From a press release:
“President Bush’s plan to address the growing health care crisis in our country is disappointing. The plan he outlined tonight would do nothing to help the 1.4 million uninsured Illinoisans finally get access to coverage they can afford. In fact, his plan would discourage employers from offering quality healthcare coverage, could increase the number of uninsured and would mostly benefit the rich. At a time when healthcare costs are rapidly increasing and millions of families across the country are struggling to afford medical insurance, the President’s plan could put healthcare even further beyond reach for millions of Americans. It’s clear that the task of finding ways to help the middle-class afford healthcare will be left up to the states.
“In Illinois, we’re already leading the way in expanding access to affordable healthcare for working families. We have expanded healthcare coverage to more than 500,000 people in just the last four years, and now every uninsured child in the State can get affordable health coverage. Soon we will announce plans for extending healthcare access to every Illinoisan. We would welcome more support for our efforts from the federal government, but not at the expense of important programs like Medicare and Medicaid.
“And while the President’s proposals to boost the use of renewable fuels and reduce reliance on petroleum are steps in the right direction, this Administration has provided little more than lip service when it comes to meaningful energy reform. Our country as a whole is no closer to energy independence now than it was a year ago when the President declared that Americans are addicted to oil.
“Here in Illinois, we’ve proposed an ambitious energy independence plan that calls for real fuel conservation and real investment in clean, renewable energy alternatives that protect consumers while significantly reducing greenhouse gases. We hope to see real leadership and investment from our federal government in technologies and strategies that will result in genuine energy independence.â€
Also, Sen. Durbin blogged his response at Daily Kos.
It wasn’t all serious.
Welcome Senator Durbin. WOOO HOOOO.
by Chamonix on Tue Jan 23, 2007 at 07:25:56 PM PST
Woo Hoo back at You.
by Dick Durbin on Tue Jan 23, 2007 at 08:02:29 PM PST
And, finally, did anyone else see Sen. Obama on TV last night? I caught him on CNN and MSNBC and his delivery seemed super-flat to me. It made me think that his attempt to move up the political ladder to the top rung has caused him to be too cautious, too hesitant to speak in his usual casual yet straightforward manner.
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Question of the day *** Updated x1 ***
Tuesday, Jan 23, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
As I told you yesterday, a federal judge has ruled that the messages on “specialty license plates” in Illinois are covered under the 1st Amendment and can’t be regulated by government.
If this ruling stands, all it will take is 800 or so Illinoisans to sign up for the license plates and the secretary of state will have to make them.
So, what messages would you like to see on future specialty plates? Snark encouraged.
Late bonus question: Should Illinois do away with the specialty plates altogether? Explain.
*** UPDATE *** Zorn makes a good point. After quoting part of the judge’s decision…
(The state) argues that if the “Choose Life†message is permissible, than the state would also have to issue Ku Klux Klan or Nazi plates to avoid viewpoint discrimination. (But) the fact that speech or viewpoint is unpopular does not exempt it from First Amendment protection. Indeed, the First Amendment protects unpopular, even some hateful speech. The message conveyed by this proposed license plate is subject to First Amendment Protection.
…he writes:
In other words, this decision opens the door wide for what I’m calling “hate plates” — specialty license tags espousing any and all forms of bigotry or bile. More likely, though, we’ll see every manner of mainstream advocacy group on the right and the left wanting to use specialty plates to boost their causes and notions.
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SS numbers distributed to ward hacks
Tuesday, Jan 23, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
So, apparently, every ward boss in the city has my Social Security number. Fantastic.
Four Chicago residents filed lawsuits Monday alleging their privacy was violated because the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners accidentally released their Social Security numbers along with those of 1.3 million other city residents.
A database file containing the Social Security numbers and other personal data from registered voter files was distributed in late 2003 and early 2004 to about 100 political organizations run by the city’s aldermen and committeemen. About a half dozen copies were also released more recently.
Tom Leach, a spokesman for the board, said it was legal for the information to be released, but the Social Security information should have been deleted. He said the board plans to ask everyone who received copies of the records to return them.
Last fall the board was forced to patch a security flaw on its Web site that had made private voter information, including Social Security numbers and dates of birth for more than 780,000 registered voters, vulnerable to online theft.
They sure seem to be downplaying these idiotic mistakes.
In addition to commenting on the city election board’s blunder, let’s use this as a privacy law open thread. What penalties should be involved here? Is there any new legislation you’d like to see introduced?
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Online voting? Lang wants to give it a look
Tuesday, Jan 23, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Lou Lang proposes that the state take a look at Internet voting.
Internet voting has the potential to allow voters to cast their ballots from anywhere — from the office, the coffee shop or the living room in their slippers. This convenience holds the promise of attracting younger, tech-savvy voters to the polls and could also be a simpler alternative to absentee voting for citizens living abroad or serving in the military.
State Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, has filed a bill calling for the state to study the idea, and possibly use Internet voting in Illinois elections as early as the 2010 gubernatorial race. […]
Michigan, as recently as 2004, allowed online voting in its Democratic presidential caucus. The result was the second-biggest caucus turnout ever of 164,000 votes, 46,000 of which were cast online. More importantly, there were no reports of security glitches, fraud or intimidation, according to Michigan Democratic Party spokesman Jason Moon.
Madison County Clerk Mark Von Nida worries about the privacy lost when voting is taken away from monitored polling places. “When you open up voting (by computer), you open up the possibility of people having to vote in front of their boss, or their union boss, just to prove that it’s done,” he said. “And of course, (the vote) would be (cast) in a way that’s how the person who coerced them wanted them to vote.”
Lang says that’s why he wants to study the issue first. Your thoughts?
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Bayer on pensions, workers
Tuesday, Jan 23, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Henry Bayer is not impressed with the recent report on how to fix the state pension mess.
Imagine there was an employer who sent its employees notice each month that it had electronically transferred their pay to the bank account that they designated.
Imagine further that, in fact, the full deposit had never actually been made, that the entire amount to which the employee was entitled, legally and contractually, had never been sent.
And finally, imagine the problem was discovered — that some of the pay owed had never been received.What would your remedy be?
Well, if you’re the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, a group of self-appointed guardians of the public trust, you’d fix it by cutting the pay of the employees who had been shortchanged.
Go read the whole thing. It’s an interesting take.
Meanwhile, Bayer also had some harsh words for Gov. Blagojevich in Bernie Schoenburg’s recent column. During his inaugural address, Blagojevich said, “Four years ago, standing before you, I looked back and what I saw was a government that was failing our people, a bloated bureaucracy, costing taxpayers millions, for no purpose, no results.”
“I think it’s highly unfortunate that the governor chooses to use that rhetoric,” Bayer said in an interview at Springfield’s AFSCME headquarters last week.
“I know that in some circles, the rhetoric plays well, but it doesn’t jibe with the reality, and I think it’s a great disservice to the thousands of state employees who come to work every day and try to keep order in our prisons and care for the mentally ill and care for veterans and try to make sure that people who are applying for unemployment benefits get the benefits that they’re entitled to in a timely fashion - all of the things that state employees do and all the services they provide.”
“To denigrate them by saying, well, they didn’t used to work and they don’t work … it’s not true and it’s really time for that rhetoric to stop.”
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Morning Shorts
Tuesday, Jan 23, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* NYT: Illinois to Privatize Lottery; Fritchey’s take
*Chicago Board of Elections hit with lawsuit over Social Security number flap
* City slates 25 large commercial properties for tax review:
The Daley administration contends the aggressive filings have helped prevent local taxing districts from paying up to $63 million in refunds — and shifting $10 million in tax burden from those large businesses to average taxpayers.
* Mark Brown: A look at former mayoral aide Reyes private files
*Sorich remains free pending appeal
* Tribune: Illinois sues over text message spam
* Two commissioners suggest tax increases to counteract Stroger’s cuts
* Some towns glad they didn’t ban smoking; other complaints
* Official with ties to Rezko leaves state post
* Chicago Federal Reserve President to step down
* Families urged to apply for low income tax credit
* Tax breaks questioned as health costs soar:
Meanwhile, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan (D) is pushing for legislation that would require non-profit hospitals to list benefits they provide to their communities. A similar measure stalled last year, but Madigan’s office is now negotiating with Illinois hospitals to try to craft an agreement.
* Tribune Editorial: Madigan just doing her job
* Eric Zorn: What is Lisa Madigan thinking?
* McQueary: Your Welcome, President Stroger
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