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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY (Part 2) - Late session updates

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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A quick note

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Congrats to Aaron Chambers for landing on his feet. Chambers, you will recall, was the Rockford Register Star’s Statehouse bureau chief who was recently laid off in a short-sighted downsizing move.

Anyway, Aaron’s been hired by Serafin & Associates Inc. From a press release…

“Having spent considerable time as a Statehouse reporter in Springfield, I have a profound appreciation for what it takes to succeed in the capital city - the pressure of constant deadlines, the ever-changing political landscapes, and the difficult sources, and venues that are not always accommodating,” said Thom Serafin, CEO and President, who founded the Communications firm twenty years ago. “I know Aaron will bring the same energy and success to our clients and to our firm.” […]

Aaron will be based in Springfield and will support the firm’s clients with issues in Chicago, Illinois and nationally.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Memo; Gordon; Budget; Forby; Durkin; Veto; Burzynski (Use all caps in password)

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You may want to click on the pic for a larger version so that you can fully appreciate the look on the governor’s face…

Caption contest!!!

  55 Comments      


CTA threatening fare hikes again

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we were told yesterday, there will likely be no fare hikes this year, but there may be no avoiding any fare hikes in the near future

A CTA fare hike is looking more likely next year as the transit agency, hit hard by free rides for senior citizens and rising fuel costs, announced $40 million in internal cuts to balance this year’s budget.

“A fare increase has to be on the table” in 2009, CTA Chairman Carole Brown said Monday.

The free rides for nearly 100,000 senior citizens and others each day will cost the CTA at least $30 million this year and double that amount next year, according to projections based on soaring increases in non-paying riders. […]

A decision on hiking fares will be made after next Monday when the Regional Transportation Authority sets the CTA’s funding levels for 2009, Huberman said.

Further straining the CTA’s bottom line, the RTA has already warned about lower-than-expected revenue from a state sales-tax increase that the legislature approved in January for Chicago-area transit.

Also, the guv’s veto of $16 million for reduced fare subsidies will reportedly cost the CTA double that amount next year.

* More

CTA Chairman Carole Brown says, “I don’t think anyone anticipated the rise in fuel costs to this degree, as well as really the explosion in the number of senior riders who are going to ride for free.”

Thoughts?

  23 Comments      


Chicago considering GLBT school

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m interested to see how you feel about this idea

Chicago Public Schools is looking at opening a high school designed for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students.

A group of educators proposing the school say it will provide a safer learning environment for GLBT students, but would be open to everyone.

William Greaves is a spokesman for the group.

GREAVES: We saw many students who were well-adjusted and integrated into their high schools, but we saw just as many who were not integrated, and feeling isolated and at risk.

Bert Cohler is a professor of psychology at the University of Chicago. He agrees that some GLBT students need a more supportive environment for a time. But there’s at least one possible drawback.

COHLER: These kids grow up in a sheltered world and don’t learn to deal, if you will, with the slings and arrows of the ordinary straight world.

* More

A 2006 report by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network ( GLSEN ) found that 35 percent of Illinois students reported that sexual orientation is the most common reason students are harassed or bullied at school. Nearly the same number of Illinois students said the same for gender identity.

In the same report, almost 75 percent of Illinois students said they heard other students make anti-gay remarks…

Other studies have found that LGBTQ students are more likely to miss school because they feel unsafe and are more likely to report physical violence than their heterosexual counterparts. LGBT students are also more likely to report attempting suicide.

According to Hollendoner, even though CPS and others have tried to improve Chicago schools for LGBTQ students over the years, not all students experience a welcoming and safe environment. For example, 50 LGBTQ youth have enrolled in BYC’s general educational development program since last year. Many of these youth dropped out of school because of the violence they faced.

Thoughts?

  49 Comments      


Top 10 reasons for avoiding DC

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A bit of snark this week in my syndicated newspaper column…

On rare occasions somebody will ask me if I’ve ever given any thought to moving up to the “bigtime” political scene in Washington, D.C.

I have a standard reply.

Never.

Here are my top ten reasons…

10) Partisanship can be intense in Illinois, but rarely will you see political followers swoon over gigantic flip-flops from their party leaders here like they have nationally with Barack Obama and John McCain.

Obama says change comes to Washington, not from Washington, but picks a running mate who has been in the U.S. Senate since Richard Nixon was president, and the Democrats cheer wildly. McCain spends months ridiculing Obama’s lack of experience on the national stage, then chooses a veep who was chairing the Wasilla, Alaska PTA six years ago, and the Republicans go gaga. What a pathetic scene.

9) Our last two governors have been even more unpopular than our current president, but at least they haven’t started any wars. At least, not yet. Perhaps I shouldn’t be giving Rod Blagojevich any ideas. I shudder to think what might happen to Indiana or Wisconsin.

8) Arrogance abounds in Illinois politics. But everybody in D.C. from the president all the way down to the janitors on K Street believe they reside at the center of the universe. It’s a terminal illness, and nobody out there is immune. Barack Obama was immediately dismissed by the Beltway crowd because nobody knew who he was. Oops.

The same goes for Gov. Sarah Palin, who has been subjected to some of the harshest press coverage anyone has seen in years. If you don’t regularly attend cocktail parties with the D.C. elite, you are nobody and therefore are not to be respected.

Unlike Washington, D.C., we give people a chance here in Illinois. Rod Blagojevich, an unknown, backbench Congressman vaulted to our state’s highest office without anyone really claiming that he didn’t have the “right” sort of experience.

OK, maybe we made a mistake with that one.

7) A national columnist referred to Bill Clinton as the “first black president” and was taken seriously. Rod Blagojevich called himself Illinois’ first black governor, and was widely ridiculed. We just have more perspective on things.

6) US House: 435 members. U.S. Senate: 100 members. Illinois House and Senate: Only one member who matters in each, the House Speaker and the Senate President. As a reporter, the Statehouse is just much easier to cover than the U.S. Capitol.

5) For security reasons, the American president is practically condemned to living most of his term in the White House. Our governor can live wherever he wants, which, come to think of it, is mostly in a bunker far away from reporters who want to ask him about his various scandals. So, maybe that’s not a great big difference.

4) Illinoisans are far superior to those D.C. folks because we long ago figured out Barack Obama’s eery supernatural powers.

Obama managed to kick an incumbent off the ballot the first time he ran for state Senate, which is about as rare in Chicago as a pro-gun politician. Then, billionaire Blair Hull self-destructed in the 2004 Democratic U.S. Senate primary after allegations surfaced of spousal abuse. Then, Obama’s Republican U.S. Senate opponent Jack Ryan was forced off the ticket after a sex scandal involving the candidate and his own wife.

Then, the state Republicans convinced Maryland resident Alan Keyes to run against Obama, only to discover soon afterwards that Keyes’ daughter was an Anarchist lesbian. Hull, Ryan and Keyes can now barely show their faces in Illinois.

I’m not sure I’d want to be John McCain or Sarah Palin.

3) Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White is a 74 year old man who can do a standing backflip. No kidding. Eat your heart out, Condoleeza Rice!

2) Unlike Vice President Dick Cheney, Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn has never shot anyone in the face.

And the Number One reason I prefer covering Illinois to Washington, D.C.: I couldn’t bear to leave my readers at the [insert news outlet name here]!

Have you any additions?

…Adding… Let’s hope Gov. Blagojevich doesn’t get any bright ideas from this story

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has billed taxpayers for 312 nights spent in her own home during her first 19 months in office, charging a “per diem” allowance intended to cover meals and incidental expenses while traveling on state business.

Like Blagojevich, Gov. Palin refuses to live in the capital city. Unlike Blagojevich, taxpayers are giving her a per diem to live at home.

  73 Comments      


A spot of good news for a change

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Let’s hope a majority of aldermanic spines remain visible long enough to kill this goofy idea

Political opposition has given the boot — at least for now — to Mayor Daley’s proposal to drop the Denver boot threshold from three unpaid tickets to two.

The City Council’s Finance Committee took no action today on the mayor’s plan to squeeze scofflaws to put a $48 million dent in Chicago’s $420 million budget shortfall — and Ald. Bernard Stone (50th) thinks he knows why.

“They didn’t have the votes to carry it. A lot of us don’t want to vote for it. I don’t think you should boot a person who has two tickets and on goes the boot. I thought three was too little,” Stone said.

Ald. Toni Preckwinkle (4th) said the two-ticket threshold has “a disparate impact on poor and working people who have trouble paying their tickets in the first place.”

It’s beyond tough to successfully appeal a parking ticket in Chicago, no matter how bogus. So a whole lot of people would be in danger of being booted. This was about revenue, not justice.

* A new state law and a federal investigation appear to have put a stop to some outrageous towing fees in the south suburbs

Towing companies that preyed on motorists at accident scenes in Chicago, sometimes charging more than $4,000 per tow, appear to have changed their ways since a new state law went into effect July 1.

One of the most egregious offenders, City Wide Auto Recovery in Blue Island, appears to have gone out of business.

It has allowed its corporate registration with the Illinois secretary of state to expire. The secretary of state’s office said the corporation was involuntarily dissolved July 11.

When you call City Wide’s phone number, a tape recording says the number no longer is in service.

A spokesman for State Farm Insurance, headquartered in Bloomington, Ill., reports the number of tow charges in excess of $1,000 is “way down.”

“We’ve seen a sharp decrease in the number of ridiculously high tow charges since July 1,” said Lori Reimers, a government affairs officer for State Farm.

* An advisory question on recall is off the ballot in DuPage

DuPage County voters won’t get a chance to weigh in on the recall debate after all.

The county election commission is pulling off the Nov. 4 ballot an advisory question that asked voters whether they support recalling officials holding statewide offices. Currently, those officials cannot be removed from office by a vote of the people.

Election commission Executive Director Robert Saar said a review of the paperwork submitted to get the issue on the ballot uncovered too few signatures on the petitions. Supporters needed more than 21,000 signatures and garnered less than 7,000.

Cook County required 100,000 signatures for the recall ballot question, but supporters only collected 1,000. However, nobody objected to the Cook petitions.

Why is the failure of getting this measure onto the ballot good news? Because it won’t distract attention from the very real issue of the constitutional convention vote. At least, that’s my opinion.

* This, meanwhile, is pandering in the extreme

State Republican leaders have proposed legislation that would ban family members of elected officials from being appointed to political office.

The law is intended to prevent such situations as the one that tapped Cook County Board President Todd Stroger to replace his father on the ballot two years ago.

I can’t see how this idea would be anywhere close to being constitutional.

  15 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Kevin Fanning

* Fitzgerald sworn in as next chief justice

Thomas Fitzgerald has been sworn in as the next chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court.

Fitzgerald’s colleagues unanimously chose him in May for the three-year leadership term. Outgoing Chief Justice Bob Thomas swore in the 67-year-old Fitzgerald on Monday.

* Fitzgerald takes over as state’s chief justice

Promising to always “strive to do the right thing,” Thomas Fitzgerald of Chicago embarked Monday on a three-year term as chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court.

* State’s high court differs from U.S.’s

* Previous chief justices include pro-football player, telegraph man

* Ex-tollway worker to get $87,500 to drop suit

A former Illinois Tollway employee who filed a federal lawsuit claiming he was improperly disciplined by the agency will get an $87,500 settlement in exchange for dropping his case.

State Toll Highway Authority board members Monday unanimously approved the deal with Scott D. Okun, who was put on unpaid leave as head of the tollway’s I-Pass program in February 2006 before resigning from his $87,000-a-year job.

Tollway officials at that time accused Okun of violating tollway procurement rules in the awarding of I-Pass-related printing work to a firm that employed a relative of his.

“We filed the lawsuit for several reasons, but the primary reason was to try to get some sort of vindication for Scott,” said Okun’s attorney, Howard L. Teplinsky. “Scott didn’t do anything improper, illegal or anything like that.”

* Community college funding cuts hurt - Schools statewide have had to increase tuition on already strapped students

llinois Central College President John Erwin repeated his criticisms of a lack of state funding, saying the state is underfunding veterans grants and have completely cut out money for high school students trying to get an early start on their post-secondary education - leaving community colleges to pick up the tab.

* Study shows District 186 students’ performance poor - Wide racial disparity reflected in report’s data

* African American Student Achievement Report

* Helping students avoid debt

Alexi Giannoulias, Illinois’ treasurer, plans to announce legislation today that would clamp down on promotions that credit card companies gear toward undergrads, including free T-shirts, Frisbees or iPod headphones for filling out a credit card application.

“Basically we want to limit the ability of credit card companies who prey on college students,” Giannoulias said. “Unfortunately this can lead to serious long-term debt for students and their families.”

* Feds say CN can’t acquire EJ&E early

Canadian National Railway cannot purchase the EJ&E Railroad before a final study on the impact of the sale is released, the U.S. Surface Transportation Board said Monday.

In a decision issued late Monday night, the federal board, which approves all railroad sales in the United States, denied CN’s request to take possession of the EJ&E early.

* Nicor customers claim overcharging

* Chicago schools, police officials unveil plans to curb student violence

“The bottom line is that students know who the bullies and gangbangers are; we want to know that too,” Weis said. “In recent weeks, unspeakable tragedies that have claimed the lives of innocent victims have outraged all of us as educators and law enforcement. We must do what we can to prevent violence against our children.”

* Students can txt tips 2 cops

* Bad cops? Let the force be without them

* Chicago public ridership is up, but so are losses

* Kane County likely to soften hiring-freeze plan, stop layoffs

* African American Student Achievement Report

* Justice Burke: George had ‘casual attitude’ about sex abuser priest

In a new book, Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke slams Cardinal Francis George for his “lack of honesty” and “casual attitude” about allowing a sex abuser priest to stay in his mansion in 2003. […]

“The cardinal wasn’t honest with me,” Burke tells Kennedy in an interview conducted in the summer of 2007. “Perhaps he was not honest with himself.”

* Constitution Day celebrates our eroding freedoms

* Celebrate your right to vote with the 2008 Election Day Advent Calendar!

* And now for the bad news

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* New RTA transit proposal called 'too little, too late half-measure that puts holding on to power above the needs of riders and taxpayers'
* ISP reports 71 percent decrease in expressway/interstate shootings since 2021
* It’s just a bill
* Roundup: Madigan ends testimony
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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