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Morning Shorts: FYI for blog readers

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

Rich has decided to extend his vacation another week. Thus, I will be in charge of running the blog again this week. I am a poor man’s ‘Rich Miller’, but beggars can’t be choosers. :)

I was not able to plan for this, however, and as a result I scheduled a lot of hours at my other job this week.

So I will do posts where I can, but unfortunately the blog will make heavy use of the format I have used for today’s posts. (I.E. More round-ups on issues and less analysis)

* 12:21 pm - I have added some additional articles to the elections section since I first posted it this morning…

  9 Comments      


Round-Up: State Governance

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* High school athletes can be tested for steroids anytime

Gov. Quinn on Friday signed legislation that would allow testing of high school athletes for steroids during any point in their seasons.

The anti-doping law, pushed by Rep. Jack Franks (D-Woodstock), builds on the Illinois High School Association’s existing policy. For the first time this past year, that group performed random steroid tests on student athletes, but only during the playoffs.

* Quinn signs student veterans legislation

Quinn Friday also signed legislation he says will benefit student veterans at Illinois public colleges and universities.[…]

The Higher Education Veterans Service Act requires Illinois schools to create a guide of services available for veterans. It also states that schools with more than 1,000 students must appoint a liaison to work with both administrators and student veterans.

* State employee furlough plans still taking shape

State agencies are being required to develop plans for workers to meet the 12-day furlough requirement while still maintaining operations.

“In developing a furlough program, agencies should take into consideration 24/7 operations, federal funding of employee positions, revenue-generating positions and other budgetary considerations in ensuring service delivery and staff coverage,” says a memo from the Department of Central Management Services to state agency officials.

Those plans are to be returned to CMS by Friday (Aug. 14).

The letters sent Friday were addressed simply to “state employee,” and say that “non furlough-exempt” employees must take 12 unpaid days off before June 30, 2010. Five of those days must be taken before Jan. 1, the letter states

* An ex-cop still trying to save lives

McCue is executive director of the Guildhaus in Blue Island, a halfway house for the long-term treatment of alcoholics and drug abusers. Only eight years ago, he was a client himself.[…]

McCue telephoned Friday because he had received a letter from the Illinois Department of Human Services.

“Our budget is being cut 75 percent,” he said. “That means we will go from $220,000 in state funding to $55,000. We’re in trouble. I don’t know any rich people to ask for money. Most of the people I know have come through here.

“And we have a tremendous success rate. We’ve saved people’s lives. Put them back to work. But I don’t know how we’re going to keep this place running without that state funding.”

* Overtime costs corrections

Gov. Pat Quinn plans to lay off as many as 1,000 prison workers at the same time a lengthy state audit reveals that overtime costs within the Illinois Department of Corrections increased from $19.2 million to $37 million two years ago because of staffing shortages.

The review by Illinois Auditor General Bill Holland’s office only pertains to fiscal years 2007 and 2008, when the corrections department was managed by a former director and under the administration of a former governor. Former director Roger Walker was appointed by then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Walker was replaced in June by Gov. Pat Quinn’s appointee, Michael Randle.[…]

“This goes to the heart of the failure of the management of the department,” he [Holland] said, adding that because there have not been dramatic changes in the management since the two years in the audit, the foundation going forward is weak. “I think the new director has got some real soul searching to do with his management team.”

One problem cited in the audit was that the department violated the legislature’s intent by not spending extra money dedicated to hire new frontline staff. The General Assembly authorized spending $11.7 million to hire 231 new staff in fiscal year 2007, but only 154 new staff were hired. The next year, the legislature allotted $12 million to hire 500 new employees, but only six were reported as being hired. Instead, according to the audit, the department used the money to pay for existing staff, which also included more expensive overtime costs.

* Boost in lottery profits not guaranteed

Winnett said she’s heard the $150 million figure, but lottery officials aren’t prepared to make predictions.[…]

Winnett also cautioned that the federal government could put a halt to selling lottery tickets online.

“No (state) lottery is selling individual tickets on demand over the Internet,” Winnett said. “It seems that the Justice Department has some concerns on that.”

Legislators are counting on increased lottery revenue to help pay for the state’s $31 billion capital plan.

* Illinois 336 draft ready for review

Forty years after the state Legislature identified the project and seven years after studies began, the last draft of a Macomb-to-Peoria highway is ready for inspection.

Exhibits, alignment maps and an environmental impact statement will be available for view at three open houses sponsored by the Illinois Department of Transportation next week.

“The overall purpose of the meeting is to get public input on what they see. There’s still time to tweak, although we hope there’s nothing major,” said Eric Therkildsen, an IDOT project development engineer. “We’re not too concerned about tweaks yet.”

That’s because funding for actual construction has not been allocated. If Illinois 336 goes forward, roads and bridges making up the 60-mile stretch of highway are estimated to cost between $710 million and $730 million. That does not include land acquisition or engineering, although $7 million has been approved for the design and soils work.

* Finke: State candidates love to draw out the suspense

Will Gov. Pat Quinn break with Blagojevich tradition and actually show up on time to cut the ribbon? For that matter, will Quinn actually show up? Blagojevich was known to skip the parade and most of the fair itself, although he did cut the ribbon.

For what it’s worth, Quinn’s office said he will march in the parade. What we’ll have to see is if the route is lined with disgruntled state workers fearful of losing their jobs and how they will greet Quinn.

The two political days should also be fun. Because the governor is a Democrat, their day is known as Governor’s Day. Under Blagojevich, Governor’s Day was known for the spontaneous appearance of busloads of people who suddenly decided on their own to travel to Springfield in support of the governor. So great was their love for Blagojevich that they sometimes booed his arch-enemy, House Speaker Michael Madigan, who is also chairman of the state Democrats. Last year, Madigan skipped the fun. Will this year be different? Will anyone really care?

Then there is Republican Day, which recently has had all of the festive atmosphere of a visitation. It should be different this year, what with roughly half the Republicans remaining in the Legislature running for some statewide office or another. If each candidate shows up with their own cheering section, the crowd could be impressive indeed. And optimism will fill the air, much as it is now filling the air for, say, Detroit Lions fans.

* Officials hoping for larger crowds when state fair opens Friday

Illinois State Fair officials are hoping for good attendance this year despite higher admission and gas prices and staff cutbacks.[…]

State budget cuts meant the fair’s staff was reduced by 15 percent. The fair also has had to raise admission prices and cut its entertainment budget by $300,000.

With the first price increase in 19 years, adults will pay $5 instead of $3 for admission, and children who used to get in free will pay $2.

But Bliefnick pointed out that once inside, much of the fair’s entertainment is still free, including Frisbee-catching dogs, horse racing, singing and dancing.

* State fair expanding recycling efforts for 2009

“We’re doubling the number of recycling containers in an effort to get more fairgoers to pitch in and recycle,” Bliefnick said. “We’ll probably have a couple hundred for glass, plastic and aluminum.”

She said the fair has had recycling in beer tents for aluminum cans and bottles for the past couple of years, and that effort has been very successful.

“We’re also banning plastic foam for all of our 30 vendors,” she said. “We hope they’ll comply.”

In another effort aimed mostly at vendors, the fair plans to recycle cardboard this year.

* Quinn headlining conference on river

PEORIA —Gov. Pat Quinn will headline the 12th Biennial Governor’s Conference on the Illinois River in October at the Hotel Pere Marquette.

“Our waterways are among the most vital natural resources in the Land of Lincoln, and it is imperative we do everything possible to protect them,” a Quinn spokeswoman said on behalf of the governor. “This conference will help find comprehensive and coordinated solutions that will preserve and restore the Illinois watershed for generations to come.”

Every other year, the conference attracts representatives of more than 30 local, state and federal agencies and advocacy groups. This year it will include an ecosystem tour, an interactive digital technologies open house and workshops, as well as keynote speakers.

U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is tentatively planning to speak, although his office said that has not yet been confirmed. Illinois Department of Natural Resources head Marc Miller will moderate a panel on ecosystem services - a process that establishes the monetary value of natural resources.

* The woman who took on the Terminator

Bass surely got an earful from her counterpart, Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan. They were huddling when I arrived at Monday night’s event at the Union League Club.[…]

She is “jealous” of Illinois’ legislative advantages. Madigan has been a fixture in the Illinois House since 1971 and has served 25 years as speaker. California’s strict term limits have limited Bass to months, not years, on the learning curve. She must leave office next year.[…]

“My style is collaborative, it’s not combative,” she said. “I see no reason to be a bully.”

As Bass spoke, Jan Schakowsky was nodding. Alas, Mike Madigan had already left the room.

* Web site helps drivers track road projects

Illinois has a new Web site to update drivers on road-construction projects.

You can find the site at http://www.dot.il.gov/dashboard public. The site provides information on active construction sites, including estimated completion date.

* More lanes closing on Ford

Beginning last Friday, traffic on the inbound Bishop Ford (westbound I-94) from 159th Street to Dolton Avenue was reduced to two lanes, through November.

  14 Comments      


Round-UP: Elections 2010

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* Sen. Burris Not Ruling Out Senate Race

Illinois Sen. Roland Burris announced last month that he would not run to retain his Senate seat next year, but in his first television interview since making that decision, Burris told ABC News he could change his mind.[…]

“You never say never,” Burris told ABC News in a “Subway Series” interview for the ABC News program “Top Line.” The “Subway Series,” which debuts on Monday, features interviews with senators and other political leaders on board the Capitol Hill subway.

“What I’m still hearing,” Burris said, is “people from all over the country and they are saying, ‘Don’t give up that seat.’”

In the name of God- why won’t this guy just go away?!?! A less electable candidate could not exist. But he is good for a laugh though: ‘from people all over the country’ - LOL, classic!

And perhaps more importantly, why is ABC News even giving Burris the air time? Must have been a slow news month.

* Press Release: Giannoulias endorsed by working families of UNITE HERE, UFCW, UA and Illinois

* So far, no GOP challengers for two key state offices

Attorney General Lisa Madigan lost a Republican opponent this past week when DuPage County State’s Attorney Joe Birkett said he wouldn’t run against the two-term Democratic incumbent.

“It has become clear to my advisors and me that it will be virtually impossible to compete financially with Lisa Madigan,” Birkett said in a statement. “It would be wrong for me to run and to ask people to contribute to a race that that is virtually unwinnable under the circumstances.”

Observers say the same could be true about a race against White, who in 2006 got almost twice as many votes as his opponent, state Sen. Dan Rutherford. And in 2002, White won every county in Illinois.

“They’ve got some problems, it seems to me, with recruiting against those two,” said John Jackson, a political scientist with Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University Carbondale.

* And We’re … Not Off to the Races

* Jack Franks Not Being Mentioned for Governor

State Comptroller Tom Hynes announced he was going to take on an “indecisive” Governor Pat Quinn in the Democratic Party primary election Thursday.

In the ABC-TV Six O’clock News report of Hynes’ candidacy, McHenry County State Representative Jack Franks’ name was not mentioned.

African-American Metro-East State Senator James F. Clayborne, Jr., was mentioned as a possible gubernatorial candidate.

As I have observed before, being ignored is one of the worst things that can happen to a politician.

* Joyce may jump for lt. gov.

The February 2010 ballot may feature several names familiar to Southland residents, including state Rep. Kevin Joyce (D-Chicago) who is considering a run for lieutenant governor.[…]

Joyce also has not ruled out a run for the 3rd Congressional District, which would stack him against U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski (D-3rd) in February’s primary. But raising money under federal guidelines is tough and time consuming.

Lieutenant governor is appealing, Joyce said, because it offers a platform to address issues. Gov. Pat Quinn used the post to support military families and advance environmental causes.

“As lieutenant governor, you have the freedom to pick your policy issues,” Joyce said. “I also think whoever the governor is could use a good person working with the legislature.”

* Peoria native will seek Illinois comptroller post

Raja Krishnamoorthi, 36, currently of Hoffman Estates, on Friday announced his intention to seek the state comptroller’s post in the 2010 primary.

No one else has officially announced plans to run for comptroller.

Current Comptroller Dan Hynes, also a Democrat, is running for governor next year.

Krishnamoorthi proposes publishing all state contracts online, “so citizens know how their taxpayer dollars are being spent and help deter some pay-to-play politics that arose in the past.”

* Word on the Street: Healthy discussion in Peoria? Maybe not

Raja Krishnamoorthi served as a volunteer adviser to Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. Before that, he was a senior adviser in his general election campaign for Senate and even before that worked on Obama’s 2000 campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives.

Now, Krishnamoorthi is working on his own campaign - for Illinois comptroller. He requested a brief meet up with Obama. He got it.

Krishnamoorthi said mostly the two chatted it up about his family, wife and kids.

“I was overwhelmed by the moment. He was just such a personable, affable individual,” Krishnamoorthi said.

* Bernard Schoenburg: Two poised to make run for state treasurer

KIP KIRKPATRICK, 37, of Winnetka formed a campaign committee in early June, and by the end of that month, had raised nearly $513,000, including a $100,000 loan to himself.[…]

The current Democratic state treasurer, ALEXI GIANNOULIAS, is running for U.S. Senate. His chief of staff, former state Rep. ROBIN KELLY, D-Matteson, has long said she’d run for treasurer when Giannoulias announced for another office. She’s formally kicking off her campaign Monday with events in Chicago, Normal and Peoria. Kelly went to college and graduate school in Peoria and lived there for 17 years.

Kirkpatrick is making his race official this weekend via a video to supporters, according to his campaign manager, Springfield native BRENDAN HOSTETLER, a former House Democratic staff member who is now a lobbyist living in Chicago.

Hostetler said Kirkpatrick, a partner at Water Street Healthcare Partners, a private equity firm, is making his “first foray into politics.”

* DeLay seeks 99th District House seat

Kent DeLay, a Democrat who got less than 40 percent of the vote trying to unseat state Rep. Raymond Poe, R-Springfield, in 2008, is making another run for the 99th District Illinois House seat.

“I deal with real-life issues that affect people every day, and I just don’t see things changing,” said DeLay in an interview. “I truly believe that I can make a difference in representing people in this district.”

DeLay, 44, is formally announcing his campaign at 11 a.m. today at his home, 1330 S. Lowell Ave. in Springfield.

* Jan Schakowsky endorses Julie Hamos
(YouTube Video)

* Schakowsky Endorses Hamos; Mark Kirk on Downstate Tour; Keller Grudglingly Admits Investigation Caused Him Not to Seek Re-election

* Morning Fix: Dodd Rises Again (Or Not) [10th District Poll]

Seals Far Ahead in IL-10 Survey: Dan Seals, the Democratic nominee against Rep. Mark Kirk (R) in 2006 and 2008, holds a wide lead in the 2010 Democratic primary, according to a survey done for his campaign and obtained by the Fix. Seals takes 63 percent of the vote compared to to just eight percent for state Rep. Julie Hamos and two percent for attorney Elliot Richardson in a hypothetical Democratic primary matchup. The survey, which was conducted by Anzalone-Liszt Research for Seals campaign, also showed Seals — not surprisingly — as by far the best known candidate in the Democratic race with 83 percent name identification. Hamos, who won the endorsement of Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) last Friday, has a meager 18 percent name identification. And, roughly two-thirds of voters agreed with the statement that Seals had earned the right to a third run for the seat while 23 percent said it was time to give someone new a chance. With Kirk leaving the 10th to run for Senate, Democrats have a very good chance of taking over this North Shore district.

* Here is the polling memo for the above mentioned 10th district poll

* Durbin pushes foe’s brother for U.S. bench

In a press release on Friday afternoon, Mr. Durbin, a Democrat, urged President Barack Obama to nominate Thomas Durkin, a civil litigator and partner at Mayer Brown here.

Mr. Durkin, who was not available for comment, certainly appears qualified. A former federal prosecutor, the DePaul University graduate recently received awards from the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce and the U.S. Department of Justice.

What’s interesting, though, is that Mr. Durkin is the brother of state Rep. Jim Durkin, a Republican who lost to Sen. Durbin in 2002. Above and beyond that, Rep. Durkin headed the Illinois campaign of GOP presidential nominee John McCain, who of course lost last year to Chicago Democrat Barack Obama, who now will decide whether or not to select Tom Durkin for the bench.

  38 Comments      


Round-Up: Municipalities and County Governance

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* ‘Infrastructure is good’: Daley

With a street repair project in the background and a lousy economy on everyone’s mind, Mayor Daley defended this year’s $1.7 billion plan to build five libraries, fix several high-traffic bridges and resurface 550 blocks of streets across the city.

“Infrastructure is good for the economy and good for jobs,” Daley said on the Northwest Side on Friday, when he also announced a five-year, $8.4 billion plan for capital improvements citywide. “All these improvements basically strengthen economic development, jobs here in the city, and it helps businesses — especially now with so many of our residents struggling financially, it is very important.”

Daley stressed the city is cutting operating expenses but said annual sewer and road improvements are not only fiscally responsible, they’re an essential part of keeping a city in business.[…]

While the five-year plan includes an array of infrastructure upgrades, including a whopping $3.9 billion at O’Hare and Midway airports, the mayor’s office offered a sampling of this year’s project list:

* Daley demands Obama take a pay cut

“I hope every federal employee from the president all the way down takes 15 days without pay to turn that money back to taxpayers’ use, because they’re getting laid off, they’re getting cut back, there are no jobs out there,” Daley said Friday.

An animated Daley offered the advice during a press conference on the Northwest Side to announce $1.7 billion in projects around the city. The projects use money that comes from bonds and federal and city coffers, including tax increment financing districts.

Daley said road, library and sewer construction projects are necessary to keep a city running and, at these times, people employed.

But as he spoke about the projects, he reflected on what’s happening in city government: layoffs and furlough days. The mayor says he’s taking 15 unpaid days this year and believes every level of government — all the way up to the president might do the same to save taxpayer dollars.

* Daley: Scott wouldn’t benefit from project

Mayor Daley denied Saturday that Michael Scott, a member of the Chicago 2016 committee, would financially benefit from a proposed West Side development near the site of a potential Olympic venue.

“He’s not involved,” Daley said after the Bud Billiken Parade, where he spent the morning riding a float blasting out the music of Beyonce. “He’s supporting the Olympics. Everybody is supporting the Olympics.”

Scott, a real estate developer and president of the Chicago Board of Education, said Friday he would not profit if the affordable housing and retail project, near a proposed Douglas Park Olympic venue site, was developed with his assistance.

The Chicago Tribune reported last week that Scott was “potentially positioning himself to cash in” on the Olympics through the proposed development.

* Daley’s nephew gets break from city pension funds

When they started their real estate investment company three years ago, Mayor Daley’s nephew Robert Vanecko and his partners made a promise to five City of Chicago pension funds they were seeking as investors:

We’ll put $7 million of our own money into the deal to show we believe in our high-risk strategy of investing city retirees’ pension money in developing inner-city neighborhoods.

That assurance helped the start-up venture known as DV Urban Realty Partners quickly land $68 million from the city pension funds.

But now it turns out that Vanecko and his partners — Chicago developer Allison S. Davis and his son Jared Davis — will put in just $3.5 million, half of what they initially promised.

* Daley’s nephew lays plans for S. Loop

Next up for DV Urban Realty, the investment company Mayor Daley’s nephew created to manage city pension money: building a $120 million high-rise in the South Loop.

Robert Vanecko and his company have a contract to buy what’s now the South Loop headquarters of the National Association of Letter Carriers at 1411 S. Michigan, which they plan to knock down and replace with a 220-unit apartment building.

DV Urban — which Vanecko owns with partners Allison S. Davis and Davis’ son Jared Davis — has spent more than $4.7 million from city pension funds on the deal, records show.

* County, unions discuss contract length, wording

ROCKFORD — Contracts for the county’s two largest labor unions are up in October, which gives county management more leeway to make cuts than last year.

Or, at least, county administrators won’t be locked in to contractual raises like they were last year.

Negotiations have started with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 473, which represents 725 county employees; and the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 50, which represents more than 100 deputies and detectives.

AFSCME and the FOP are coming off four-year agreements. Given the economic realities, however, it’s likely the new contracts will be shorter.

* County departments prepare for more cuts

ROCKFORD — Top county officials are demanding an additional 10 percent cut from all county departments as they prepare the fiscal 2010 budget.

The demand potentially means dozens of layoffs and most certainly means hour reductions and wage freezes in some departments. It’s also an indication that despite some recent news indicating a small economic rebound, the situation in Winnebago County remains troubling.

County budget crunchers estimate they’ll take in $46.1 million during the fiscal 2010, which begins Oct. 1. That’s the lowest the county’s income has been since at least 2006.

The reasons for the shortfall include projected slow property tax growth, declines in sales tax revenue, as well as less money from licenses, permits and fees.

* Forging a friendship

Mayors of Aurora and Romanian town meet on common grounds

* Chicago schools report spike in year-round schools

School officials say 132 schools in the nation’s third-largest district will be year-round for the 2009-10 school year. That’s up from 41 last academic year.

The year-round calendar starts Monday. It affects about 80,000 students.

* Chicago Public Schools Adds More Schools to Year-Round Track

* Should Empty Homes House Chicago’s Poor?

It seems like another lifetime, but just a few years ago, Chicago neighborhoods faced a tsunami of condo conversions. That wave—plus the demolition of public housing towers—left many of the city’s poorest people struggling to find a place to live. Now the foreclosure crisis has displaced tens of thousands more Chicagoans, and left empty homes in their wake. A lot of people see a new opportunity to revive neighborhoods. But there’s also fear that people most in need will be squeezed out of this chance for housing.[…]

LUDWIG: The more vacant and abandoned properties on a block, the less the people who are currently there and have been there for years and are good, responsible property owners want to be there, they see, ‘Oh, maybe I should get the heck out of here,’ this neighborhood isn’t going anywhere, so to speak.

And that’s exactly what Ludwig wants to avoid. The neighborhood stabilization program she mentioned, that’s how the city got $55 million from the federal government. And here’s where the competing goals come in: do you use that money to fix up buildings and sell them? Or do you turn them over to non-profits to run as rentals?

* More parking spaces without meters?

“Theoretically, there could be,” said Avis LaVelle, spokeswoman for Chicago Parking Meters LLC, the private company that took over Chicago’s parking meters and raised prices. LaVelle doesn’t know that anyone has done a tally about how many more spaces there could be, but if people park efficiently, “like urban parkers,” there could be room for more cars than under a single-meter system.

So there’s a silver lining in the new meter system — in case you were in search of one.

Chicago Parking Meters has put up 2,200 parking meter boxes. One box replaces 10 meters.

* Pedaling slowly

The city issued a request for proposals from vendors interested in operating a bike-sharing program here. But that yielded only two proposals, says Brian Steele, spokesman for the Chicago Department of Transportation. And neither was judged adequate to meet Chicago’s needs.[…]

The city has also been looking more closely at some of the potential pitfalls that a bike-sharing program might face. Could a rider hurt while using bike-sharing sue the city for damages? What style of bikes would work best in Chicago? Where would the bikes be located? And what would be the best way to minimize vandalism?

Answering those questions is taking longer than bike enthusiasts might like. But in this instance, we’re glad to see the city pedal cautiously. Haste could prove costly, as Paris learned. That city’s program, which has 20,000 bikes placed at 1,000 stations, was supposed to cost taxpayers nothing. Advertising giant JCDecaux had contracted to operate the program for free, in exchange for outdoor ad space.

But vandals routinely smash bike frames, cut chains and slash tires. JCDecaux has had to replace 16,000 bikes, according to a National Public Radio report. Eight thousand bikes have been stolen. Given the extent of the damage, the city of Paris recently agreed to subsidize $500 of each replacement bike’s cost. That’s expected to total $2 million per year.

* Love the park, can’t play there

But the park, in Lincoln Park’s pricey Hartland Park development, recently was closed to families who don’t live in the subdivision.

The park was slated to be transferred to the Chicago Park District, but the park district won’t take it because the roads and sidewalks leading into it are private, according to Ald. Scott Waguespack’s (32nd) chief of staff and members of the Heartland Park Master Homeowners Association.

The sidewalks and streets were supposed to be transferred to the city, but it won’t take them because they don’t meet city standards or, in the case of the sidewalks, requirements laid out in the Americans with Disabilities Act, according to documents sent to Belgravia Group, Hartland Park’s developers.

The homeowner’s association said they were forced to shut off public access to the park, at Hermitage and Schubert, because they were assuming liability for anyone playing in the park.

* Chicago’s Lakefront Trail: A path to danger?

The limited data the Chicago Park District keeps about crashes on the 18-mile trail — one of the busiest multi-use recreational paths in the country, according to parks officials — show that crashes do happen. Between 2002 and 2008, Park District employees — most of them lifeguards — reported 126 wipeouts that included people colliding with each other, swerving to avoid each other or hitting rough patches and losing control, according to a Chicago Sun-Times analysis of Park District “patron incident reports.”

Anecdotal evidence suggests these incidents are only a small part of a bigger problem. Dr. Rahul K. Khare, an emergency room physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, says it’s common for him to treat at least five path-related injuries during an eight-hour weekend shift when the weather is nice. “You do see some significant fractures, lacerations, concussions,” Khare said.

The Park District doesn’t have a comprehensive system for tracking collisions and other problems on the trail, making it difficult to assess if slow zones, speed limits, additional signs or other safety measures could make the path safer. A list of police responses to crashes is difficult to create, Chicago Police say. The Fire Department is reviewing a Sun-Times request for ambulance responses.

* On trail, history repeats

The trail runs along an unused railroad bed from the Dan Ryan Woods near 80th Place to Whistler Woods in Riverdale. It was one of the area’s first “rails to trails” projects. The Chicago Department of Transportation spent $5 million in state and federal money on the trail, buying the land and paving it. It officially opened June 2, 2007.

The Chicago Park District controls a large part of the trail — from 104th Street south to 127th Street — while the Cook County Forest Preserve District controls either end. The street portions are maintained by CDOT.

Peter Taylor said the trail is troubled by gang activity. He wants the Park District to provide “simple things” like lighting, water fountains, more trash cans and maybe a bathroom. He also wants better maintenance, through sweeping up of trash and cutting back vegetation, and a better police presence.

* Heat doesn’t faze Lollapalooza crowd

  3 Comments      


Round-Up: Ethics and Reform

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* Watchdogs question legitimacy of new campaign donation rules

But watchdog groups say that in the long Illinois tradition of passing fake reform measures, the new limits are another sham and they find themselves in the odd position of lobbying Gov. Pat Quinn - himself a veteran ethics advocate - to veto or rewrite campaign donation limits they have long sought.

“This is just fatally flawed,” said Dave Lundy, president of the Better Government Association, which is lobbying Quinn with other organizations.

Vetoing or rewriting the measure would run the risk that lawmakers won’t approve the changes or pass any other limits down the road. Some reformers are willing to take that risk.

“These limits are worse than having no limits,” added David Morrison, deputy director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform. “The problems are so extensive the risk is that lawmakers would not get around to fixing them if this became law.”

* Make it easier to follow money in campaigns

Those who have dragged their feet about enacting campaign contribution limits - or endorsed half-baked measures like House Bill 7, which Gov. Pat Quinn’s should veto - say disclosure rules are enough.

But disclosure doesn’t prevent the undue access and influence that large donors receive and it doesn’t prevent pay-to-play politics. Still, it is useful and relatively easy.[…]

We agree with the Illinois Reform Commission that state law should require political committees to disclose these bundlers if they coordinate contributions above a certain amount - the Reform Commission recommended $16,000 as the threshold.

The Legislature also should adopt the commission’s recommendations for speeding up filing requirements, such as mandating that contributions of $1,000 or more for statewide office and $500 for other offices to be reported electronically within five business days.

* Money plus career politicians equals never-ending corruption

* Feds water down Illinois anti-corruption law

A surprise opponent has arisen to fight efforts to tighten Illinois’ anti-pay-to-play law.

No, not Mike Madigan, George Ryan’s campaign committee or your local precinct captain. But rather the federal government, specifically the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration — and Congressman Mike Quigley, D-Chicago, wants to do something about it.

Here’s the story:

* Fix FOIA Now

But today’s Daily Herald editorial gave some of the reasons why they support the bill, and we at ICPR can identify with these problems:

Our reporters battled some bureaucrats for months when we tried to learn about red-light cameras for our recent “Seeing Red” investigative series. One village clerk said we didn’t need the documents because others had reported on the cameras. Another village official called the request a waste of time.

In all, it took more than two months to obtain documents about a government program operating all over the region. It should take seven days under the existing loophole-ridden law.

As part of our review of lobbying by units of government, we at ICPR send out hundreds of FOIA requests each year. (here’s a PDF of our most recent report) Most units respond promptly, and we commend them for that. After all, that’s what the law requires. But what we cannot understand is why so many units of government fail to respond in a timely fashion; and sometimes, not at all.

* End the delay, gov; changes to FOIA should become law

* Blago’s former aide due back in court

The next chapter in former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s corruption case comes next week when his former top aide is due to change his own plea on corruption charges to guilty.

Alonzo Monk, the ousted governor’s former chief of staff, is due to appear before U.S. District Judge James B. Zagel on Tuesday to change his plea

* Can’t leggo your Blago?

Impeached former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich is spreading his self-described message as a “champion for ordinary Americans” through a Web site launched Sunday.

governorrod.com invites readers to “Tell Rod what’s bugging you” during his weekly radio show on WLS or book the former governor for a speaking engagement.[…]

“He made history in August 2009 when he became the first former elected official still facing charges to be named host of his own radio show,” a part of Blagojevich’s online biography reads.

The former governor needs a “one-stop shop” where people can do everything from hire him to sing an Elvis tune or learn his take on issues, Blagojevich’s spokesman and publicist Glenn Selig said.

* Can’t get enough Blago? Do we have a Web site for you

* Quinn asks all U. of I. trustees to resign in wake of clout report

Gov. Quinn is urging all of the University of Illinois trustees to resign in the wake of a recently released report detailing how clout helped unqualified students gain admission.

“The trustees who remain on the board, the best thing for them to do would be to read [the report], take it to heart and voluntarily submit their resignations,” Quinn told reporters at the University of Illinois at Chicago on Friday.

When asked if he would be willing to use his power as governor to force some trustees to quit, Quinn said he hoped he wouldn’t have to.

“My father taught me don’t take an aspirin until you get a headache,” he said. “I don’t intend to really deal with that issue.”

* U. of I. needs six law firms to handle admissions matters

The school has enlisted the help of six outside law firms to assist in its response to a flurry of Freedom of Information Act requests, a state panel that investigated the issue and lawsuits revolving around its giving special treatment to student applicants with clout in the admissions process.

The outside legal help is costing the state tens of thousands of dollars, if not more.

U. of I. spokesman Tom Hardy defended the hiring, saying the firms’ expertise is “important work.” One firm has also enlisted Hill & Knowlton, a public-relations firm, as well as a computer forensics company to assist, Hardy said.

Exactly how much the outside legal help has cost the university cannot be determined from the 55 pages of documents turned over after a Sun-Times Freedom of Information Act request.

* Prompt action required on U of I report

* Housecleaning must continue at U of I

University President B. Joseph White and Chancellor Richard Herman are also accused of unethical behavior in the admissions process, according to a report by the Illinois Admissions Review Commission. The commission recommended that all trustees resign, but did not go as far as calling for White and Herman to step down. The commission left the president’s and chancellor’s fates in the hands of a new board of trustees.

This is not a case of these individuals failing to find or deal with a problem: They knew about the influence peddling and used their own authority to get students into the school.

Sweeping all these individuals out of their jobs will not solve the university’s problems. Other measures in the commission’s report should be considered, such as a state inspector general for higher education and an open appeals process for students whose applications were rejected.

Continuity may be lost in a housecleaning, but credibility will be gained.

* Opposing view: White’s leadership is needed (Sen. Syverson Op-Ed)

University of Illinois President B. Joseph White has presided over the state’s flagship university during one of the most difficult economic periods in recent memory.

He has managed a university that, in real dollars, is receiving less funding from the state than it did six years ago. The U of I is more than just Illinois’ largest university, it is also one of our largest employers, with more than 20,000 employees. It is one of the top medical centers in the world, with hospitals and clinics throughout the state.

U of I has also developed one of the most respected pharmacy schools in the country, including the addition of a new campus in Rockford. White has helped the U of I maintain its status as one of the best universities in the world, and has done so by raising significant private dollars to help offset the funding cuts by the state.[…]

While some have called upon President White to resign due to some issues regarding actions of some board members, I believe, in these uncertain times, now is not the time to cast away the kind of leadership Dr. White has brought.

* A scandal’s impact

* Where will the UI go from here?

* Don’t let this redistricting idea die without a debate

There’s an idea floating around the Illinois Capitol that aims to empower the people, legitimately reform the way we choose our representatives and create competition in a system that too often guarantees incumbents re-election.

Right now, state Rep. Mike Fortner, a West Chicago Republican, is its lone advocate.

We urge other suburban lawmakers to look at the proposal, HJRCA32, and embrace its goals. Without co-sponsors and without bipartisan support, we fear this model for fixing the way Illinois draws its state and congressional districts will not get a proper debate.

* Make the check out to the alderman (for a retirement present)

The heir apparent to powerful Ald. William J.P. Banks (36th) is throwing a $200-a-ticket retirement party for the outgoing City Council zoning boss and asking everyone who attends to make the checks out to Banks personally.

“We’re going to buy him a gift,” said John Rice, Banks’ driver and would-be successor. “Thirty-two years of service to the city and to the community — I think he deserves a retirement party. That’s why I decided to throw it.”[…]

The city’s ethics ordinance prohibits gifts of $50 or more from anyone “with an economic interest in a specific business transaction” that an official has power over, said Steve Berlin, executive director of the Chicago Ethics Board. That would not apply if Banks has resigned before the party, Berlin said.

But David Morrison, assistant director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, urged Banks not to leave “a black mark on his legacy” by letting allies encourage people to give him cash directly. Morrison said Banks instead should hold a fundraiser for his political fund, which would require revealing the donors and the amounts publicly.

  2 Comments      


Round-Up: Economic News

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* Credit cards holders shocked to see interest rates skyrocket, limits plunge

Four former employees of MBNA, now owned by Bank of America, told AFFIL that they were given financial incentives to drive customers deeper into debt; offered only the highest interest rate on cash advances, even when customers qualified for a lower rate, and were trained to “sell debt” through balance transfers that increased the cardholders’ indebtedness.

A Bank of America spokeswoman said it has no such practices.

Experts warn that canceling or taking out rage on your credit card can backfire because canceling the card will cut your debt-to-available credit ratio and your credit score.

* ‘Back to school’ crucial for retailers, parents

Deloitte’s recent survey showed that 64 percent of respondents planned to spend less on back-to-school items, compared with 71 percent in 2008. And four in 10 planned to cut their spending by more than $100.

The top reasons for those cuts: concerns about the economy, recent job losses, efforts to save more money and pay down debt. Because different school supplies are often a necessity each year, people are cutting back primarily on clothes and shoes.

* Hartmarx successfully sold

Hartmarx, the 125-year-old Chicago-based manufacturer of men’s suits that outfits President Obama, was sold today [Friday] to London-based Emerisque Brands and will be headed by Ajay Khaitan, Emerisque’s founder who has been instrumental in turning around brands such as Eveready and Lee Cooper.

* After massacre: ‘No one came’

As jury selection in the trial for the second man accused in the mass murders at a Palatine Brown’s Chicken gets under way, the company’s co-founder told the Sun-Times the notoriety surrounding the crime had such an adverse effect on the business, he was forced to close 60 of 100 local Brown’s Chickens within the first 2½ years following the slayings.[…]

Portillo said sales at all his restaurants dipped 35 percent just months after the seven victims’ bodies were discovered in the suburban restaurant’s cooler and walk-in refrigerator.

* Rezko’s foreclosed mansion on auction block today

The auction is scheduled for 11 a.m. at Intercounty Judicial Sales, 120 W. Madison St. in the Loop. It’s estimated the home will go for about $4.3 million.

* Is advertising on Bears practice jersey just a start?

  4 Comments      


Round-Up: Law & Order; Crime & Punishment

Monday, Aug 10, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* Springfield Ald. Sam Cahnman arrested

A Springfield alderman was arrested early Sunday for allegedly soliciting a sexual act from two undercover female police officers.

* Top cop: City’s drop in murder rate ‘encouraging’

Chicago Police Supt. Jody Weis on Friday hailed an 11 percent drop in homicides and a 9 percent dip in all crimes during the first seven months of 2009 as a “very encouraging” sign that his department’s strategies are working.[…]

Through the first seven months of 2009, the city recorded 258 homicides, compared with 290 for the same period in 2008.[…]

Still, the city’s top cop said his detectives often have been stymied this summer in their efforts to solve violent crimes by a “code of silence” among victims who refuse to cooperate with authorities.

“I cannot stress this enough: The code of silence that exists in far too many neighborhoods is a contributing factor to much of the senseless violence, shootings and homicides we see every day,” Weis said.

* Dart done gathering evidence, says he can back up Burr Oak charges

Dart said his investigators and special FBI forensics experts have gathered enough evidence to back up the criminal cases against four Burr Oak employees accused of digging up graves, dumping remains in piles or in shallow graves and then re-selling the plots. Three graves were exhumed last week, indicating evidence of illegal grave stacking. One man’s body was found buried in a concrete vault without a coffin.

Tom Trautmann, the FBI’s assistant special agent in charge in Chicago, said identifying all of the pieces is too unwieldy a job because of the terrible records kept by Burr Oak.

“We wish we could have fully identified all the remains recovered to give some sort of closure to the families who were affected by this unfortunate occurrence,” he said.

* Burr Oak Cemetery desecration suspects indicted

The Cook County State’s Attorney announced a seven-count indictment this morning against four workers at historic Burr Oak Cemetery who had been accused in an elaborate grave selling scheme.

The indictments of all four added charges of aggravated theft of $100,000 to $500,000 from a place of worship, unlawful removal of grave stones, desecration of human remains, unlawful removal of deceased human beings from a burial ground and conspiracy to remove human remains. The crimes occurred between September 2003 to July 8, 2009, prosecutors said.

* Only retired cops patrol suburban Inverness

The 12 full-time officers who began patrolling suburban Inverness on May 1 collectively have spent more than 350 years in uniform — or better than 29 years per man.[…]

But the new officers’ experience also is saving the town money, Tatooles contends.

Because they already have earned pensions while working decades at other departments, Inverness could bring them on board for less money than it likely would have cost to hire less-experienced cops and then contribute to their pension plan. The village also is saving money on training — which can run more than $100,000 per officer.

“When you have the older guys, they’re all trained,” said Police Chief Robert Haas, who at age 50 is the youngest officer on the force.

* A sea change for Waukegan Latinos

Like so many towns across the U.S., Waukegan — a formerly mostly Caucasian, blue-collar manufacturing town 30 miles north of the Loop — was torn apart by a fervent anti-illegal immigrant sentiment that oozed all over its perfectly “legal” Hispanic residents.

The match was a city ordinance that impounded the cars of drivers caught cruising without a license or car insurance. A critical public safety issue, to be sure, but some Latino residents, who make up over half the town’s population, considered it rampant racial profiling.

It lit a powder keg. In June 200, the Waukegan City Council voted to apply to the feds for two Waukegan police officers to be trained for 287(g) authorization — a controversial program that would have allowed police to start deportation proceedings for any illegal aliens convicted of violent offenses such as rape, murder, sexual assault or drug violations.

Enraged Hispanic residents exploded in protests.

* Judge sentences man to 6 months in jail for yawning

As Circuit Judge Daniel Rozak handed down the cousin’s sentence — 2 years’ probation — Williams, 33, stretched and let out a very ill-timed yawn.

Williams’ sentence? Six months in jail — the maximum penalty for criminal contempt without a jury trial. The Richton Park man was locked up July 23 and will serve at least 21 days.[…]

Chuck Pelkie, a spokesman for the state’s attorney’s office, said the prosecutor in the courtroom that day told him that “it was not a simple yawn — it was a loud and boisterous attempt to disrupt the proceedings.”[…]

A Tribune review of a decade’s worth of contempt-of-court charges reveals that Rozak jails people — typically spectators whose cell phones go off or who scream or shout profanity during sentencing — at a far higher rate than any other judge in the county. There are now 30 judges in the 12th Judicial Circuit, but since 1999, Rozak has brought more than a third of all the contempt charges, records show.

* Patrick Kane arrested over $13.80 cab fare

An argument over 20 cents’ worth of cab fare has $875,000-a-year Blackhawks star winger Patrick Kane facing a felony robbery charge.

Kane — who’s scheduled to start U.S. Olympics orientation camp next week — gave the team a black eye and even caught his mother off guard Sunday when he and his cousin were charged with assaulting a cabdriver in his native Buffalo, N.Y.

* Why didn’t Blackhawks’ Patrick Kane just tip Buffalo cabdriver and let it go?

* 7 arrested for dogfighting in Kankakee Co.

Seven men were arrested and nine severely scarred pit bulls were rescued following a dog fight in Kankakee County over the weekend, according to authorities.

Cook County Sheriff’s Police said the fight was in progress Saturday evening near the village of Hopkins Park when the arrests were made, capping a two-month investigation.

  5 Comments      


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