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Round-Up: 2010 Elections *** UPDATE 1x***

Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

***Update 1x***

* GIANNOULIAS STATEMENT ON KIRK PLAYING POLITICS ON HEALTH CARE

Chicago, IL - Illinois State Treasurer and U.S. Senate candidate Alexi Giannoulias released the following statement in response to Congressman Mark Kirk’s assertion that members of the House would lose seats if they voted in favor of reforming the health care system:

“It’s sad that Congressman Kirk would rather win an election than lower the cost of health care for Illinois families, but with these words and ten years of voting with big drug and insurance companies to block reform, Congressman Kirk has made it clear he puts politics ahead of our families,” said Giannoulias.

***End of Update***

* Giannoulias far outpaces opponents in fundraising

The state treasurer raised $1.1 million in the three months ending Sept. 30 and had $2.4 million on hand after spending $345,000.[…]

Closest to him is Chicago attorney Jacob Meister, who had $1.04 million in his account — nearly all of it borrowed.

Former Chicago Inspector David Hoffman had $837,000 in the bank — including a $500,000 loan to himself.

Chicago Urban League President Cheryle Jackson raised $367,000 and had $318,000 on hand.

* Ill. Republican, Democrat raise $2M in Senate race

Among Republicans, U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, of Highland Park, had $2.3 million after raising $1.63 million during the period. He spent $351,000. Another Republican in the race, real estate developer Patrick Hughes, had $340,000 on hand after loaning himself $250,000 and spending $42,000.

* Governor coming to King City

MT. VERNON — Illinois Governor Pat Quinn is expected to make a his formal campaign announcement in the King City on Wednesday at one of the 2009 Governor’s Hometown Award winning buildings.

* Illinois tax increase: Researchers say combine plans by Pat Quinn and Dan Hynes

Both proposals are ‘complimentary,’ says Institute on Taxation and Economic PolicyGov.

Quinn’s campaign touted the analysis by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a sister organization of the liberal-leaning Citizens for Tax Justice, for calling the governor’s plan “the most progressive, most economically sound and most timely option available.”

But the governor’s campaign did not note that the institute said Hynes’ plan, in the long run, “would be preferable as it would further enhance tax equity and would put Illinois’ tax system on a more sustainable path.”

* Comparing (and combining) the Quinn and Hynes tax proposals

* Schillerstrom offers budgeting ideas, with a twist

Republican candidate for governor Bob Schillerstrom issued several proposals today aimed at making the state’s budgeting process more transparent–but immediately backed off his own suggestion that the state comptroller have virtual veto power over the budget.

* Jim Ryan leans ’strongly’ toward run for governor

* Candidates for governor tout ideas at Bloomington forum

Republicans Adam Andrzejewski, Bill Brady, Dan Proft and Dan Schmidt, independent candidate Michael White and Constitution Party candidate Randy Stufflebeam spoke at the event sponsored by the McLean County Freedom Coalition.

* How clout list can help voters next year

Springfield lawmakers’ reaction to the investigative report in the Chicago Sun-Times detailing how they begged the Blagojevich administration for state jobs reminds us of a scene out of the 1942 classic movie, “Casablanca.”

* No Games Chicago leader to run for Cook County president

A top opponent of the failed Chicago 2016 Olympic bid is running for president of the Cook County Board on the Green Party ticket.

Tom Tresser, a lead organizer for No Games Chicago, a grass-roots group that fought the city’s Olympic bid, announced he’ll enter the race for the position held by Democrat Todd Stroger.[…]

Other Democratic candidates are West Side Chicago U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, Hyde Park Chicago Alderman Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County Clerk of the Circuit Court Dorothy Brown and Cook County Water Reclamation District President Terry O’Brien. Republicans Roger Keats, a former state senator from Wilmette, and Chicago police officer John Garrido also are running.

* Related

* U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean cancels swine flu talk after family’s brush with the illness

* Former U.S. Rep. Bill Lipinski gets building named after him

  79 Comments      


Round-Up: State Government

Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

* Quinn names new state finance chief

* Poll shows ‘agenda for reform’

* Illinois voters take initiative

* Your government in secret: Public officials are blocked from information too

“Public bodies have gotten comfortable with an unenforceable law and have gotten very good at roadblocks, making it brutally difficult to give access to information that the public is entitled to or board members are entitled to,” said Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s deputy chief of staff, Cara Smith.

* 7 board members who ran into roadblocks

* Ruff Law a recipe to cook lame ducks

State Rep. Renee Kosel (R-New Lenox) has introduced the Paul Ruff Law in the Illinois General Assembly.

The measure is officially known as House Bill 4627, but I’m calling it the Paul Ruff Law after the man who inspired it, the oafish assessor of Frankfort Township.

* Amendment gives power back to citizens

* Student lobbyists to take on lawmakers

  12 Comments      


Round-Up: Chicago and Cook County Governance

Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

* New Cook County health board faces showdown with Todd Stroger

Board president — who gave up direct control of county hospital, hiring and budget — lectured health chief at recent meeting and lets him know Stroger still influences his budget

* Cook health officials on hot seat over hospital plan

* Tuesday Illinois political docket: Daley budget details, Stroger forest preserve budget

* Will Daley have the guts to stop voodoo budgeting?

Be sure to watch the magic show, beginning at 10 a.m. in the City Council chambers as the city’s chief prestidigitator employs his best-ever sleight of hand to evaporate a $519.7 million (or whatever the latest number is) budget deficit without a tax increase.[…]

Daley lays the city’s budget problems on the recession, which has cut substantially into revenues generated from taxes, licenses and other sources. That’s certainly true; corporate revenues have declined, according to the preliminary budget that he released months ago, from $3.2 billion in the 2009 budget to $2.8 billion projected for the fiscal year beginning Jan. 1.

But you might also expect expenditures would also decline. Families are cutting their budgets, eating out less, buying cheaper clothes, skipping vacations and so forth. Silly me. This is government; this is Chicago government. Instead of reducing expenditures, Daley expects them to rise in fiscal year 2010 by 5.2 percent, to $3.3 billion.

Because personnel accounts for some 80 percent of city expenditures, you would be right to find the reason for the increase in labor costs. The preliminary budget identifies those costs as stemming from wage and health care increases, much of them required by labor contracts. Also to blame is the city having to subsidize the debt service for funds that go into employee pension funds. Special funds also have seen cost increases, such as the 5.9 percent increase at O’Hare International Airport.

* Daley looks at ways to cut Chicago’s budget

Daley announced plans Monday to save $114 million by eliminating vacant jobs, continuing furloughs and cutting expenses like travel and supplies by $20 million.[…]

His cost-saving plans include eliminating 220 vacant jobs.

The city will also save $70 million through union agreements and continued unpaid holidays and furloughs for nonunion workers.

Nonunion workers, including Daley, will take 24 unpaid days off next year.

* Daley: City Managers To Take Nearly Five Weeks Off

Thousands Of City Workers To Take 24 Unpaid Days In 2010

* Layoff notices for bus drivers, other CTA workers

Layoff notices have been sent to nearly 2,000 CTA bus drivers and other unionized employees, warning that their jobs could be eliminated in the next two months because of budget problems that also could lead to higher fares and service cuts to close a massive $300 million budget gap.

“They want to mimic what City Hall did with the unions — the furlough days, the unpaid vacations and holidays, things of that nature,” said Darrell Jefferson, president of the bus driver and mechanic’s union, which is expected to bear the brunt of the layoffs. “We’re not open to that.

* End the free rides

The Regional Transportation Authority recently surveyed senior citizens who ride the trains and buses for free and found, not surprisingly, that 70 percent of them think it’s a fine program that ought to be continued. If you’re wondering why Illinois lawmakers can’t bring themselves to eliminate that perk, even as the transit providers slash routes and raise fares for everyone else, there’s your answer.

Almost half of the riders who responded — 46 percent — never went to the trouble of applying for a senior fare card back when the discount was only 50 percent.

A year after the free rides went into effect, the region’s three transit systems are providing an average of 3.1 million free rides per month, the RTA estimates. Roughly 1.7 million of those rides are taken by riders who previously paid half price. The other 1.4 million are taken by people who used to pay full fare or didn’t take mass transit at all.

That’s almost 6 percent of total ridership. The freebies are costing at least $49 million a year, a number that will soar if not checked. By 2030, the region’s senior population is expected to be more than double what it was in 2000.

* Still paying for Blagojevich’s mistakes

We support state Rep. Suzie Bassi’s efforts to repeal the free rides except for low-income seniors. The Palatine Republican’s proposal would revert to the old system in which seniors who don’t qualify for free rides receive half-price fares.

Senate Republican leader Christine Radogno of Lemont also is taking up the cause. Her spokeswoman told Pyke in a Sunday follow-up story that Radogno “feels strongly a senior partner in a law firm doesn’t deserve a free ride downtown. Every dollar counts.”

Even though the idea clearly was politically motivated by Blagojevich, Bassi concedes that now it will be difficult for legislators to reverse course, saying seniors are an important constituent group.

* Daley: Police hiring to stay slow

After hiring only 46 Chicago Police officers all year, Mayor Daley acknowledged Monday that the slowdown would continue in 2010, dramatically impacting the city’s ability to fill 591 police vacancies.[…]

To save $10 million, Daley’s 2009 budget slowed police hiring to a crawl — with only 200 officers expected to be hired all year.

But, as city revenues plummeted, City Hall opted not to maintain even that snail’s pace. Only one class of 46 officers entered the police academy this year.

As of Oct. 9, the Chicago Police Department was 591 officers short of its authorized strength of 13,500 — and that’s not counting hundreds of other officers on duty- and non-duty disability.

* Uptown neighbors stand up against gangs — literally

* Chicago’s most dangerous hour? Statistically it’s 9 to 10 p.m.

* Northwestern University: Prosecutor defends subpoena of students’ notes, grades

Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez says all information is relevant

* Al Sanchez case: FBI agent tells judge he didn’t connect the dots over key witness at trial for ex-Streets and Sanitation boss

Government witness was under drug investigation, officials say

  16 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

* Former Blago aide due to plea

Alonzo Monk is set to appear today before U.S. District Judge James Zagel to enter a plea that has been postponed for months while his lawyer and federal prosecutors negotiated the terms.

* Blagojevich cleared for TV show, but with possible provisions

“He has a history of repeatedly commenting on the evidence - usually inaccurately,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Reid Schar. He said Blagojevich’s comments could taint the jury pool by mentioning evidence or talking about the possible length of the trial.

* Judge fears Blagojevich might talk about case on ‘Celebrity Apprentice’

Judge doesn’t rule on appearance, tells lawyers to address concerns about on-air statements

* Fascination with Blago trumps common sense

* Appeals court overrules judge who cut 25-year sentence to 15

In 1996, a judge reluctantly sent drug dealer Gregory Shelby to prison for nearly 25 years — even though the judge felt the term was unreasonable — because crack-cocaine sentencing rules tied his hands.

Then in 2008, prosecutors went back to the judge to ask for a 2½-year cut in Shelby’s sentence because he snitched on drug dealers while in prison, helping in a case against 23 people. Judge Charles Kocoras went beyond the recommendation, slashing Shelby’s sentence to 15 years.

But Monday, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the judge didn’t have discretion to cut the sentence beyond prosecutors’ recommendation.

* Charges dropped against one teen in Fenger beating death

* Jobless recovery no cause for cheer

Rare champagne is bubbling on Wall Street. The Dow Jones hits 10,000. Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke says the recession is over. Let the good times roll.

Only, don’t look at the world around us. The real economy — not the casino on Wall Street — is still mired in recession. Some 15 million are jobless, and the layoffs keep coming. Two-thirds of the jobless, the highest proportion since we began keeping records, have been out of work for at least six months. Those who have jobs are forced to work shorter hours — down to an average work week of 33 hours, lowest in 60 years. Incomes are down; health care benefits are getting cut; retirement plans are shattered. One in nine Americans now relies on food stamps.

* Ownership lawsuit stalls CBOE’s switch to stock-based company

* Outsourcing firm readies to hire, expand

London company Xchanging sets up HQ in Chicago

* State’s tech exports growing, but future challenging

* Target, CVS encourage reusing shopping bags by paying back their customers

* A fair approach to red-light cameras

* Not quite a house call, but not far off

* Bears do better rating than Dodgers in blase LA

  7 Comments      


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* Reader comments closed for spring break
* The DC 'chaos' vs. the state budget
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Michigan Republicans attack Pritzker over Asian Carp project
* Sen. Emil Jones III trial roundup
* Securing The Future: How Ironworkers Power Energy Storage With Precision And Skill
* It’s just a bill
* Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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