* That was quick. I have a ticket to the St. Louis Cardinals game tomorrow. Believe it or not, I’ve never been to the new stadium. Looking forward to it. Going with a bunch of my oldest friends in Springfield, so it could be kind of a riot. Let’s hope so.
* One of the most anticipated bands of the year is a new supergroup called “Them Crooked Vultures” featuring Dave Grohl, John Paul Jones and Josh Homme. The album isn’t out yet, and the official tour doesn’t start until next month, but they have done a few live shows so far, including one at the Metro last month. All we have right now are pirated videos of some of those shows, so here’s one called Elephant…
A whole bunch of strangers
Who’re sporting and dangerous
* I’ve never seen her show and know almost nothing about her, but Bonnie Hunt gave Rod Blagojevich some of the beat-down he richly deserves today. Watch it…
What does it say that a daytime talk show host is more aggressive than major network TV news broadcasters?
Clearly agitated by the questions, Blagojevich raised his voice to Hunt, pointed his finger at the audience and said his name would be cleared once the tapes are released.
“They’re lying,” he said. “These are false accusations and there are taped conversations that will set the record straight. That’s the truth. I’m the one that wants you all to hear them. My accusers don’t. Now what does that tell you?”
Blagojevich became so riled by the questioning, Hunt jokingly asked for “a sidebar.”
“You went to law school, I didn’t,” she says. “I’m only a nurse, but I might inject you with something just to get you to quiet down.”
The Cook County Democratic Party, on final vote, slated Pat Quinn for governor.
* Dan Hynes campaign press release…
Dan Hynes for Governor campaign spokesman Matt McGrath issued the following statement upon the news that Pat Quinn had accepted to be slated by the Cook County Democratic Party Central Committee ahead of February’s primary:
“Is there a single core principle to which Pat Quinn will consistently adhere? Despite saying as recently as this morning that he has always supported open primaries, the Governor apparently sees no contradiction in asking and working to be slated by the Cook County Democratic Party. Long before becoming Governor, Pat Quinn sought a reputation as an outsider in part by railing against the very entity whose support he eagerly accepts today. It would seem that his prior support for open primaries was nothing more than political rhetoric. It is acts like this that give the people of Illinois reason to question Pat Quinn’s sincerity.”
* Quinn’s statement…
Statement from Governor Pat Quinn on today’s decision by the Cook County Democratic Committee to endorse his candidacy for Governor of Illinois
“I am happy to receive today’s endorsement of my candidacy for Governor of Illinois.
“As I told the committee members this morning, I have spent the last seven months doing what I have been doing for the past three decades – standing up for the people of Illinois. As Governor, I am working hard every day to bring good jobs and economic recovery to every corner of the Land of Lincoln.
“Throughout my career in public service, I have won endorsements from political groups, civic groups, and labor organizations throughout our state. As we go forward, I will continue to seek the support of groups – both large and small – as we work together to make the will of the people the law of the land in Illinois.”
A motion for an open primary narrowly failed, so Stroger’s backers pushed for a roll-call vote in which each of the 80 committeemen, including the dozen or so on Stroger’s payroll in Cook County government, had to go on record stating who they supported among the five candidates.
Stroger didn’t get a majority of that vote, either.
“I think that was a miscalculation on his part,” said Ald. Toni Preckwinkle (4th), who came in second after Stroger.
U.S. Rep. Danny Davis came in third, followed by Metropolitan Water Reclamation District President Terry O’Brien and, in last place, Clerk of the Court Dorothy Brown.
*** UPDATE 3:42 pm *** Rep. John Fritchey is a ward committeeman, so he’s at the meeting. He just Tweeted this…
There will be no slated candidate for Cook County Board President.
Not a huge surprise, but another major blow to Todd Stroger.
Speaker Madigan, Ald. Burke and Commissioner Daley all voted “Present” on the motion to keep this particular race an open primary, according to a different source at the meeting.
*** UPDATE 2:17 pm *** Sen. Rickey Hendon promised pork for everyone if he was slated for lieutenant governor…
“The job is to legislate and appropriate and if I’m elected your lieutenant governor, I’ll bring back that kind of money to every committeeman in Cook County that I can help,” Hendon said.
[ *** End of Update *** ]
* Sources at the meeting tell me that a subcommittee of the Cook County Democratic Central Committee came just a couple votes shy of recommending that Gov. Pat Quinn be slated by the party against Dan Hynes. Only one motion was made, and that was to endorse Quinn. Dan Hynes had asked that the party slate no one. Another vote will take place this afternoon. Check here for udpates.
Also, the same sources say Rep. David Miller was slated for comptroller over Raja Krishnamoorthi.
Giannoulias and two of the three other Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate asked for the party’s blessing Friday.
Former City of Chicago Inspector General David Hoffman, whose job it was to investigate some of these committeemen’s loyalists on the city payroll, did not attend. He formally announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate Thursday. […]
Attorney Jacob Meister criticized all three of his opponents, saying he has “no history with organized crime” — an apparent reference to loans Giannoulias’ family’s bank made in years past to shady figures; he was not “a figure in Gov. Blagojevich’s cabinet” — Jackson was Rod Blagojevich’s spokeswoman for two years; and he criticized Hoffman for clerking for conservative Republican judges.
On the road back to Chicago. I was just released from the hospital. Deo Gratias!
* Infamous media critic Howie Kurtz once gushed that the Chi-Town Daily News was “pioneering a new form of low-cost, street-level reporting.” Apparently, that’s no longer the case. From Gapers Block…
Breaking news: The Chi-Town Daily News Folds - more details soon.
I can just hear the Sun-Times and Tribune now: “See? We’re not the only ones with horrific business models!”
UPDATE: The C-TDN owner says everybody got it wrong. I asked him why he was laying off people if he wasn’t really folding. His response: “The new product isn’t going to launch immediately — the plan is in the next 8 weeks. While we expect to be better funded than Chi-Town, we’re not in a position to pay reporters when we don’t have anywhere to publish their work, or one that we can sell ads in to support their salaries.”
…Adding… Ironically, the latest Tweet from Chi-Town Daily News’ owner was: “Rolling in green!”
* Follow the link in this Ramsin Canon Tweet for some hilarity…
Some facts @wbez DIDN’T report on from the Cook County Democratic Organization meeting. http://tr.im/yrAr
* I’ve pretty much settled on a new look for this website. I should be rolling it out in a couple/three weeks.
* The Question: Is there anything - information, plug-ins, links, content, etc. - that is currently not on this website which you would like to see added?
* The big Sun-Times front-page headline today is about government “pension millionaires.” But that label is a bit misleading. The paper calculates the term “millionaire” based on those who have “collected more than $1 million each from their pensions.”
If you retire at 65 and collect a $40K average annual pension check for 25 years, then you’re a millionaire, according to the Sun-Times.
Still, the millionaire roster includes some impressive names. Noted reformer Dawn Clark Netsch has collected $1.4 million in pension checks since January of 1995. Jim Thompson has pulled in $1.7 million since 1991. Former New Trier High School superintendent Hank Bangser has raked in $1.1 million just since July of 2006.
The state’s richest government pension goes to Dr. Alon P. Winnie, former chairman of anesthesiology at Cook County Hospital and the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago. Winnie, 77, has two pensions that total $447,233 a year. He has collected more than $3 million since retiring. He doesn’t think that’s excessive: “If you were with a good company, you’d have a helluva lot better benefits.”
Emil Jones Jr. is about to hit the pension jackpot.
The retired Illinois Senate president’s state pension this year: $81,016.
In January, a year after his retirement, it skyrockets 51 percent, to $122,334, far more than his final Senate salary of $95,313.
That’s when the Chicago Democrat cashes in on two pension sweeteners that legislators set up for themselves: a longevity bonus for serving more than 20 years in the Illinois Legislature and a cost-of-living increase.
* JBT’s pension shows why current law ought to be changed…
Topinka’s current yearly pension is $141,482.
That’s 23 percent more than what she was making when she retired from state government in January 2007.
Topinka’s pension isn’t based on her final salary of $115,235.
Instead, it’s based on a salary of $130,324 — the salary that had been set for the state treasurer’s post at that time but which the Illinois Legislature didn’t fund at that level until seven months after she retired, according to Timothy Blair, administrator of the General Assembly Retirement System.
Nearly 6 in 10 voters in the latest survey said the [ethics reform] measures enacted by lawmakers and Quinn would have little or no effect on curbing corruption in Illinois, while roughly a third of voters said such measures would have at least some impact.
The actual poll question, which is not published online…
The governor and the legislature recently enacted tougher state government ethics reform measures to curb political corruption. How likely will these reform measures eliminate political corruption?
5 very
30 somewhat
30 not too
30 not likely at all
The Tribune’s pollster did not ask whether the bills would “curb” political corruption, as the narrative claims. The pollster asked whether the bills would “eliminate” political corruption.
No law will ever eliminate political corruption. Frankly, I’m amazed that 35 percent would think any legislation would completely do away with corruption.
But, it’s almost certain that the Tribune editorial page will use this ridiculous polling result to bash the GA again and again.
At the same time, 3 out of 4 voters favor term limits for statewide elected officials and want to see the same applied to the leadership positions in the state Senate and House, the poll showed.
That’s no surprise. Other polls have shown similar support.
But the pollster told respondents that statewide officials can “serve as many four-year terms as they like,” as if there was no such thing as elections.
Sheesh.
Respondents were told that legislative leaders “can also serve as long as they like.” Former House GOP Leader Lee Daniels might not agree with that one.
Illinois voters are ambivalent about the job Gov. Pat Quinn has done in his first seven months, even as he prepares to seek a full term in next year’s election, a Tribune/WGN poll found. […]
The statewide poll of 700 registered voters found 39 percent approved of the job he has done since then, while 26 percent disapproved and 35 percent had no opinion. The telephone poll, conducted Aug. 27-31 by Market Shares Corp., has a 4 percentage point margin of error. […]
Almost half of Democrats, 47 percent, approved of the job Quinn has done while 19 percent disapproved. Another 34 percent had no opinion.
They ought to have given the MoE for that smaller sample size. It would’ve been quite high.
The same MoE point applies to the Trib’s story this week about Todd Stroger’s low support among African-Americans. Stroger’s campaign claims the Tribune pollster surveyed just 81 registered African-American voters to come up with this result…
Only about 1 in 5 African-American voters polled approve of the job Stroger is doing or want to see him re-elected, while more than half oppose him.
* By the way, the Dan Hynes gubernatorial campaign has now released a couple of their own polling questions from last month. The poll was conducted August 19-23 of 800 likely Democratic primary voters.
Pat Quinn job approval among Dems…
Excellent 8
Good 37
Only fair 42
Poor 8
I’ve said for months that Quinn’s approval rating is centered in the mushy middle. People just don’t have a hard opinion of him.
The Pat Quinn reelect numbers among Democrats show much the same…
Vote to reelect Pat Quinn 27
Consider someone else 45
Definitely vote for someone else 18
Don’t know 10
They’re not sold on Quinn yet.
* Related…
* Cook County Board President Todd Stroger asks committeemen to slate him for re-election - Committeemen likely to decide on an open primary
How, given everything he had going for him and the object lesson of his Republican predecessor behind bars serving as a constant reminder to remain above reproach, did Blagojevich become the first governor of Illinois to be impeached and removed from office?
How did he go from potential presidential candidate to potential federal inmate and national laughingstock in six short years?
Maybe there’s a good explanation, innocent or otherwise. Maybe not. But the search for that explanation is why one might purchase and carefully read “The Governor,” as I did.
How could this have happened?
How could this have happened? Because he’s a crook.
This has been yet another edition of “Simple Answers to Simple Questions.”
* Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Schillerstrom kicks off a new Internet video campaign with his spoof of the popular Dos Equis ads. Have a look…
* I’ve written about this topic before, but I’ve done it in a different way today. My Sun-Times column…
‘You were around the old timers who dreamed up how the families should be organized,” mob attorney Tom Hagen reminds stool pigeon Frank Pentangeli in “The Godfather, Part Two.” “How they based it on the old Roman legions and called them regimes . . . with the capos and soldiers, and it worked.”
Substitute “regimes” for “party caucuses,” “capos” for “deputy and assistant leaders” and “soldiers” for “rank-and-file legislators,” and it’s an almost perfect fit for how legislative leaders have organized the Illinois Statehouse.
And just like the old Roman legions, the Statehouse operates on loyalty.
Rank-and-file members are almost totally loyal to their leaders, which they perpetually demonstrate by voting for their leaders’ re-election and showing deference to their leaders’ decisions in all matters.
The leaders are, in turn, loyal to their members’ interests, and they show it any number of ways. Members are rewarded with jobs for friends and family, promotions to “capo” slots and sponsorship of important legislation.
The leaders’ most important job is protecting their members from election challenges by the other political party. And that brings us to my favorite mob movie, “GoodFellas.”
“All they got from Paulie was protection from other guys looking to rip them off. That’s what it’s all about. That’s what the FBI can never understand — that what Paulie and the Organization offer is protection for the kinds of guys who can’t go to the cops. They’re like the police department for wiseguys.”
Mobster Henry Hill’s real-life description of how mob bosses operate pretty much gives you the key to understanding how things work in Springfield.
Now, I don’t consider legislative leaders to be gangsters. But even the leaders would have to admit that the organizational mind-set is strikingly similar.
As with organized crime, protection is the absolute key to legislative loyalty. As a class, politicians are a fearful bunch. They live in terror of losing their jobs, offending the wrong people or any number of things. And the leaders know that once a rank-and-file member is convinced that he or she is safe in the hands of a competent, fearless leader, then everything usually falls right into place.
If a member has an election opponent, the leader steps in with gigantic mountains of campaign cash, armies of trained staff and anything else that’s needed to win. Even if the incumbent loses, the rest of the caucus can still feel safe if they believe that the leader did everything humanly possible.
The leaders also do their best to protect their favored interest groups. Legislation that hurts those groups is either killed or watered down. In exchange, those interest groups show loyalty by filling up the leaders’ campaign funds and hiring their former top staffers as lobbyists.
You can watch this protection-loyalty game play out almost every day.
For instance, several House Republicans privately said they wanted to balance the state budget by voting for an income tax increase during the spring session. But they didn’t dare because House GOP Leader Tom Cross was dead set against it.
House Speaker Michael Madigan has without a doubt perfected this leadership style. His protection skills are impeccable, and few members have had the courage or even the inclination to go against his will. Most of those who did have paid a very serious price.
Henry Hill was hidden away for years in the federal witness protection program after he testified against his boss, Paulie Cicero. Nobody opposing Madigan would ever wind up like that, of course. But they fear Madigan like nothing else.
Perhaps now you can understand why the reform groups are finding it so difficult to change the way things are done in the Illinois General Assembly. Even if the members really wanted serious change, the system is specifically designed to strongly discourage anyone from actually fighting for it.
* David Hoffman kicks off his Democratic US Senate bid today…
Hoffman’s announcement launched a multi-city tour of the candidate via an RV clad in his campaign colors of yellow and black. The political newcomer goes to Springfield this afternoon and then will make weekend trips to Alton, Carbondale and Champaign to introduce himself to downstate reporters and voters.
Hoffman also got support from state Sen. Jeff Schoenberg (D-Evanston), who introduced the candidate at his kick-off event. Schoenberg also took a shot at Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias…
Schoenberg also said Hoffman was “a Democrat who can win this seat next election” and raised the specter that Giannoulias could not survive a general election, creating the “potential political damage of the president’s old seat falling into Republican hands.” Hoffman’s reputation offsets Republicans running against Democrats based solely on the Blagojevich scandals, he said.
And Hoffman himself appeared to foreshadow an attack on Giannoulias…
“Plain and simple, it is time to turn the page on the Blagojevich-Rezko era,” Hoffman said, citing convicted former campaign fundraiser Antoin “Tony” Rezko, “and to nominate a candidate for the U.S. Senate with no connection to the corrupt and cozy politics of the past.”
He also took a whack at Republican Senate hopeful Mark Kirk during his speech…
“Even as the financial mess was beginning to unfold, Congressman Mark Kirk voted against tougher regulation of the very subprime mortgages that were at the heart of this crisis. In fact, he marched lockstep with the Bush/Cheney economic program, right over the cliff.”
This is the worst case of bureaucratic denial that I have ever seen. First they LOST the bucks — $85 million of them. And now they keep “passing the buck.” But it does not appear they will pass the bucks to the families who trusted them with college accounts in time to pay tuition this fall. And that’s the sad, Savage Truth.
* In other US Senate campaign news, Democratic state Rep. Susana Mendoza held a conference call presser today to blast Republican Kirk for accepting $1,000 from Congressman Joe Wilson in 2006. Wilson is the guy who shouted “You lie!” at President Obama last night. Obama accepted Wilson’s apology today. The presser was sponsored by the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee.
* Speaking of the president’s speech, if you’re at all interested Nate Silver has done some regression analysis to predict how the “public option” is faring in every congressional district. It’s interesting, but that’s about it. And speaking of fun stuff, Johnny Longtorso has drawn a new Illinois congressional map which looks lots more compact and contiguous than the current map but is still Democratic leaning. Also, the AP claims that Congressman Shimkus left during last night’s joint session address. And here’s Mark Kirk’s reaction to the speech: “He talked at us. He didn’t listen to us … It was a missed opportunity.”
UPDATE: Thanks to a reader, I just read the Tribune’s story on the Shimkus walkout…
“Congressman Shimkus was frustrated that the president was not offering any new ground and left with just minutes remaining in the speech,'’ spokesman Steven Tomaszewski said today
* Moving on to the governor’s race, ABC7 reports that Rep. Ken Dunkin wants an “extensive audit” of how Comptroller Dan Hynes’ office has regulated cemeteries. Some of Dunkin’s relatives are buried at the notorious Burr Oak Cemetery…
Dunkin is filing the Cemetery Care Act to get the Illinois auditor general to find out if the comptroller knew about complaints against Burr Oak Cemetery and did nothing about them. […]
“Any typical Illinois citizen driving past could see bones mountains of bones and the comptrollers has a staff of 20 people and they saw or did nothing what do they do all day? What do they do when they receive complaints people have been complaining about Burr Oak for years,” said [Dunkin].
The comptroller’s office says the auditor general already examines regulatory activities every two years and that it has found no evidence of impropriety since the 1998-2000 audit.
Anyone driving past could see mountains of bones? Really? Also, if they could, then why didn’t Dunkin notice something was amiss?
Between 2002 and 2006, Sen. Dillard opposed embryonic stem cell research. He said so in questionnaires he filled out, as Stanek documents.
But then, in 2007, he flipped, and was one of only two Senate Republicans who voted for government funding of embryonic stem cell research.
Today, Sen. Dillard says he is 100% pro-life. But in 2003, Illinois Planned Parenthood gave Sen. Dillard a 100% rating for his pro-choice votes. So, in just the last six years, Sen. Dillard has changed his positions on pro-life issues not once, but twice.
* Other campaign related stuff…
* Strike for Health Insurance Gets a Boost From Pat Quinn: Dozens of Chicago toolmakers on strike for health insurance got a shot in the arm Wednesday. A politician who’s counting on their union’s support next year joined their picket line.
* Bernie Schoenburg tells his readers today what I told subscribers yesterday. Illinois State Fair manager Amy Bliefnick is running as a Democrat in the 51st Illinois Senate District. Bliefnick also told both Bernie and myself that she won’t quit her state job while she’s campaigning…
She said she plans to keep the position during election season. If she’s successful in the Feb. 2 primary, that means she’ll be her party’s nominee during next summer’s state fair.
“I’m very good about separation of responsibilities,” she said.
Bliefnick is an elected member of the Richland Community College board and currently its president.
* The Question: Should Bliefnick resign her State Fair job to run for state Senate? Thoroughly explain your answer, please. Thanks.
We already know that Gov. Pat Quinn wants a $1 a pack increase in the cigarette tax to fund the MAP college scholarship program. Speaker Madigan is fully on board, but the other legislative leaders are hesitant…
Sara Wojcicki, spokeswoman for House Republican Leader Tom Cross, says Cross does not support such an increase but wants to work on other ways to restore MAP grant funding.
Senate President John Cullerton supports a cigarette tax increase but wasn’t part of Quinn’s renewed push for it, spokeswoman Rikeesha Phelon said. He prefers using the money for health care but will work to find revenue for scholarship funding.
And the House sponsor of the original Senate-approved dollar a pack cigarette tax hike, which was supposed to be used for health programs, is skeptical at best…
Rep. Karen Yarbrough, D-Maywood, said there simply wasn’t enough support to get the 60 “yes” votes needed for approval in the spring.
Yarbrough also said she didn’t know how Quinn and Madigan could find the three-fifths majority to pass the tax hike during the veto session.
And here’s Dan Hynes’ react to Quinn’s announcement that he would wait until after the February primary to move ahead with his income tax increase…
“Dan Hynes put forward his own comprehensive plan last week to get our state back on track through strategic spending cuts and modernizing and making more fair our tax structure,” McGrath said. “Governor Quinn has chosen, yet again, to put off tough decisions for another day.”
Quinn, Madigan and the Republicans all said about 2,600 state workers face lay-offs unless AFSCME agrees to forgo a scheduled pay increase for workers or accept furloughs.
Lay-off won’t happen “if the AFSCME union would enter into meaningful negotiations,” Madigan said. “I think the governor would say there’s no need to do the lay-offs if the AFSCME union would give up on the scheduled pay increase next year. The options for reducing costs would be layoffs furloughs, and you don’t need to do that if you give up the scheduled pay increase next year. In light of the general economic conditions all across the country, people everywhere are giving up hours, giving up time.”
* Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, writing in his new book about his impressions of Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic during Blagojevich’s 1990s trip to the region with Rev. Jesse Jackson…
I found [Milosevic’s] identification of himself as a victim very interesting and very telling….he couldn’t understand how [his critics] could be so wrong to believe what he claimed were lies and propaganda against him….This was shocking to hear, that a leader….would so blatantly deny the obvious and lie about it with the kind of conviction he was showing.
It’s official. Rod Blagojevich has absolutely no self-awareness whatsoever.
Wow.
* And speaking of books by crooks, Fox Chicago reports that former Cicero Town President Betty Loren-Maltese is peddling a new “tell-all” now that she’s out of prison…
She’s not afraid to name names.
Loren-Maltese has always said the whole Cicero story has not been told. Now she appears ready to tell it.
In her book, called “Justice… Chicago Style,” she calls herself a dumb broad and writes about some of the biggest names in Illinois politics — and the mob.
She doesn’t spill everything, but she does offer the station a couple of tidbits, which I’ve clipped for you…
Speaker Madigan’s spokesman told Fox Chicago that Loren-Maltese’s claim about Madigan offering to trade a Cicero casino for political help was “absurd.” Mayor Daley and Judy Baar Topinka did not respond, but a Topinka person told me that Betty got her story backwards.
* WBEZ interviewed all of the candidates for Cook County Board President as well as Sen. James Meeks (D-Chicago). Meeks said he’s worried that four black candidates “cancel each other out” against one white candidate…
A few weeks ago, Meeks organized a quiet, private meeting with the four African American Democrats: Clerk of courts Dorothy Brown, Congressman Danny Davis, Chicago Alderman Toni Preckwinkle and Stroger.
MEEKS: I just wanted them to make sure that they were dialoguing with each other, that they were not saying anything disparaging about each other, and that - at a certain date - they could come back together again and maybe determine who had front-runner status.
Meeks says he hopes one or more of the black candidates then drop out, making it less likely, he contends, that Terry O’Brien wins. O’Brien, chair of the water and sewage agency with that impossibly bureaucratic name… is that one white candidate Meeks was referring to.
But, so far, none of the African-American candidates seem concerned abut the racial dynamics, at least in public. Here’s Danny Davis’ reaction…
DAVIS: I can’t think of any particular reason that an African American voter wouldn’t vote for me, but I can’t think of many reasons that other voters wouldn’t vote for me either, if they’re looking for the best-run government that Cook County can have.
* Meanwhile, the Tribune editorial board pins the Stroger tax hike on Speaker Madigan because he has so far refused to move a bill that would allow a smaller override margin on the county board. The margin is currently four-fifths…
…Madigan wants to protect the thousands of Democratic patronage jobs in county government. Many of those payrollers donate money and campaign time to Madigan’s party. Overriding Stroger’s veto and lowering the sales tax would begin to force some economies — such as eliminating a few do-little patronage jobs — on Stroger’s government.
So let’s bestow on Madigan the honor he richly deserves: co-ownership of Stroger’s galling tax hike. They’re the taxmen.
Madigan has historically opposed lowering the veto threshold at least since the 1980s. That wasn’t mentioned in the editorial, of course.
…Adding… As a commenter correctly points out, the bill the Tribune wants passed during the veto session has an effective date of January 1, 2011. So, even if it had passed last spring, it wouldn’t have impacted any of the sales tax veto override attempts. Oops on the Trib.
Berrios isn’t just an old-style ward-heeler. He’s an ambitious ward-heeler who would bring his disregard for basic ethical principles to an office that by definition is highly vulnerable to clout and favoritism. If the Democratic bosses slate Berrios, they’ll be saying to the taxpayers of Cook County: We’re backing a guy who plays by our rules. Joe takes care of us, and we take care of Joe. As for you, well, tough.
In the first of four public hearings on the Cook County Health and Hospitals System’s 2010 budget, the tension that dominated recent budget discussions in county board chambers was nowhere to be found.
In fact, it was hard to detect a pulse at Provident Hospital last night, despite the fact that health system board members control the county’s second largest budget - nearly $1 billion in taxpayer dollars.
However, health system leaders told those at the sparsely attended event that the system’s increased patient volume and negotiations with government leaders has led to increased revenue this year, and a projected revenue increase of about $100 million next year.
The dollars rolling in are softening the burden to taxpayers, as system leaders are requesting $74 million less in county tax subsidies, relying more on the revenue generated from patients and federal funding. And as health system board members prepare to submit their budget to the county board, that’s a good thing.
Aldermen OK city’s Olympic liability, but get big concessions […]
They forced Ryan to line up $1.4 billion in private insurance to insulate taxpayers and spend 50 long nights conducting public hearings in all 50 wards to shore up public support that started to falter after the mayor’s overseas about-face.
If talk show diva Oprah Winfrey decides to reprise this week’s Michigan Avenue block party to open her 25th season, it could cost her a pretty penny.
Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) wants to require promoters and sponsors of outdoor special events in the central business district to pay the same hefty lane-closure fees that developers pay to make way for construction projects.
The Good Jobs Chicago Coalition is pushing for wages of at least $10-15 an hour. Members want Wal-Mart to provide health care and they want the retailer to purchase supplies from local vendors.
Conventional political wisdom says the Wal-Mart debate will jumpstart again in a few weeks. That’s after Chicago learns whether it will host the 2016 Olympic Games.
Alderman Howard Brookins wants a Wal-Mart in his ward, at a vacant site on 83rd and Stewart.
Wal-Mart sent him a letter with community promises. But the jobs coalition wants an ordinance.
The Chicago Transit Authority board approved a $4.3 million contract with Teleste Corp. of Georgetown, Texas, to install high-resolution digital security cameras and related equipment at all 144 CTA rail stations by 2011.
Several new faces will be present for today’s University of Illinois Board of Trustees meeting. Seven of the nine board members were appointed in recent weeks during the aftermath of the school’s admissions scandal.
* Illinois smart grid collaboration gets support from Gov. Quinn
Led by the Institute of Technology and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the Illinois Smart Grid Collaboration seeks to develop smarter, stronger and more secure electric grids. Gov. Quinn joined over 60 organizations, including electric companies ComEd, Ameren, and the Galvin Electricity Initiative, as well as the City of Chicago and Village of Oak Park in supporting the proposal.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) has set aside nearly $4 billion for smart grid advancement, with more than $615 million for regional demonstration projects. The Illinois Smart Grid Collaboration is competing for its cut of $60 million available in regional ARRA demonstration project funds.
If federal funding is received, the State of Illinois will invest up to $30 million in matching funds for two smart grid development and testing centers. According to Gov. Quinn’s office, the centers will work in partnership with energy providers and individual communities to ensure consumers and industrial users benefit from the collaboration’s technological advancements. Total costs for the proposed project is estimated to be $120 million.
* Internet Grows 37.5%, Traditional Media Declines 30%, 2006-2009
If you’re looking for a job, five others are knocking on that same door. There were six workers for every one U.S. job opening in July, according to data released by the Labor Department Wednesday.
There were 2.4 million job openings, in July, according to the government’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover report, the lowest number in the history of the report.
Foreclosure filings in Cook County dropped 9.5 percent in August from a year ago and plummeted 32 percent from July, according to a report from RealtyTrac released Wednesday.
Fully 70 percent disapprove of the job Stroger is doing, according to the poll of 300 Cook County registered voters. Asked whether they would like to see Stroger re-elected, 72 percent say no.
Stroger’s rating with black voters is horrid…
Only about 1 in 5 African-American voters polled approve of the job Stroger is doing or want to see him re-elected, while more than half oppose him.
And without providing specifics, the Tribune claims that more than three-quarters of voters want Stroger’s one percentage point sales tax repealed.
“I’m not surprised that the Tribune poll fails to accurately capture the opinions of voters – just as I’m not surprised by the ongoing smear campaign this paper mounts against me in their editorial pages,” Stroger said in a statement. “This paper’s owner, Sam Zell, after all, poured over $75,000 in the final weeks of the last primary into the campaign coffers of Forrest Claypool, and has made no secret that the Stroger name is loathed by the editorial pages.” […]
“[A]cross the county, countless residents have voiced outrage at the biased editorials of the Chicago Tribune and its running attempt to steer an election,” Stroger said. […]
“Our recent polling data severely conflicts with the so-called ‘data’ that the Chicago Tribune is publishing in this poll, not surprising given the miniscule size of the sample, particularly among minority communities.”
The Tribune poll is only of 300 voters, but Stroger shouldn’t be surprised at the results. They’ve been around that point for a very long time now.