  30 Comments      


Protected: Subscriber-only morning shorts (password is in today’s Capitol Fax)

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

As I noted below, 1,548 Springfield homes were damaged by Sunday night’s storm and 1,000 may be uninhabitable. Many are still without power.

Despite this, the General Assembly went ahead with session this week, clogging hotel rooms with legislators, lobbyists and citizens group members in town for the festivities. As a result, some Springfieldians are finding it difficult to book hotel rooms to get away from their damaged and/or powerless homes.

On the other hand, session always means big dollars for Springfield, which needs all the cash it can get right now.

The question is, do you think the General Assembly should have called off session this week?

  25 Comments      


Really bad news for that Greek guy

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This is a very bad day for Alexi Giannoulias. First, the Tribune ran a very unflattering story:

Bank loans to a Chicago crime figure have become an unlikely campaign issue in the Democratic primary race for Illinois treasurer. […]

Broadway Bank had lent millions of dollars to Chicago crime figure Michael Giorango, who has been convicted twice of federal bookmaking charges and also of promoting a nationwide prostitution operation.

And then it gets worse.

But Giannoulias said that since he became a full-time senior loan officer, he has met Giorango at the bank “a few” times.

He described Giorango as “a very nice person” and questioned whether Giorango actually was a criminal. “Is he a crime figure?” Giannoulias asked. “I don’t know what the charges are that makes him this huge crime figure.”

Nicknamed “Jaws,” Giorango pleaded guilty in 1989 to helping direct a south suburban bookmaking ring that used threats of bombings, beatings and robbery to collect unpaid debts. Then in 1991, he was convicted of additional gambling and tax violations stemming from his role in a separate bookmaking operation overseen by Chicago Heights gambling boss Dominic Barbaro.

In 2004, federal prosecutors convicted him of promoting the Circuit, a nationwide prostitution ring, by encouraging Miami madam Judy Krueger to have prostitutes work from one of his hotels and by using the women to entertain and entice his business associates.

Oy.

And then the Tribune uses that story as a big reason for endorsing Paul Mangieri.

More troubling, some of the bank’s business dealings have come into question. As the Tribune reports today, the bank has lent millions of dollars to a Chicago crime figure who has been convicted on federal bookmaking charges and of promoting a prostitution operation. Giannoulias’ answers about these deals are incomplete.

Giannoulias’ very brief work experience and the unanswered questions about Broadway Bank raise some caution. The Tribune endorses Paul Mangieri in the Democratic primary for treasurer, based on his record of strong ethical standards as a county prosecutor.

The Republicans will have a field day with this if Alexi wins the primary.

  35 Comments      


SGOPs against guv’s stem cell bill

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Despite a recent poll that showed 69 percent of voters favor the idea, the Senate Republicans unanimously rejected Gov. Blagojevich’s stem cell research proposal yesterday. Bill Brady led the charge.

A group of Senate Republicans threatened Tuesday to block passage of this year’s budget if it contains funding for stem cell research. All 27 Senate Republicans signed a letter to Gov. Rod Blagojevich opposing the governor’s proposal to use $15 million for embryonic stem cell research. Currently, $10 million is set aside for that purpose.

Blagojevich has proposed using at least $100 million over five years from state tobacco settlement funds for stem cell research grants.

“It is wrong to exploit human life for research purposes,” said state Sen. Steve Rauschenberger, R-Elgin, who is running for lieutenant governor. “To purposefully create human life to exploit it is just wrong.” […]

State Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington, said support from across the aisle would effectively defeat legislation regarding stem cell research.

40 percent of Republicans supported the proposal in that poll, while 51 percent were opposed.

UPDATE: This story has not been getting any play at all. But it is an important part of the stem cell debate:

Gov. Rod Blagojevich quietly filed an executive order that essentially eliminates legislative oversight of his controversial stem cell research grant program, The News-Gazette has learned.

When the General Assembly failed to pass a bill for state-funded stem cell research last spring, Blagojevich circumvented the legislative process and issued an executive order creating the Illinois Regenerative Institute for Stem Cell Research.

The July 2005 executive order required the Illinois Department of Public Health to adopt rules for the issuance and administration of stem cell research grants, funded by $10 million that had been hidden in the budget under the vague description of “scientific research.”

Those rules would have had to have been approved by the General Assembly’s Joint Commission on Administrative Rules, a panel made up of equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats from the House and Senate.

A new executive order, filed on Feb. 10, amended the old executive order by eliminating the requirement that rules be adopted to govern the grant program.

  15 Comments      


Stroger roundup

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· Sun-Times:

Unable to walk, slightly disoriented and slurring his speech, the 76-year-old was alert Tuesday evening but will likely spend the final days of the campaign in a hospital bed, as Democratic Party leaders ponder whether Stroger will eventually have to be replaced on the ballot.

It also caused Stroger’s primary opponent, Forrest Claypool, to pull anti-Stroger ads in favor of those touting Claypool’s own record. Claypool canceled Tuesday night appearances as he wished Stroger a quick recovery. It remained unclear how the illness will affect Claypool’s campaign. […]

But Simon said he would advise Stroger to avoid campaigning and it could be a month or more before Stroger can go back on the job.

· Tribune:

Now, Stroger’s campaign must grapple with convincing the public that their candidate remains fit enough to serve a fourth term.

Bruce Washington, Stroger’s campaign manager, said the campaign strategy would not change even with Stroger in the hospital.

“The campaign is fully engaged and aggressively moving forward with a plan that has been structured,” Washington said late Tuesday. “We’re not changing anything. There’s no issue as far as what the campaign is going to do. […]

Stroger’s illness similarly presents a dilemma for Claypool’s campaign, which must continue to chip away at Stroger’s lead without seeming insensitive or opportunistic. […]

Axelrod said that as a result of Stroger’s condition, he moved up by a day a new Claypool TV ad, one that features Claypool and highlights his newspaper endorsements. The ad replaced one that mocked Stroger’s attack ads and hammered the board president’s record on taxation and management of the county’s health system.

Daily Herald:

Simon, who is also on the county payroll as executive chairman of emergency medicine for the Cook County Bureau of Health Services, said he advised Stroger to go to Rush because all of Stroger’s records are there, because Simon is on staff there and because Rush has expertise in handling stroke sufferers.

Mark Brown:

It seems cold to reduce Cook County Board President John Stroger’s health to the political calculus of the moment, so let’s begin by wishing him a complete and speedy recovery. But when you look at the calendar, there’s really no avoiding the politics of it. […]

Will there be a sympathy vote for Stroger?

Probably some.

Will there be voters who had planned to vote for him who change their minds because of questions about his ability to carry out his duties?

That seems likely, too. […]

It was somewhat disappointing, but not that surprising given past history, that the first confirmation of Stroger’s stroke came at 5 p.m. from Simon, 12 hours after Stroger was first taken from his home to a nearby hospital by Chicago Fire Department paramedics.

Then Stroger’s staff said he had been discharged from that hospital — initially neglecting to mention that he was being transferred to Rush.

While reporters waited in the lobby at Rush for word on Stroger’s condition, his people kept giving reassurances that all his tests had come back “normal,” failing to mention that he’d had a stroke.

CBS2:

The political fallout from County Board President John H. Stroger Jr.’s stroke is huge and far reaching. To say that it could change the future of Cook County is an understatement.

Your turn.

UPDATE: Stroger will stay in the hospital for at least a week.

Cook County Board President John Stroger will likely remain hospitalized next week when voters go to the polls, according to an update issued by Rush University Medical Center

  23 Comments      


Morning shorts

Wednesday, Mar 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· State Journal-Register’s website still being slammed by high traffic because of their storm coverage. They’ve put up a temporary home page to deal with the huge demand. You can find photo gallery links at that page. Meanwhile, the SJ-R reports that 1,548 homes were damaged by the storm and 1,000 of them are uninhabitable.

· Record low number of voters registered in Chicago. At least dating back to 1942 and maybe since the ’20s, when women got the vote.

· Lt. governor race roundup.

· Tribune profiles Duckworth.

· Kadner: “In a year full of dark news about corruption in Illinois politics, there has been one ray of sunshine.”

· Daily Illini editor fired over cartoon.

· Dems hope to take GOP spots on Will County board.

· Hey, Tribsters, if you have a political bloggy type thing, aren’t you supposed to update it every now and then? As of this morning, no posts in three days.

· Guv hopefuls avoided the spotlight yesterday, stayed in their offices. Strange.

· Line of the day, from Carol Marin: “Gidwitz is like a good shampoo in a bad bottle.”

· More later.

· Republicans gather to rally troops, mock governor.

· Potentially big story on Exelon’s power auction proposal.

· Rauschenberger in major hot water with the Elk Grove Township GOP. (Scroll down for story.)

· Freakonomics Blog: “Creative” use of data by death penalty proponents.

· Everyone’s entitled to their opinions, which is why I rarely criticize a columnist. But this guy should probably not quit his day job.

Finally, there’s a woman named Debra Shore who is running for Metropolitan Water Reclamation District. In her literature she notes that even her name, Shore, bespeaks her watery commitment. I wonder how she would handle her last name if it was Sewage?

Unintentionally hilarious stuff. Read it all.

· What he said. Eisendrath is such an embarassment.

· Cal has a good post at Illinoize today.

  4 Comments      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* The Waukegan City Clerk was railroaded
* Whatever happened, the city has a $40 million budget hole it didn't disclose until now
* Manar gives state agencies budget guidance: Cut, cut, cut
* Roundup: Ex-Chicago Ald. Danny Solis testifies in Madigan corruption trial
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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