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Another blow to the “Chief”

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

The last time I wrote about the U of I’s mascot, there was a firestorm here. This time, I present the story without comment.

The Oglala Sioux Tribe today demanded the University of Illinois return the Lakota regalia worn by Chief Illiniwek, the school’s controversial mascot.

In a resolution presented to the U. of I. board of trustees, the university president and the chancellor, the tribe called for the university to “cease use of this mascot.”

The “Oglala regalia is being misused to represent ‘Chief Illiniwek,’” and is a “disrespectful representation” of the people of the Kaskaskia, Peoria, Piankeshaw and Wea nations, according to the resolution. “The antics of persons playing ‘Chief Illiniwek’ perpetuates a degrading racial stereotype that reflects negatively on all American Indian people.” […]

The use of the costume by Chief Illiniwek is insulting to the tribe, particularly because the ceremonial dress “was a significant honor to wear,” Young Bear added.

  50 Comments      


Let’s all welcome Paul

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

I’ve always thought about getting an intern, but I’m kind of a lone wolf when it comes to things. However, when my old pal Jim Nowlan, who runs the Civic Leadership Program at the University of Illinois, approached me about taking on an intern, I was intrigued.

Paul Richardson will hopefully be a good fit around here. He seems easy-going enough and is most certainly bright enough to handle the challenges.

Paul, who hails from Bradley, Illinois, will be with us throughout the semester. At first, he’ll be handling the Morning Shorts duties (which I find to be a pain and, therefore, perfect intern work), but he’ll also be doing some interviews with freshmen legislators which will be published in the Capitol Fax. He’ll work on some projects I’ve been meaning to get to, and will do various reporting for me at the Statehouse.

This should be fun. I hesitate to do this, since it’s his first day and all, but I’m gonna keep comments open. Try to go easy and welcome him to the fold.

  35 Comments      


Reform and Renewal - More things that make you go “hmmmm”

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

Somehow, I missed this column today by Mark Brown. It’s a fun read, but the really important stuff is kinda buried. The story is about a lawsuit between two lobbyists with very close connections to Gov. Blagojevich. One allegedly stole an associate and business from the other.

Deep in the column is this nugget:

Other messages contain computer files… including a curious legal opinion… asserting that it would not be a violation of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act’s ban on “ex-parte communications” to communicate directly with the governor about pending planning board matters.

As Brown later explains, the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board rules on whether hospitals can expand or add new services and is “at the center of a major scandal involving board member Stuart Levine, who allegedly used his position to shake down applicants.”

The hospitals, which need the board’s permission to build new facilities, aren’t supposed to have any contact with the agency’s board or staff except through tightly restricted channels. Nobody is.

Ever since Blagojevich was first elected, lobbyists with close ties to the governor have been signing up hospital clients by the boatload, “even though those firms are prohibited from directly lobbying the board,” as Brown rightly notes.

So what’s up with that legal opinion? Did Blagojevich-allied lobbyists get around the law by lobbying the governor’s office, which in turn may have put pressure on board members or staff for their buddies’ clients?

That board, by the way, was wired by Tony Rezko from the start. Remember the $25,000 contributions from two board members to the governor’s campaign around the time they were appointed?

It was so putrid over there that the governor was eventually forced to clear the place out and start all over, blaming it all on the Republican Levine and his GOP predecessors.

Brown concludes:

It won’t surprise you to learn that none of the litigants were willing to talk to me about that.

Advice of counsel, you understand.

Yep.

It never ceases to amaze me how often these bitter little lawsuits wind up wreaking all sorts of prosecutorial havoc.

  5 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Budget director; Shafted; Taxes; Cole; Crespo (Use all caps in password)

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

Name one new state program or potential state legislative proposal that you would like to see enacted this year.

  51 Comments      


Obamarama - More local stuff *** Updated x1 ***

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped up for discussion purposes.]

* So, where will Obama’s Springfield kick-off be held? As Scott Fornek reports, it may be too cold to have it outside.

“What if it’s five below?” asked one Democratic strategist. “What will it look like if everyone is huddled together like they are at a Green Bay Packers game? Will that look good? . . . You want visuals of people who are happy.”

The Sangamon Auditorium is booked that evening for an Illinois Symphony Orchestra concert and the convention center has no historical significance [corrected sentence]. The Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum is off limits to politics. The Old State Capitol is too small. Lincoln’s home was “never discussed.” Did they think this through all the way? Stay tuned for an update later.

* The Tribune has an interesting story about people coming out of the woodwork in droves to help Obama’s campaign, although the headline “Splinter groups line up behind Obama” is a bit strange. Here are some of the relevant local aspects:

In southern Illinois, one gun-rights advocate is recommending Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) to his hunting friends and talking about forming a group with the working title “Sportsmen for Obama.”

“I don’t agree with everything he says about guns, but he gets the sportsman’s point of view on it,” said state Rep. Brandon Phelps (D-Norris City), who served with Obama in the state legislature. “He would never do anything to hurt hunters, because he has bothered to get to know us and listen to us.” […]

Friends from the Illinois legislature are offering to work as a truth-squad against attacks on his Statehouse record. In the Quad Cities in western Illinois, local Democrats want to help Obama launch his foray into nearby Iowa, which holds the nation’s first caucuses. A Chicago minister volunteered to take time off from his church to work for the campaign full time. […]

State Sen. John Cullerton (D-Chicago) has offered to put together a team of lawmakers to tout and defend Obama’s record in the General Assembly, where he served in the state Senate for eight years.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) is offering to introduce Obama around the House, where many members haven’t had a chance to get to know him.

North Shore Democrats say they are getting calls from volunteers who want to make bus trips to promote Obama in Iowa. In the Quad Cities, local Democrats are offering to set up a base of operation for the Iowa caucuses.

* Bernie Schoenburg quotes a couple of Democratic state legislators gushing over the presidential hopeful.

He’s still the same guy,” Fritchey said.

Fritchey said it’s the right time in political history for Obama, that people want “a new type of candidate and a new type of dialogue.”

While it was obvious Obama was a “quality guy,” Fritchey said, he doesn’t think anyone could have predicted that his fame would have grown so quickly.

“Was it clear he was an intelligent, thoughtful legislator? Absolutely,” Fritchey said. “Did you know that he was going to be bigger than the Beatles? No.”

* The AP does an opposition research piece on Obama’s days at the Illinois Statehouse: “Obama record in state legislature offers possible ammunition for critics

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama may have a lot of explaining to do.

He voted against requiring medical care for aborted fetuses who survive. He supported allowing retired police officers to carry concealed weapons, but opposed allowing people to use banned handguns to defend against intruders in their homes. And the list of sensitive topics goes on. […]

One vote that especially riled abortion opponents involved restrictions on a type of abortion where the fetus sometimes survives, occasionally for hours. The restrictions, which never became law, included requiring the presence of a second doctor to care for the fetus.

“Everyone’s going to use this and pound him over the head with it,” said Daniel McConchie, vice president and chief of staff for Americans United for Life.

* The AP also has a list of some of the more hot-button bills he voted on and sponsored. Here are a few:

Voted against making permanent the repeal of the state’s 5 percent sales tax on gasoline. (2000) […]

Voted against restrictions on public funding of abortion. (2000) […]

Voted against letting people argue self-defense in court if charged with violating local weapons bans by using a gun in their home. (2004) […]

Unsuccessfully sponsored measure to expunge some criminal records and create an employment grant program for ex-criminals. (2002) […]

Voted against making gang members eligible for the death penalty if they kill someone to help their gang. (200

* The Sun-Times’ Mary Mitchell looks at the race angle and makes this interesting observation.

If Obama is indeed counting on the black vote — like all Democrats count on the black vote — that could only become a problem if Sharpton jumps into the race.

“I’m waiting to see if someone raises the issues I want to see raised,” Sharpton told reporters in November when he announced he had formed an exploratory committee.

With Sharpton in the race, we can expect to hear some of the “but is he black enough?” rhetoric that tainted Obama’s unsuccessful run against U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush in 1999.

* ABC’s The Note (which can be excruciatingly juvenile) has what it calls the “Best David Axelrod quote (of the news cycle)

“There is such a compulsion on the part of the political community and political media community to create a steel cage match between Clinton and Obama you can almost see the fight posters.”

* And this isn’t local at all, but is still scurrilous: Limbaugh called “Barack Hussein Obama” a “half-minority”

What a twit.

*** UPDATE *** Chuck Goudie reports that Obama has upped his security detail.

On Monday, even before he posted the website video announcing that he was forming a presidential exploration committee, Senator Obama had increased the level of security around him. As he toured Martin Luther King Day events in Chicago, Obama seemed better insulated than he had a few weeks ago.

To those closest to Obama, that security is paramount.

“There have always been crazy people in the world. There always will be crazy people in the world. But he’s made the decision that he’s not going to let the threat of that stand in the day way of what he wants to do. That’s a courageous position for him to take. It’s a tough decision to make,” said Valerie Jarrett, Obama adviser.

  41 Comments      


Yesterday’s “reforms” have become today’s “arbitrary” rules

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Chicago Reader’s new Clout City blog (which is a pretty darned good product, even if they don’t quite understand the theory behind targeted endorsements) has the Kafkaesque details of the effort to keep CTA bus driver Victor Rowans off the 27th Ward aldermanic ballot. Four years ago, Rowans was kicked off the ballot for failing to properly number his petitions…

This year he discovered just in time that he’d been circulating the wrong kind of form. Nevertheless he succeeded in collecting 1,615 signatures (he only needed 147), correctly filled out his petitions, filed on time, and started campaigning against Alderman Walter Burnett.

But Marvin Burnett, the alderman’s brother, challenged Rowans’s nominating petitions, alleging that not enough of his signatures were valid. On January 2 the case came before the Chicago Board of Elections, and hearing officer William Jones looked over several hundred signatures on Rowans’s petitions before deciding that “continuing the record examination would only put the candidate further over the minimum requirement.” He recommended that Rowans be placed on the ballot.

Marvin Burnett appealed, bringing in affidavits from about 40 residents who said they’d never signed the petitions. Rowans countered by arguing that a some of the complainants weren’t the same people who had signed. On January 11 Jones again decided in his favor, ruling that Burnett “has failed to provide a pattern of fraud by clear and convincing evidence.”

Burnett appealed again, and yesterday the case came before the elections board. After hearing Burnett’s lawyer, Michael Kasper the board sent the matter back to Jones for a final review. So for a fourth time Rowans will have to defend his petitions. “Keep in mind, I’m doing this by myself,” he says. “I can’t afford a lawyer.”

Meanwhile, the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform bemoans the ways in which technical violations are keeping people from running for office, and points to three instances where candidates were booted for “ailing to file the receipt for their Statement of Economic Interest along with their petitions” (Chicago, Decatur and Forest Park).

These rules seem arbitrary and intended for some purpose other than protecting the integrity of the election, especially since some flaws can be fixed after the petitions are filed while others, like the Statement receipt, cannot. The goal of the election is to give voters a choice among serious, credible candidates to select who is best fit to hold office. The rules should not be used unreasonably to narrow that choice to one between the incumbent and nobody else.

  8 Comments      


Horses long gone, barn door finally closed

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

The governor is proposing a new, computerized hiring system This one, unlike the last three, is supposed to guard against fraud.

The Blagojevich administration acknowledged Wednesday that clout could play a role in the hiring of some state workers.

Paul Campbell, director of the state’s main government services agency, said the state’s current hiring system allows for too much human intervention, which could lead to the hiring of people based on political connections.

“It’s not 100 percent blind now,” Campbell told reporters at a press conference in Chicago.

…And more:

Deputy Gov. Sheila Nix and Paul Campbell, director of the Illinois Department of Central Management Services, unveiled details about the electronic, Web-based model the administration hopes to have in place by the end of this year. They said it would phase out a largely paper-based state hiring system that has come under fire for alleged abuses.

The proposed system would cover 49,527 jobs within the governor’s administration that under the U.S. Supreme Court’s “Rutan” decision, cannot be filled for political reasons, CMS spokesman Justin DeJong said. Job-seekers would submit applications via the Internet.

“If a legislator wants to recommend a constituent, all they can do is refer the constituent to a computer,” Nix said at a Chicago news conference. “(Applicants) can go through the process. It really removes any possibility of anyone weighing in on those Rutan-covered positions.”

Notice how they’re trying to pass blame to others, including legislators. The old systems were theirs, and they’re the ones who gamed it for their people. Anyway, the State Journal-Register editorializes in favor of the new program, calling it a “step in the right direction.”

  27 Comments      


Morning shorts

Thursday, Jan 18, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald: “An effort this week by Illinois Republican leaders to halt a conservative Lake County organization from using the party’s name might hinge on whether it’s a generic word or a trademark.”

* Tribune: “A condition of working for one of Illinois’ most politically powerful unions was giving the boss $100 a month, according to union members seeking to fire that boss by defeating him in an upcoming election.” [Oops. Wrong lawsuit.]

* Sun-Times:

A wide-ranging hospital fraud investigation in Nevada has Cook County Board President Todd Stroger reconsidering his plans to help balance the county’s budget on a private firm’s promise to bring up to $125 million a year to the county’s ailing health system. […]

Court documents show that among the companies being investigated is Crystal Communications, with links to Orlando Jones, the influential godson of former board President John Stroger. The company is in the same Loop office as Jones’ firm. Jones said he simply leases the company office space and is not involved in its operations.

* Orlando Jones gets around. Check this out.

* Update: Sensible Mom blogger has some helpful Orlando Jones linkage

* The Decatur City Council is poised to spend $60,000 in taxpayer money to get more lobbying power in Springfield.

* AG joins lawsuit that alleges MRI scam

* Treasurer backs hotel foreclosure

* U. of I. cuts back its online proposal - Faculty resists plan for separate business

* Judge charged with DUI gets permission to drive to work, doctor

* Layoffs hit Illinois’ National Wildlife Refuges

* Why Campaign Finance Reform?

* Daley sacks playoff parking hike for Bears fans

  9 Comments      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Let's help these kids! (Updated)
* Once again, a Chicago revenue idea would require state approval
* Lion Electric struggling, but no state subsidies have yet been paid out
* Question of the day
* Madigan trial roundup: Solis faces first day of cross-examination
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Live coverage
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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