* 5:00 pm - Who will the governor sue next?
Gov. Rod Blagojevich today filed a lawsuit against the clerk of the Illinois House in an attempt to prompt faster consideration of the governor’s budget vetoes.
Blagojevich is asking a judge to order that his veto message be officially filed in the House record so that any override attempt can come quickly. Blagojevich used his amendatory veto power to cut $463 million out of the $59 billion spending plan.
The governor says that clerk Mark Mahoney, who is also Springfield’s Ward 6 alderman, should have entered the information into House records when the House met on Sept. 4.
Once that information is entered, the House would have only 15 days to act on the vetoes.
As I’ve told you before, the Constitution seems to require that the House read the governor’s budget message into the journal during last Tuesday’s session. The House claims that the Constitution’s requirement that the messages be read into the journal “immediately” can be interpreted different ways.
* 6:17 pm - Here are the documents…
* Complaint
* Memorandum in support of plaintiff’s complaint for mandamus
* Summons
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This just in…
Tuesday, Sep 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* 12:57 pm - From the AP…
A group of disabled protesters is blocking access to elevators and escalators in a government office building in downtown Chicago.
A wall of wheelchairs is preventing occupants of the James R. Thompson Center from exiting or entering their offices, although people are being allowed into the building.
The protesters from the advocacy group ADAPT made a similar effort Monday, blocking the entrances to the American Medical Association in Chicago for more than three hours.
The group wanted the AMA to push for legislation that could lead to more housing options for people with disabilities.
Thanks to a commenter for the tip. For readers at the Thompson Center, is this over yet? I’ll make some calls as well.
* 1:07 pm - Yep. It’s still going on. I’m told it’s pretty loud there, too.
* 1:10 pm - I’m told that security isn’t allowing people to reenter the building, so you might want to stay in your office.
* 1:12 pm - If you were going to the Secretary of State driver’s license facility on the lower level, you should make other plans. The entrance is blocked.
* 1:14 pm - Apparently, they have a permit and the coppers are allowing them to block the entrances, which is bizarre if you ask me.
* 1:38 pm - Quote of the week (public blog) is from John Laesch, a Democrat running for the second time for Congressman Denny Hastert’s seat. Laesch’s heavily favored Democratic opponent, Bill Foster, was just endorsed by Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias…
Laesch shrugged off Giannoulias’ endorsement, calling him “just a wealthy guy who bought himself an office.”
“I don’t think it’s a big endorsement of any kind,” he said.
[Hat tip: Bridget]
* 1:53 pm - This protest may not end soon. An e-mail from a higher-up who checked out a rumor for me…
Apparently there is no timeframe. Yesterday they were at the AMA for three hours. Last time they were at the jrtc, they stayed until the building closed at 6 pm and that’s what building management expects they’ll do here today as well.
* 2:15 pm - Here’s a photo of yesterday’s action by this group, called “ADAPT,” taken from the organization’s website. They sealed off the entrance to the AMA…
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And here’s some info about what the group wants, also taken from its website…
ADAPT, the nations leading direct action disability rights organization, gathers in Chicago to put the brakes on people flooding into institutions and nursing homes. Illinois ranks 41st in providing options to expensive facilities and has a history of being one of ADAPT’s ten worst states at providing home and community alternatives. Rather than progress toward integration and choice, Illinois Governor Blagojevich has failed to reasonably support Money Follows the Person legislation and is planning to reopen an institution for people with developmental disabilities.
* 4:16 pm - An e-mail just arrived from the US Attorney’s office…
Please find attached the Answer of the United States to Petition for Rehearing or for Rehearing En Banc in U.S. v. Warner and Ryan that was filed today in the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals.
Here it is.
* 4:19 pm - From a higher-up at the Thompson Center…
Illinois State Police is requesting that employees use emergency stairways to exit the building. And, protesters just got a second wind.
Irony of all ironies, this means that disabled employees may be trapped.
* 5:24 pm - The protesters are still outside, but are no longer blocking the entranceways, so state employees can leave without using the stairs now.
* 5:28 pm - From the Not Dead Yet blog, which has also been covering the protests today…
Latest news: This just in from Diane Coleman:
The negotiations were a success.
1. The governor has agreed to meet with ADAPT by no later than October 17th.
2. There will be no re-opening of Lincoln Developmental Center as a residence for people with disabilities during the present administration.
3. Rahnee Patrick will be an ADAPT liaison on the Governor’s “Money Follows the Person” Advisory Committee.
(caveat - I got all this in a rushed phone call with lots of background noise so there might be some details slightly off that will be edited later.)
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Sep 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
What is your favorite non-political website, blog, etc.? Explain why it’s your favorite and provide a link. But, please, no porn. lol
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Doomsday cometh
Tuesday, Sep 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* With the cancelled session this week and, therefore, no prospect for passing a CTA/RTA bailout before Sunday’s mass transit “doomsday” deadline, Sen. Emil Jones tried to convince the CTA to put off its fare hikes, service cuts and layoffs, without success…
Senate President Emil Jones asked the CTA to delay launching its “doomsday” plan to raise fares and cut routes this weekend, but the transit agency shot down the plea Monday. […]
With no prospect of either the Senate or House meeting before next week, it appears likely no relief for Chicago area bus and train riders will come before then.
That realization prompted Jones to ask the CTA to do “the appropriate thing” and push back its Sunday deadline so his legislative chamber could take up the issue when it next meets Monday.
But the CTA’s chief rejected the idea.
“The CTA has always said we chose the date because it was the last possible date we could implement cuts and still meet payroll for the year. Any delay in this date, without a solid funding source, would potentially create a systemwide shutdown as the CTA would not be able to meet a system-wide payroll,” CTA President Ron Huberman said.
* More from the RTA…
By Monday, the moves could push as many as 100,000 transit riders off the system and either on to roads or out of work.
“We are not backing off,” said Jim Reilly, chairman of the Regional Transportation Authority.
Pace and CTA officials say they can’t pay the bills and leave service and fares as they are. The two agencies are about $180 million in the red.
“We literally do not have the money,” said Rocky Donahue, a Pace spokesman.
* The media absolutely loves doomsday scenario stories, so we can probably expect a whole lot more coverage between now and Sunday, when tons of reporters will likely be dispatched throughout the city and suburbs to find stranded commuters…
Frustration doesn’t begin to describe the anxiety CTA customers are feeling.
“I wouldn’t know the first thing about how to get to school, and then back, too, if anything changes,” said Amina Doctrove, a regular CTA bus rider who recently moved to Chicago from Shreveport, La., to attend Columbia College.
* Despite the delays in Springfield, are things moving ahead behind the scenes? Maybe, but there are still big problems ahead…
Some lawmakers said the delay signaled that real negotiating was going on, rather than the public bickering that has colored much of the state budget process this year.
In fact, Gov. Rod Blagojevich traveled to Greenville last week to visit personally with Senate Minority Leader Frank Watson in his hometown. Watson called the meeting about a state capital construction plan “very productive.“
He said it was helpful to speak directly to Blagojevich about the negotiations.
“It all really revolves around the fact of trust,” Watson said.
Watson said Monday the plan is still to pay for new schools, roads and bridges across Illinois with money made from new casinos. But, how many is still an open question, as Watson said votes from his fellow Republicans grow fewer as more casinos enter the proposal.
* The Republicans want to tie the capital bill to the transit bailout, so until the capital bill is resolved, they won’t get on board. But resolving the capital package is tricky because, as noted above, the Republicans aren’t thrilled with the idea of three new casinos.
The Repubs are also worried that the governor won’t release the money for their projects, which is what Senate Watson was talking about when he brought up the “trust” subject…
[Watson’s spokesperson] said Republicans also want assurances that needed projects in their districts will be funded.
“We want assurances that this will not be a political document, but solely based on the infrastructure needs of the state,” Schuh said.
* Meanwhile, part of the problem with the CTA/RTA bill coming up short in the House was that the governor pulled his allies off the bill. Sen. Carol Ronen, the governor’s floor leader in the Senate, seemed to signal her intentions to support the mass transit bill in that chamber, even if it does include the hated sales tax increase.
This is from an e-mail that Sen. Ronen sent to her constituents yesterday…
Over the past several days, many of you have contacted me to express your concerns and frustration with the failure of the Illinois House to pass the mass transit funding bill, SB 572.
SB 572 failed in the House mainly because the House Republicans who voted against it, want a broader capital program, including more funding for roads, to be part of the transit legislation. To address this issue, the Senate is scheduled to meet next Monday and Tuesday to introduce and vote on a new transit funding bill, similar to SB572, in conjunction with a capital project spending plan which will deal with other transportation and construction projects across the State, including funding for roads. With the inclusion of the capital spending plan, my hope is we will have the requisite number of votes to pass a mass transit legislation and send it to the House for a vote.
I understand and share your concerns and frustrations with the current state of mass transit and the impending service cuts and rate hikes. I fully support mass transit and will do my best in the coming days to find a solution to the crisis.
* One major aspect of the lobbying push that has been virtually ignored (including by myself, unfortunately) is the Illinois Association of Realtors, which has worked to defeat the proposal. The bill includes an increase in Chicago’s real estate transfer tax. Considering the down market these days, the Realtors are not happy with anything that might make a bad situation even a little worse.
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Early primary impact
Tuesday, Sep 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* If the Politico had more analytical stories like this one, I might read it more often. A well-done story on the impact of the early primaries is like finding a diamond in a pig pen…
“It’s very conceivable people will go door-knocking around Christmas break,” said Simon Behrmann, spokesman for Jay Footlik, a Democrat seeking the nomination against Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.). “This is definitely something we’ve never seen here in Illinois.” […]
Christine Dudley, the former executive director of the Illinois Republican Party, said it also will be a challenge for congressional candidates to compete for the voters’ attention during a period that is normally dominated by sports. […]
“You’ll be seeing lots of Christmas cards with veiled political messages,” said Dudley. “It’s distracting, and in this media market, people care a lot more about sports than they do about politics.”
The nine-month gap between the primaries and the November election also poses a challenge to many campaigns. One Illinois Democratic campaign manager predicted that he would have to lay off some staff after the primary.
“It puts a premium on doing the work on a campaign much earlier,” the operative said. “I can’t keep my organizers for nine months. There’s not enough news … to pay salaries.”
This uncertain terrain could have far-reaching effects, as Illinois is hosting its share of competitive primaries that could affect the balance of power in the House.
* Could the February primary hurt campaign fundraising for down-ballot candidates?
“Maybe it’s an old wives’ tale, but people usually follow it - usually during that period of time, people are more interested in using their funds for Christmas, for the holidays,” [Kane County State’s Attorney John Barsanti] said.
* The state’s fundraising disclosure calendar has been adjusted to fit the new reality…
Normally, fundraising committees have to submit two campaign finance reports before each primary. The regular semi-annual report is due Jan. 31 and the pre-election report is due 30 days before the election.
As that pre-election report would be due Jan. 5, the measure also combined those two reports into one report, due Jan. 20. This would only take place in even-numbered years.
* This article points out other hurdles…
*Illinois (Feb. 5). Cook County needs to train 12,000 poll workers in January, when many retirees have left for Florida or other warm areas. In Rock Island County, about 80% of the 325 poll workers usually are seniors. “We hope we won’t be tearing around the day before the election just trying to find somebody who can fog a mirror,” County Clerk Richard Leibovitz says.
* And…
* Mailing absentee ballots. The ballots, which are sent to as many as 6 million military and civilian voters overseas, must be mailed 45 days before the elections. In states holding early primaries, that could mean during the holidays, when mail delivery is slow, increasing the potential for disenfranchising voters, says Brad Bryant of Kansas, president of the National Association of State Election Directors.
* Negotiating bad weather. Earlier primaries boost the chance of snow and ice, which could make it tough to open, supply and staff polling places. Several cold-weather states are moving their elections into midwinter, including Illinois, New Jersey and New York.
* As Kate Clements points out, we’re not alone…
Twenty states, including Illinois, have either adopted a Feb. 5 primary date or are considering doing so.
* And that has forced presidential candidates to adjust, as this admittedly outdated NY Times story attests…
Aides to the candidates said they were debating whether the changes would mean that the nominations would effectively be settled on Feb. 5, by which point easily 50 percent of the delegates are likely to have been chosen, or whether a few strong candidates would divide the Feb. 5 take, forcing the campaign to stretch on for months. That could, oddly enough, make those fewer states sticking to later primaries vital players in the election cycle.
The changes are forcing candidates to decide whether Iowa and New Hampshire, two states with contests before Feb. 5, will become more influential as contenders look for early victories to give them momentum. And with as many as 23 states voting on a single day — more states than are typically considered competitive in a general election — candidates must decide which ones to ignore, given the demands on their time and bank accounts. […]
For Democrats, the prospect of a mega-primary has created a new calculation about the importance of black voters, already a constituency being fiercely courted by Mr. Obama, who is seeking to become the nation’s first black president, and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York. There are hardly any black voters in Iowa and New Hampshire; by contrast, they could play an important role in California, Illinois, Missouri, New Jersey and New York.
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Morning shorts
Tuesday, Sep 11, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* New allegations emerge as board backs SIU President
In an article published on its Web site Monday, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that a copy it obtained of Glenn Poshard’s 1975 master’s thesis on drug abuse and the document contained sentences found nearly verbatim in sources published earlier. The passages in Poshard’s thesis are neither in quotation marks nor attributed to other sources, according to The Chronicle.
The first two sentences in his thesis, for instance, read, “Drug abuse is not a new phenomenon in America. Various forms of drug abuse have existed for years in the United States and other countries,” according to The Chronicle. It compares that with two sentences from a 1969 U.S. government report that read, “Drug abuse is not a new phenomenon. Varying forms of drug abuse have been present for years in the United States and other countries.”
* SIU board backs Poshard after plagiarism claims
The university’s board of trustees discussed Poshard during a one-hour private meeting Monday, ultimately deciding that since taking over as the system’s president in January 2006, Poshard “has met and exceeded our every expectation and has this board’s full confidence.”
* Consumers begin digesting Ameren’s electric rate rebates
* Rebate checks being sent this week
* Ameren to announce rebate details
* Ameren starts sending out rebates this week
* CPS payroll glitches hit retirees
* City teachers OK contract
* Chicago Public Radio: Teachers contracts short on reform
* Mary Mitchell: Chicago’s perfect choice for top cop
* Editorial: Think twice before raising Cook Co. utility taxes
Cook County Commissioner William “The Hog” Beavers has declared an end to patronage in Cook County.
“There’s no more patronage,” Beavers said last week. “The county has been cut to the bone.”
No more patronage? Yeah, sure.
Beaver’s pronouncement came amid the county’s search for more revenue to support next year’s budget. An array of ideas has been proposed. Many of them fall into the “Let’s Stick It To The Citizens for Our Inability to Be Fiscally Responsible” file. In other words, taxes.
Beavers has proposed taxes on electricity and natural gas, and he’ll soon come up with a telecommunications tax. There also are proposals for taxes on cigars and loose tobacco. And officials reportedly also are considering increasing the county’s cigarette tax and sales tax.
* IRS hits Todd Stroger’s campaign for unpaid taxes
* Son of former Harvey mayor gets $400,000 settlement
* WurfWhile: Laesch opens campaign office in Aurora for votes
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