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The truth trickles out

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Buried in an AP story this afternoon about All Kids enrollment is this golden nugget:

A spokeswoman for the state Department of Healthcare and Family Services says so far about 45,000 kids have signed up.

That includes 40,000 who already qualified for state coverage but hadn’t signed up and 5,000 kids who didn’t qualify until All Kids was created.

Did you get that? Almost 90 percent of All Kids’ total enrollment right now would have qualified for existing state healthcare services.

Is there a need for healthcare for kids? Yes. Is there a demand for All Kids from families who didn’t qualify for state assistance before this year? So far, not so much. Of the total enrollment for All Kids, just eleven percent are the children whom the program was supposedly designed to serve.

[emphasis added]

UPDATE: Blogger foleyma posted an All Kids acceptance letter online and it shows two things. 1) It’s still being billed as “Governor Blagojevich’s All Kids” and 2) Parents who enrolled their children by the deadline are apparently getting comped for their first month. Click on the pic for a larger view. [jpg file]

UPDATE 2: I think comments are being hit with a coordinated counter-spin.

This response prevails:

The program just started July 1st. I think you are looking at the numbers wrong. To have enrolled 45,000 and 5,000 to be for a new program with just 11 days started is a reflection on the need.

They’ve been pre-enrolling for months, so that bit of spin is not accurate at all. Please, whoever you are, get off the script and engage. Or go away.

UPDATE 3: Also, this program was specifically billed as help for middle class and working class families that make too much to qualify for state aid. These are the governor’s own words on the All Kids website:

Of the 250,000 children in Illinois without health insurance, more than half come from working and middle class families who earn too much to qualify for state programs like KidCare, but not enough to afford private health insurance. Through All Kids, comprehensive health insurance will be available to every uninsured child at rates their parents can afford.

About half of the children without healthcare belong to families who are Medicaid eligible, but those families make up almost 90 percent of the total enrollees in All Kids to date.

  98 Comments      


Um, Phil?

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

New congressional candidate Phil Hare has a website. I know Phil, and I think he did a very good job for Lane Evans, but that website really sucks. The Democrats better hope he runs a campaign better than he builds a site. Also, what’s with that photo?

Republican Andrea Zinga also has a website, and it’s much better.

Consider this a congressional campaign open thread.

[Hat tip: Passing Parade]

  31 Comments      


Tuesday afternoon time-waster

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

My buddy Pete S. sent me this link. The Widespread Panic fan site PanicStream has a large collection of live Grateful Dead performances which were voted “best” by Panic fans. As Pete wrote, you may disagree that these are the best possible cuts, but they’re still pretty darned good. Have a listen.

  9 Comments      


Ethics Commission Chairman: Give us something to do, pretty please

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Looks like Bernie’s back from vacation.

The new chairman of the Illinois Executive Ethics Commission wants some of the same things the previous chairman sought: more openness in the ethics process and more for the commission to do.

“As it is, we’re shut out, and we think we can help,” said Jim Brennan, 41, a Wheaton lawyer who took over as chairman July 1 from author Scott Turow of Glencoe. “We want to help. We want a role.” […]

The commission, created by legislation signed by Gov. Rod Blagojevich in December 2003, has never acted on a single case. The state’s ethics laws have generally worked to keep matters investigated secret, and those laws should be changed, Brennan said Monday. […]

Turow said last year that about 25 people were fired as a result of hundreds of investigations by the governor’s inspector general’s office in its first year, but the commission never received the names of those fired.

I wonder if and or when the golden boys and girls on the commission finally decide they’re being used as props?

  10 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Lisa Madigan letter, the Sorich verdicts and the various media scoops have all combined to shake up this election season yet again. But will it mean that much in the end?

Time to take another assessment of the chances of both Rod Blagojevich and Judy Baar Topinka. Have at it.

  52 Comments      


“Dangerous and Brilliant”

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Conservative activist Fran Eaton writes this week that after reading a USA Today op-ed by Sen. Barack Obama she concludes that he is both “dangerous” and “brilliant.” Dangerous, I assume, to the Republican cause.

If he were to wilt when challenged, he would be harmless and ineffective. But his consistent, calm responses and the confidence he displays in his own worldview is something conservatives in Illinois could learn from and incorporate into their own public discourse.

Obama took some heat after he gave a recent speech about faith, politics, liberals and conservatives. Some Democrats, particularly activist bloggers, thought he was attacking them with hackneyed conservative talking points. Obama shot back that he was misunderstood and that the initial press reports were seriously flawed. (Personally I thought it ironic that so many bloggers who regularly slam the mainstream media for getting the story wrong relied on some pretty bad MSM reporting instead of the raw text for their attacks on Obama.)

After reading the speech and then the refined version in USA Today, I’ve concluded that Obama may have assumed he could be cautious with his words and that reporters and his target audiences would understand what he was getting at. It doesn’t work that way. You have to make yourself clear and/or then you have to make sure your PR staff “helps” the reporters understand what it is you were trying to say. He did neither. So, an interesting speech about a journey of understanding became yet another intraparty wedge issue for the hapless Democrats.

But go read the op-ed and tell us what you think.

  24 Comments      


A familiar story

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Governing Magazine’s blog has two great posts about why New Jersey’s finances have tanked. It’s eerily familiar. I’m probably excerpting way too much, so I hope they’ll forgive me.

From Part One, we pick up the story after Democratic Gov. Jim Florio is drummed out of office for raising taxes and Republican Christy Todd Whitman is elected on a promise to cut income taxes by 30 percent.

Cut taxes she did, becoming a national star for her party in the process. To pay for the cuts, she took up the bad fiscal habits of prior governors (including Florio). For one thing, she emptied out a retirement health trust fund, taking some $300 million out of the kitty and turning it into a pay as you go program. She also eliminated the state’s annual billion-dollar appropriation to pay for pensions.

During her second election year, in 1997, the pension fund needed money, but rather than reverting to the habit of making contributions from the state budget, Whitman sold some big pension bonds — and also got legislation allowing surpluses from pension investments to be used to cover the state’s ongoing obligations.

More tax cuts were in store, notably property tax cuts. All the cutting left the state without the funding necessary to comply with a state Supreme Court decision on school finance. New Jersey eventually floated a $12 billion school construction bond. As with the pension bonds, though, legislators and the governor failed to set aside enough cash even to make payments on the debt they incurred.

That meant that Jim McGreevey, the Democrat who opposed Whitman in 1997 and succeeded her in 2001, inherited a deficit of $6 billion. During that latter election year, the legislature gave a 9 percent pension increase to retired and current workers — shades of a pension bonus Kean doled out on his way out of office.

McGreevey raised some taxes and made some spending cuts, but for the most part resorted to a variety of new gimmicks to fill the gap. For instance, he twice borrowed money against tobacco settlement dollars. The state was still neglecting its required payments to the pension system, so it continued its neat trick of taking money out of the system to make payments back into it. Eventually, the state Supreme Court ruled that the state had to stop borrowing money to pay for operating costs.

Read the whole thing. Part Two can be found here.

  9 Comments      


The Stroger beat

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Once again, the Tribune buries the behind-the-scenes maneuvering over appointing an interim county board president. This is from the very end of the paper’s story:

Steele has been lobbying hard for the position. But commissioners said Monday that no candidate appears yet to have the necessary votes to win the interim slot now that John Daley has removed himself from the running. Commissioner Forrest Claypool, who lost to Stroger in the March primary, said he would consider the position if no consensus candidate emerges.

  25 Comments      


Pantagraph tries again

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Pantagraph reiterates its demand today for some pre-election revelations on what’s really going on in the Blagojevich administration.

[Attorney General Lisa] Madigan was displeased with us for an earlier editorial suggesting she let the public know before November’s general election if there was sufficient evidence that the Blagojevich administration violated hiring laws, or that the administration has done nothing wrong. […]

Prosecutors should be concerned about professional ethics. But they should also remember they represent people who are entrusting billions of dollars a year and the state’s well-being to the administration controlling the governor’s office.

So, we’re encouraging Fitzgerald to move hastily, too. The public deserves some answers before Election Day. […]

It would be a disservice to Gov. Blagojevich if he goes into an election with a cloud over his administration. It would be an even greater disservice to residents of this state if they unknowingly re-elect a man whose administration flaunts state hiring laws.

Expect this demand to spread before election day.

  8 Comments      


Morning shorts

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· The owners of the Chicago area’s horserace tracks have always hated each other and constantly tried to one-up the others. That’s a big reason why it’s always so difficult to pass any riverboat legislation - because the tracks can never seem to agree on how to divvy up their cut. Now, though, it looks like Mr. D has Bidwell very close to a checkmate situation.

· “In the wake of allegations about Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s hiring practices, several high-profile Republicans are flocking to Illinois to stump for Republican challenger Judy Baar Topinka.”

· Feds keep their word, seek leniency for Fawell’s fiancee

· Geils insists on no talks with Chicago

· Illinois 4-H sponsors food drive

· “Exelon’s proposed takeover of New Jersey utility PSEG continues to run into opposition”

· Daley welcomes Gay Games

  4 Comments      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Public Pressure Mounts For Nursing Home Accountability On Care And Safe Staffing
* Mayor's 87 percent transit ridership remarks turned back on him when it comes to funding (Updated)
* It’s just a bill
* Healing Communities: Endeavor Health Is Helping Train The Next Generation Of Caregivers
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