Election results open thread
Tuesday, Apr 7, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This will probably be my last post until Thursday. My intern Mike Murray will do a large Morning Shorts tomorrow with everything from all categories. I’m having a wisdom tooth removed in the morning and will likely be out of commission most of the day. Hope nothing big happens.
Anyway, enough of that. This is an open thread to discuss tonight’s local election and special congressional election results.
Have fun.
* 8:19 pm - OK, just one update: Jeff Clarke has been elected mayor of Pawnee. God help us all.
Also, some guy named Mike Quigley has all but won a congressional seat.
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* 2:24 pm - Rahm Emanuel forgot to vote absentee for Mike Quigley.
[I bent the time-space thingamabob to put that post at the top.]
* 2:25 PM - From a press release…
Attorney General Lisa Madigan today announced the indictment of a Chicago-area businessman and his construction company for fraudulently obtaining public funds reserved for minority businesses in construction contracts with City of Chicago agencies.
A Cook County grand jury returned the indictment today against Robert Blum, 56, of New Lenox, Ill., and Castle Construction Co., based in Markham, Ill., on 10 counts of fraudulently obtaining public moneys reserved for disadvantaged business enterprises, one count of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud. Blum is the owner and CEO of Castle Construction.
“Castle Construction never would have received these public contracts without employing deceptive practices, and because of that, this company prevented other legitimate businesses from securing contracts intended to help provide business growth opportunities for minority-owned businesses,” Madigan said.
The indictment alleges that Blum and Castle Construction fraudulently obtained two construction contracts worth more than $18 million and allegedly devised a scheme to misrepresent and conceal how much of the public funds actually went to minority-owned businesses, a condition required by both contracts. […]
Public Integrity Bureau Deputy Chief Mary Bucaro and Special Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Bunge are handling the case for Madigan’s office.
Castle Construction is a major political player and has been in a lot of hot water lately, including similar allegations about the construction of a Chicago firehouse. It’s reportedly under federal investigation in connection with the ongoing probe of Rod Blagojevich, to whom the company donated big bucks. The company’s founder is good buddies with former Blagojevich fundraiser Chris Kelly and the company even did work on the former governor’s campaign office.
* 2:36 pm - I can understand the motivation and the reasoning, but considering the electoral pressures and ambitions of state’s attorneys, I can see why legislators might be uncomfortable with this idea…
Illinois should adopt its own version of a federal racketeering law that’s been used to take down Mafia families and crooked politicians in order to better fight corruption and violent gangs, Cook County State’s Atty. Anita Alvarez said Tuesday.
Legislation being prepared by Alvarez’s office would adapt provisions of the RICO Act to help authorities here investigate political, white-collar and street crime, Alvarez told the Chicago Tribune editorial board.
Alvarez said the reaction to the law from House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton has been optimistic but cautious.
“Both of them were actually very interested,” Alvarez said. “We were not shut out, but no one was signing on immediately.”
*** 4:28 pm *** Not good news at all.…
A congressional ethics board has launched a preliminary inquiry into U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill), related to President Obama’s vacant Senate seat and the corruption investigation of ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned
The Office of Congressional Ethics, formed just last year, voted in late March to conduct a “preliminary review,” of actions surrounding Jackson’s bid to be appointed to the Senate seat, according to documents received by parties involved in the case. The committee launched the action Thursday — the same day Blagojevich was indicted on corruption charges.
The panel has asked parties in the Blagojevich case — including his former gubernatorial staff and campaign staff — to turn over any documents, emails, or other correspondence involving Jackson Jr. and his campaign staff, Jackson’s brother, Jonathan, and political fund-raisers Raghuveer Nayak and Rajinder Bedi, lawyers close to the probe told the Sun-Times. The request for information is from June of last year through Dec. 31, 2008.
Nayak, Bedi and Jonathan Jackson attended a Dec. 6 fund-raiser hosted by the Indian community for Friends of Blagojevich. People attending the event have told the Sun-Times that discussions about future fund-raising for congressman Jackson’s Senate candidacy took place at the function. [emphasis added]
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Unsolicited advice
Tuesday, Apr 7, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Dear Associated Press,
Please, stop the stoopid…
Taking aim at the way news is spread across the Internet, The Associated Press said on Monday that Web sites that used the work of news organizations must obtain permission and share revenue with them, and that it would take legal action against those that did not.
A.P. executives said they were concerned about a variety of news forums around the Web, including major search engines like Google and Yahoo and aggregators like the Drudge Report that link to news articles, smaller sites that sometimes reproduce articles whole, and companies that sell packaged news feeds.
Lemme explain this to you, APers, since you seem to be so clueless.
I, or Drudge or the Google or somebody else makes linkies to AP stories and your members then get all the ad revenue (which they share with you in the form of dues) when readers click on those aforementioned linkies. That’s somehow bad?
On the right side of this here page, you will see an automated news feed for AP stories - the sort of feed you appear to hate. Well, dingbats, that feed drives readers to your subscribers’ sites. The Chicago Public Radio people have told me that this blog is one of their top referral sites. Unlike y’all, they are not the least bit moronic. They welcome the traffic and appear to love the attention. CBS2 designed a video news feed especially for this site. They’re smart, unlike you AP goofs.
I also excerpt your stories under what’s called the Fair Use Doctrine. Linkies are always included, which drives more visitors to newspaper/TV/radio sites, which then helps those sites make money. Yes, money.
Not a day goes by that some reporter doesn’t request favorable placement for a story on this site. I’m always more than happy to comply. Reporters know that getting their stories posted here means the people who matter most in Illinois politics - my readers - will see those stories. This arrangement also benefits me, of course. But that’s the beauty of it.
If you want to go after sites that reprint entire articles, well, you already have that ability and my full blessing. Posting articles in their entirety is very bad practice and should be punished. I don’t do it and I don’t allow commenters to do it, either. Maybe one or two will get through the screen on occasion, but I do my best to prevent this.
But, if you’re thinking of trying to pass a new law to gain new powers, well, you can forget about that. We’ll crush you. If you want to start suing people, then brace for a fight, or risk making your members’ truly horrific financial situation even worse as those wonderful little linkies disappear.
Seriously, how can you be so totally idiotic?
…And another thing… Yesterday, I broke the story that Gov. Quinn had signed an executive order repealing one of Rod Blagojevich’s most controversial executive orders. The AP followed up, but no credit was given and no link to this site was offered. That’s no big deal. It happens all the time. But get off your high horse about “theft.” Look in the mirror, first.
…And while I’m at it… What if we turn the tables on you, AP? What if bloggers and aggregators demand a piece of the ad revenues which we generate for your members by driving so much traffic to their sites? Think about that for a minute, jerks.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Apr 7, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Steve Chapman does not love the fact that Illinois exempts all pension income from taxation…
It’s an expensive indulgence, costing Illinois about $1 billion in revenue every year–this at a time when the state faces a big deficit. And it’s hard to defend on grounds of fairness. If other types of income are taxed, why should retirement benefits be exempt? Social Security benefits are subject to the federal income tax.
The exemption helps the poor, elderly retirees, of course, but also people who aren’t poor or old. The state says that one-third of the people who get retirement payments are under 65 and many have other income in the form of wages and salaries.
Quinn’s tax proposal would raise the personal exemption from $2,000 per person to $6,000 per person, which would mean low-income people, retired or not, would be spared state income taxes. So it makes sense to repeal the retirement exemption, treating that income the same as other earnings. Before we raise income tax rates, we should plug the holes that are leaking revenue.
* The Question: Should this exemption be abolished? Exlain fully.
* Bonus Question: How politically volatile do you think this would really be?
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Debating reform: More items for your perusal
Tuesday, Apr 7, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller
* One reform item which is rarely if ever discussed is the power of local elections boards to do things like this…
Voters in south suburban Bremen Township will see two names on the ballot for township supervisor — Maggie Crotty and Sarah Hamm. But they will be handed a notice saying that a vote for Hamm won’t count. The state appellate court ruled her off the ballot last week, leaving Crotty, a Democratic state senator, to run unopposed.
Earlier, Crotty supporter George Murphy put together an objection to Hamm’s candidacy, saying she did not have sufficient signatures. Murphy arrived at the township office 40 minutes after it closed on the final day to file objections. Murphy called township clerk Leonard J. Hines, who’s running with Crotty, and Hines accepted the objection after hours. A Cook County judge said that smelled fishy and threw out the objection, leaving Hamm on the ballot. The appellate court reversed that ruling last week.
Way too often, local elections boards are controlled by incumbents and their friends and allies and the results are too often predictable. We need a better way.
…Adding… The Sun-Times has posted more info to the story’s online version…
Hines drove to the office, let Murphy in the back door, notarized Murphy’s objection and accepted it after-hours. A Cook County judge said that smelled fishy and threw out the objection, questioning whether an average, unconnected citizen would get the same service from the township clerk. That judge’s ruling left Hamm on the ballot. The appellate court reversed that ruling last week.
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column makes some reform suggestions. I’m not wedded to any of them, but let’s take a look anyway…
I’ve often said I’m a reform agnostic.
It’s not that I don’t believe in good government.
I do. Fervently.
And I most certainly don’t believe as some do that voters should be given the sole responsibility to weed out the crooks and con artists. “Let the buyer beware” just isn’t good enough. Rod Blagojevich’s two consecutive gubernatorial campaign wins and George Ryan’s earlier win proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that voters simply aren’t able to handle this task on their own.
So, we do need some “consumer protection” laws in Illinois. But we should also keep some important points in mind.
For instance, campaign contribution caps are now being pushed hard by good government groups and Gov. Pat Quinn’s independent reform commission. Most want a federal-style program that would cap contributions at about $2,500 for individuals and $5,000 for political action committees.
On its face, that looks quite reasonable. Contribution limitations are imposed in Washington, D.C., and many other states.
But caps can also hurt those who challenge the status quo.
It’s probably no coincidence that no incumbent Illinois congressman has lost his or her seat for years unless they were under some sort of extreme ethical cloud. For instance, Dan Rostenkowski got caught up in a probe of the U.S. House post office and was the only Illinois Democrat turned out during the historic 1994 national Republican landslide. Dan Crane was ousted by voters after his involvement in a congressional page sex scandal. Charles Hayes lost a primary when he was linked to a House bounced checks scandal.
Back in 2007, several deeply entrenched Chicago aldermen lost their seats to young reformers because a few reform-minded labor unions dumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into their campaigns. If the union contributions had been capped, most of those reformers would’ve lost.
Caps mean that most challengers have to work much harder to raise money. Incumbents have access to financial networks that usually dwarf those of outsiders. National political parties and caucus organizations often take up the slack these days to help level the congressional playing field, but that usually means they choose who runs. The proposals coming out of Springfield would cap those sorts of contributions to state and local candidates.
The horrific venality revealed after Rod Blagojevich’s arrest and indictment has prompted loud and angry calls to “do something and do it now.” One of those “somethings” most often mentioned is campaign contribution caps.
If we’re going down that road then we should do as little harm as possible to challengers. A higher cap, perhaps somewhere near the $10,000 legislative limit proposed by Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno, of Lemont, might be the way to go. It’s high enough to help people fend off uncapped, self-financing millionaire opponents, but low enough to do some reforming good.
Also, barring all campaign donations of any kind to incumbent legislators and statewide officials during the spring legislative session would help even out the playing field for challengers and could prevent some pay to play hanky panky. It might also ensure the General Assembly adjourns on time.
Banning contributions from industries regulated by the government would be an obvious help.
Requiring almost immediate online disclosure of contributions could be an effective deterrent. If we had known in “real time” that Blagojevich was taking $25,000 contributions from his appointees to state boards and commissions, we might have been able to stop some of his excesses.
One of the most important changes we can make has nothing to do with money, however.
Prohibiting incumbents from drawing legislative, congressional, aldermanic and county board district maps is an absolute must. Incumbents in this state “choose” their voters by manipulating their own district boundaries every 10 years.
Iowa allows a computer to draw district maps based on population, not political or other parochial preferences. As the congressional results show, incumbents have far too much advantage, so keeping them from drawing their own maps would be an enormous help.
In the end, though, Illinois voters absolutely must start looking beyond the slick ads, familiar names and blind partisan leanings that have gotten us into this mess. Just about every political reporter in Illinois did his or her very best in the 2006 governor’s race to warn voters they were about to re-elect a crook. But voters bought Blagojevich’s bag of disgusting goods and here we stand.
…Adding… Far too much of the “reform” proposals focus on the evils of money, rather than making elections, including primaries, more competitive and, therefore, more small “d” democratic. I’ll have more on this soon.
* And the Tribune has a couple of reform items it wants passed before the “big” capital projects bill is addressed…
First, a bill sponsored by Rep. Kathleen Ryg (D-Vernon Hills) that would require all proposed transportation projects be measured against specific goals—congestion relief or energy savings, for example—and ranked accordingly. The bill, supported by the Metropolitan Planning Council and Chicago 2020, also seeks to balance the needs of urban and rural communities and to ensure that projects are approved based not on clout but on how well they further statewide goals.
Second, a proposal from the Illinois Reform Commission that would insulate state procurement officers from politics. Setting up an independent office to award contracts would help ensure that those decisions are based on objective and professional standards instead of being manipulated by politicians. The plan would also close numerous loopholes that allow government officials to skirt the procurement process altogether.
* And, via comments on another post, we have this from Quinn commission chairman Patrick Collins…
“We just learned today that we have been invited to testify April 21 before the joint [House/Senate ethics] committee,” he said of a separate reform study group appointed by House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton. “I’m not sure that would have happened a couple of weeks ago.”
Let’s see. Madigan sent his chief legal counsel to testify before Collins’ commission weeks ago, and from what I remember there’s been an open invitation for Collins and his crew to testify at the joint committee.
Thoughts?
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* The Sun-Times reports today that federal investigators want to know why Rod Blagojevich believed he would get $1.5 million in campaign contributions from an associate of Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. in exchange for appointing Jackson to the then-vacant US Senate seat.
Jackson and his lawyers met with the feds over a week ago, according to the paper…
Among the areas of interest, sources say, was what Jackson told his representatives to convey to the Blagojevich camp on his behalf last year — a time Jackson sought the Senate seat appointment.
And, in a signal that the probe into dealings involving a possible Jackson appointment is still under way, witnesses and possible evidence involved in that part of the alleged scheme were recently subpoenaed by a federal grand jury, sources say.
Jackson has repeatedly claimed that he is not a target in the probe, and even said he was tipped off by the feds in advance of Blagojevich’s early-morning arrest.
The paper also has some internal call logs from the governor’s office which appear to show the congressman’s interest in the seat…
“JJJr called 2nd time — LM Gov returned call @ 4:50 p.m. on 10/24-JJ on plane,” the log states. “JJJr called a 3rd time @3:30 p.m. on 10-29.”
Blagojevich’s people contacted the congressman Nov. 25 about scheduling a meeting. The next day, the Rev. Jesse Jackson left a message for Blagojevich, saying he wanted to speak to the governor.
A Dec. 2 notation in the ex-governor’s log indicates: “Will prob do JJJr next week. But do not call him yet.”
Rod Blagojevich and congressman Jackson eventually met Dec. 8 — the day before Blagojevich was arrested.
…Adding… Oops. Forgot about this one…
Tribune Co. would have received as much as $45 million and a 5 percent stake in a leased Wrigley Field under a deal involving a state loan of $300 million toward restoring the historic ballpark, a proposal found in state documents shows.
A Nov. 19 memo released Monday night by the Illinois Finance Authority, marked “strictly confidential — for discussion purposes only,” outlines a complicated deal in which a new owner of the century-old stadium’s tenant, the Chicago Cubs, would pay $25 million a year for 30 years. […]
The Nov. 19 agreement, released to The Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act, shows the finance authority, through a complex venture, would retain 95 percent interest in a company set up to lease Wrigley to a new Cubs owner until 2039.
In addition to the upfront contribution, the Tribune would control the other 5 percent.
What’s almost never discussed is the curious timing of former (and now current) budget guru John Filan’s transfer to the Illinois Finance Authority just as these talks were heating up last year.
* On another front, Mark Brown looks at the “beauty” of the feds’ conspiracy charge strategy against Blagojevich…
The beauty of tying everything together as a conspiracy is that jurors will be able to see the totality of the pay-to-play practices carried out by Blagojevich: from fund-raising schemes carried to completion early in his administration — on which his own fingerprints may be less distinct — to the shakedown interruptus captured on the wiretaps where his involvement will ring through loud and clear in his own voice.
I found it telling that the accusations of Blagojevich’s attempting to sell Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat, front and center after the governor’s December arrest, are practically secondary in his indictment. There’s just so much more coming at him now than the stuff on the wiretaps.
That’s going to be the biggest problem for his defense attorney. Any one of the charged schemes might be beatable from a defense viewpoint. But taken as a whole, it’s going to be difficult for Blagojevich to sell his story that he was an honorable public servant felled by his efforts to fight the political forces of evil.
* Related…
* Quinn nixes Blagojevich executive orderexecutive order on ethics
* Blagojevich Name Still Towers Over Far South Side
* He Can Run (To Disneyland)
* Zorn: Once again, Deb Mell puts family first
* Edgar: Burden of improving Illinois should fall on everyone’s shoulders
* Union wants TRS’s Bauman gone now
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*** UPDATE 2 *** This is somewhat odd, but it probably can’t hurt…
The producer behind the “Barbershop” movies, “Soul Food” and “Nothing Like the Holidays,” showcasing Humboldt Park, has found another family with a compelling story to tell — this time in documentary form.
His subject: Alexi Giannoulias, the state treasurer, who is considering a run for the U.S. Senate seat previously held by his mentor, President Barack Obama.
“He’s got an interesting story to tell. He’s young, and this is going to be an amazing political race,” says Mr. Teitel, who launched shooting at a small fundraising gathering for Mr. Giannoulias. The filmmaker arrived with camera and sound crew in tow.
*** UPDATE 1 *** From the Post-Dispatch blog…
This is from a written statement by Lance Trover, spokesman for the Illinois Republican Party. He notes that, four days ago, Moody’s downgraded the state’s rating on general obligation bonds from A1 to Aa3, and today, Fitch Ratings placed Illinois’ AA minus rating on a negative credit watch.
“While the Illinois bond rating tumbles, Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias has been spending his time raising money for a U.S. Senate race,’’ Trover wrote. “. . . On the same day the State of Illinois appeared on a credit watch list, Alexi Giannoulias was busy trumpeting his fundraising numbers for a political campaign. … Blagojevich Democrats have created a fiscal crisis and instead of serving as financial watchdog for the people of Illinois, Giannoulias is focused on his next political move.’’
Um, how exactly is Giannoulias supposed to have prevented that downgrade?
[ *** End of Update *** ]
* Wow. Just wow. Giannoulias had hoped to raise about half of this when he started out. Considering the current economic climate, this is freaking huge…
He’s still just at the “exploratory committee” stage, but Illinois Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias has already raised $1.1 million in the 28 days since he announced he was “exploring” a run for U.S. Senate.
He is eyeing the seat formerly held by his friend and basketball court partner, President Obama.
“It’s actually unbelievable on two counts: The sum of $1.1 million, in and of itself, is unbelievable, but the fact that it’s in the worst political fund-raising environment that, I think, any of us have ever seen, makes it all the more extraordinary and impressive,” said political activist and fund-raiser Michael Bauer.
The Washington Post reported a week ago that political donations are down 26 percent across the board from two years ago, presumably because of the economic downturn. Giannoulias supporters said this big a haul — with no Giannoulias personal or family loans, PAC or corporate money — in the 28 days before the March 31 quarterly reporting deadline appears to be a record.
Giannoulias told me last night that there is no personal money in that mix. That $1.1 mil may also be close to a one-month US Senate record, by the way.
And Bill Daley has been awful quiet lately, hasn’t he? He wasn’t using a threat of a US Senate run to leverage that ambassadorship to China, was he? Whatever the case, floating his name constantly in Sneed’s column didn’t seem to hurt Giannoulias’ fundraising one little bit.
* Meanwhile, appointed US Sen. Roland Burris said yesterday he still hasn’t made up his mind about whether he’ll run for real and added…
He has not raised any money for a run.
Surprise, surprise.
* And in another race, Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s campaign fired off a blast e-mail to supporters yesterday asking them to vote in an online poll…
Right now the Chicago Tribune is hosting an online poll that asks if Lisa should run for governor. Cast you [sic] ballot and let your opinion be known by clicking on the link
Clicking on the link shows her efforts haven’t worked wonders…
Yes (1107 responses) 41.6%
No (1552 responses) 58.4%
2659 total responses (Results not scientific)
Maybe it was the typo.
* Related…
* Sweet: Madigan debuts in D.C. as state decision looms : Madigan, in a brown pants suit, flanked by men all wearing grey, was trying on the big stage to see how it fit. It fit fine.
* Illinois attorney general, feds crack down on mortgage scams
* Feds, states clamp down on refinancing schemes
* State’s attorney vows to change search warrant filing system
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Morning Shorts
Tuesday, Apr 7, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray
* Report: 3.5M in Illinois spent time uninsured
* 22 firms plan mass layoffs
During the month, 22 employers advised state government of their plans to cut workers, mostly this spring. In total, the companies disclosed they were shedding at least 2,486 jobs.
Chicago area employers making the list include NBC Universal Inc., which said it is cutting 103 positions at its Chicago offices, home to WMAQ-Channel 5.
The largest of the March layoff announcements were outside the Chicago area. Engine manufacturer Android Industries LLC said it will close a Belvidere operation, costing 273 jobs. Soybean processor ACH Food Cos. Inc. said it will close a Champaign operation and lay off 246 people.
Last week, state officials said the unemployment rate in the Chicago area spiked to 9 percent in February, from 5.6 percent a year earlier, and many experts expect further increases into double digits.
* AMA laying off Chicago staffers
The American Medical Association is laying off about 100 workers, or 8 percent of its staff, to “offset declining revenues amid the ongoing economic downturn,” the Chicago-based national doctors group said this afternoon.
The staff cuts at the nation’s largest doctor group will trim “open and existing staff positions” at both its Chicago headquarters and Washington offices effective May 4, the AMA said. The AMA has about 1,200 staffers.
* AMA to lay off 100 workers, 8 percent of staff
* Ethel’s Chocolate Lounge closing 5 of 6 Chicago-area locations
* Mars closing Ill. Ethel’s Chocolate stores
* Hold those layoffs
The other steps companies are taking to cut costs are not exactly harmless to workers. Chief among them: capping the number of hours employees can work, cutting or freezing pay and suspending matching payments to 401(k) plans.
* Laid-off workers are fired up over Asian steel
* Chicago suburban downtowns: Officials find ways to lure businesses
* Private lenders take students to cleaners
* Chicago Olympics: Pothole protesters stopped in their tracks
For months, South Side residents have called the city complaining about the craterlike potholes along Garfield Boulevard near Throop Street.
So on Monday, they scheduled a protest in Englewood, demanding that the mayor fix potholes in all neighborhoods, not just at proposed 2016 Olympic sites visited by an international commission this week.
But moments before Monday’s protest, Chicago Department of Transportation crews showed up, filling holes along a stretch of Garfield, including the area where the demonstrators had gathered.
CDOT spokesman Brian Steele said the timing was coincidental.
* Chicago Promotes Blue-Green Games
Chicago’s Olympic team told the visiting international committee today that the city would host the most environmentally friendly games ever if Chicago gets the 2016 bid.
* Is it too late to switch bid to Winter Olympics?
* Hip-hop artists rap to CPS beat
Backed by Microsoft, which donated $15,000 to help restore CPS music education programs, the artists headlined a star-filled benefit at the downtown Hard Rock Cafe.
* Illinois to track students’ school progress
Illinois will begin tracking schoolchildren as they progress from preschool through college, logging the schools they attend, the educators who teach them and the high school courses they take, state officials said Monday.
The State Board of Education announced a $9 million grant from the U.S. education department to fund the data system.
* Chicago mental health centers closing: After sit-in at Mayor Richard Daley’s office, supporters meet with top aide
* Plan to close nCENTER also upsetting seniors
* Teamsters Local 743: Chicago Trial opens in rigged-election case
* Contempt ruling challenged: Cook County prosecutors appeal cut in jail time for not testifying
* 911 subpoenas just shoved in a drawer
An employee at Chicago’s 911 emergency center has been disciplined after four months worth of unprocessed subpoenas for 911 tapes were found stashed in her office drawer.
* Seat-belt use up; highway deaths down 9 percent
* Sox Opening Day Not a Second Too Early for Some
…Added content…
* Manzullo’s earmarks beat online deadline
* Hare, Braley seek $545 million in earmarks
* Rep. Hare digs at Schock over his votes, abs
* Rep. Schock seen as crucial to GOP’s outreach efforts
* Rep. Aaron Schock: ‘Hottest freshman’ in Congress pushes beyond his media-friendly profile
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