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*** UPDATED x1 - Jackson blasts Quinn over… supermarket closure? *** A victim he ain’t

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

*** UPDATE *** Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. just sent out a press release headlined: “Southland Jobs Continue to Hemorrhage Under Quinn.” It was about an announcement of a supermarket closure, but he tied it in to the third airport and the south suburban casino…

Upon hearing Jewel-Osco’s surprise announcement to close the Olympia Fields store this summer, Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. today called on Gov. Quinn to commit whatever state resources he can to keep the supermarket open.

“The Governor’s delays in developing a south suburban airport and Southland casino continues to create a hemorrhaging of jobs in the south suburbs, with Jewel being just the latest company to announce a shutdown and layoffs,” Jackson said. “Today I am calling on Gov. Quinn and the Jewel-Osco management team to come together and find a way to keep Jewel-Osco open.” […]

Jackson noted that a recent analysis showed that Quinn’s economic development programs awarded $350 million in business incentives during the last two years, but only 1 percent ($3.4 million) went to south suburban businesses.

[ *** End Of Update *** ]

* Um, Congressman, the Democrats gave you a sweet map and a very Republican district. Yes, you were “targeted” - for preservation

Shimkus was asked if he felt Democrats had singled him out by dividing his hometown between two districts.

“It’s almost an honor to be personally targeted, because it means that someone doesn’t like the job you’re doing,” he said. “And if it’s the Democrats in Springfield and Chicago, then that must mean I’m doing a pretty good job.”

I know it’s all the rage in DC to claim to be a victim, but Shimkus ain’t a victim. And since those bad ol’ Democrats actually kept him safe and sound, what does that mean?

* I’m told by his campaign that Raja Krishnamoorthi put just $11,406 of his own cash into this rather impressive fundraising haul

Raja Krishnamoorthi who lost a primary bid for Illinois comptroller last year has already launched a campaign. On Friday, his campaign said in a release Krishnamoorthi has in the last five and a half weeks put $400,000 into his warchest.

Krishnamoorthi’s wife reportedly contributed another $2,500.

* Krishnamoorthi’s most likely Democratic primary foe is Tammy Duckworth, who was released from Hatch Act restrictions last Thursday when she left the federal payroll. She started making calls on Friday

If Duckworth ran for the House again, she would have a much stronger position than the first time around–her resume is more formidable–since 2006 she ran the Illinois veterans agency and is one of the top VA officials in Washington– and she would be running from the more Democratic district.

Her Hoffman Estates home is in the proposed new 8th district, designed by Illinois Democrats to have a Democratic tilt.The new 8th contains territory from the present 6th district where Duckworth beat Roskam.


When Duckworth ran in 2006, her candidacy was supported by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), then Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and then Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.), now Chicago’s mayor, then running the House political operation.

* This is a clue as to her intentions

Pete Giangreco, a consultant who also worked on Duckworth’s 2006 bid, said Friday was her first day back in Illinois after leaving her job as assistant secretary of Veterans Affairs in Washington.

Giangreco was making calls and sending out e-mails Friday on her behalf.

* The Chicago News Cooperative has a decent basic primer on the expected Republican challenge to the legislative and congressional maps

Republicans and Latinos are not traditional political allies in Illinois. But in a lawsuit expected to be filed this week, Republicans will stump for Latino interests as they challenge the legality of the state’s redrawn political boundaries.

In addition to that case, which disputes the new map of General Assembly districts, Republicans also plan to file a similar lawsuit opposing the redrawn congressional map.

In both instances, the GOP will advocate for more Latino representation in the Statehouse and Congress, a cause driven by political expediency, not ideology. Republicans and Latinos tend to clash on immigration policy, entitlement programs and criminal justice issues. […]

Latino groups are split over their analysis of the new boundaries. U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Chicago) supports the new congressional map, which secures his seat representing a super-majority Latino district but does not create another. Other groups, such as the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, continue to weigh legal options to sue and have been communicating with GOP officials. The state map divides the heavily-Latino Little Village neighborhood into multiple districts, a change MALDEF opposed.

“It is not ironic,” MALDEF Midwest Redistricting Coordinator Elisa Alfonso said of a Latino-GOP partnership. “If you look at the history of redistricting cases, some cases we’re friends of the Republicans and sometimes we’re not.”

* Speaking of the map, I suppose one could look on the bright side and rejoice in the notion that the Associated press has finally discovered the rural hamlet of St. Anne

Surrounded by fields that grow corn, soybeans, melons and potatoes, this tiny rural village is 65 miles from Chicago but light years away from the big city. Still, St. Anne and a lot of the farm country around it has now been dragged into the metropolis as part of an ambitious political strategy focused on the 2012 national elections.

A new census-based political map drawn by the state’s Democratic-controlled Legislature, and signed into law by Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, has taken swaths of suburban and rural Illinois and added them to the districts of veteran Chicago Democrats such as U.S. Rep. Jackson Jr., who could be St. Anne’s next representative.

That Jackson district is most certainly one of the weirder aspects of this new map. And perhaps the reporters in the southern end of his new district will have more luck prying answers out of Jackson

During the trial, he denied, under oath, any involvement in Blagojevich’s shakedowns. Afterward, he issued a written statement:

“As you can imagine, I have many strong feelings about this entire matter,” he said. “My strongest feeling, however, is respect for our judicial system. Therefore, I will have no further comment about the case or how it has affected me until there is a verdict.”

I couldn’t wait. Alas, post-verdict, Jackson kept his “strong feelings” to himself. Last week, his office issued the usual “no comment.”

* This CNC story tells part of the story about black migration to the south suburbs

On Willow Road, a boulevard lined with 3,200-square-foot houses, five of the nine buyers in the 1000 block moved to Newbury Estates from heavily black sections of the South Side. Buyers came from the Woodlawn, Park Manor, Morgan Park, Gresham and Englewood neighborhoods, property records show.

The subdivision, about 30 miles from the Loop, represents only part of a much greater migration to the south suburbs from 2000 to 2010. In all, Chicago’s black population declined by about 181,000 people, or 17 percent, in that period, according to recently released figures from the 2010 census. The rapid contraction of the black population was the main driver of the city’s overall population loss of about 200,000 in the last decade, a fact noted by Rahm Emanuel in his mayoral inauguration speech in May.

According to the CNC’s chart, south suburban towns saw a population increase of about 46,000 over ten years. Some of that was natural growth, much was migration from the city. But that still leaves a whole lot of people unaccounted for.

* Roundup…

* Sheyman Raises Almost $110K for Congressional Run

* Eric Reyes announced Saturday in Rock Island he will be joining three other Democratic candidates seeking nomination for the race against Rep. Bobby Schilling in the 2012 election.

* Bustos In, McNeil Out in Illinois’ 17th District Race

* Chuck Sweeny: Rockford stands to lose big in the new 17th District

* Foster, we’d like to miss you for a change

* Hultgren gets a look at thriving business in Genoa

* Kent Gaffney plans to run in 2012

  29 Comments      


Weathering Storms with a Smart Grid

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

On June 21 powerful storms, including two tornadoes, struck ComEd’s service territory knocking out power to 440,000 customers.

ComEd’s call center responded to nearly 600,000 calls and Web site traffic was at an all-time high as customers reported their outages and checked to find out when power would be restored.

With more than 800 crews, working around the clock ComEd restored service to 90 percent of customers within the first 48 hours. Within three days, the company had restored power to virtually all customers, with some individual, isolated outages lingering into Saturday.

Power outages are more than just an inconvenience; they lower productivity of the region’s economy and cost money.

But what if smart grid technology had been in place?

    o ComEd would have known customers were out of power without them having to call us.
    o Technology would have pinpointed outages allowing us to dispatch crews more quickly to restore service.
    o Digital automation would have rerouted power meaning fewer customers would have been seen outages, and
    o Thousands of customers may have never experienced an outage.

Why wait to modernize our electric grid? The time to act is now.

  Comments Off      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As you already know, the Flubs managed to eke out just one win in the latest three-game series against the White Sox. The team’s record is an abysmal 35-51. They can’t even put together three wins in a row

As difficult as this is to believe, through July 4, the Cubs have still not won three games in a row this season. As the three-game winning streak drought germinated early in 2011, I researched to see if other Cubs teams have ever had this problem. I had to go all the way back to 1974 to find a Chicago Cubs team that did not win three straight until July 5. After losing to the Washington Nationals, the 1966 Cubs are the next Chicago team to have gone longer without a three-game winning streak… The 1966 Chicago Cubs did not attain a three-game winning streak until August 6!

Injuries and mental errors have plagued the team and goofy excuses abound

Cubs closer Carlos Marmol didn’t blame his costly wild pitch in the 10th inning on having to rush into the game because of an injury, which he never had done before. Marcos Mateo left with an elbow injury after facing two batters.

But manager Mike Quade wonders if there might be a better way to prepare a reliever if the situation arises again.

‘‘These guys’ routine is to get ready in the bullpen and then come out and make their eight [warmup] pitches and pitch,’’ Quade said. ‘‘But [in cases of injuries], everyone always comes out and makes their pitches on the mound in front of 30,000 people. Do you have to do that? Someone told me today it’s a courtesy.

‘‘Well, if a guy’s more comfortable doing his thing [in the bullpen], I’d rather have him [do that] because of the urgency once you get on the mound and everybody’s watching.’’

* The Question: Just how bad is this Cub team?

  50 Comments      


Crime and punishment

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More than three months after falsely claiming that Rep. Bob Rita had been convicted of a felony and was therefore ineligible to serve in the House (wrong on both counts), the Illinois Policy Institute quietly issued a retraction and apology on the Friday before the July 4th holiday weekend under the headline “Investigative Reporting Update.” I have no idea why the group waited so long to do this because it was clear within minutes of publishing its story that at least half of it was wrong (even if he was a felon, which he wasn’t, felons are able to serve in the General Assembly after they’ve completed their sentences). The other half (about being a felon) was cleared up within a few hours. Even so, the group continued to aggressively push the story via Chicago radio and TV appearances.

Rep. Rita has graciously accepted the apology. I’m still waiting for the group’s apology to me, however. All I did was point out IPI’s egregious errors and was then insanely accused of fronting for the House Democrats. Ridiculous.

* This is bizarre on so many levels

State Sen. Martin Sandoval (D-Cicero) awarded a taxpayer-funded college scholarship for $8,200 to Michael A. Giorango, who’s the son of three-time felon and reputed mobster Michael C. “Jaws” Giorango.

And then Sandoval did something that state officials say was even more unusual: He tried to revoke the scholarship that he’d awarded to the younger Giorango to attend Illinois State University.

But it wasn’t because the father had been convicted of helping run a mob bookmaking operation, failing to file his taxes and participating in a nationwide prostitution ring, according to Sandoval.

“I never met him, I don’t know who he was, and I don’t care to meet him,” Sandoval says of Michael A. Giorango and the string of events that led to his getting — and ultimately giving up — one of the college scholarships that the senator gets to hand out under Illinois’ legislative scholarship program.

Nor, Sandoval says, does he know the elder Giorango, who served a four-year prison sentence during the early 1990s for the mob bookmaking conviction. According to federal prosecutors, the south suburban ring that Giorango helped run once threatened bombings and other violence to make sure people paid them what money they owed.

Giorango listed his address as being at the home of Rudy Acosta, a top precinct captain for Ald. Ed Burke, even though he actually lives in Orland Park, which is not in Sandoval’s district. Acosta has worked for Sandoval in the past, but Sandoval says Acosta didn’t personally recommend Giorango to him for a scholarship. The scholarship application was approved by an aide, Sandoval claims, even though Giorango didn’t complete a 500-word essay or submit a school transcript.

* Meanwhile, the Daily Herald has a story about the murderer registry bill

The father of an Illinois State Police officer mowed down during a high speed police chase 25 years ago in Itasca, is imploring Gov. Pat Quinn to sign a bill requiring first-degree murderers to register their whereabouts with local law enforcement for 10 years after their release. The state Senate unanimously approved the bill in May. […]

John Kugelman had been a member of the Illinois State Police for about 3½ years when he was killed during a high-speed police chase in November 1986. David Melind, who was 17 at the time, led police on a high-speed chase through Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg and Elk Grove Village before he mowed down John Kugelman. The state police officer had stepped onto the shoulder of Route 53 near Irving Park Road in an attempt to stop the chase. Melind, formerly of Elk Grove Village, had taken off when police attempted to pull him over for speeding. Melind did not take his foot off the accelerator when he ran Kugelman over, according to court testimony. […]

Sponsored by state Rep. Dennis Reboletti, a Republican from Elmhurst, the bill is known as “Andrea’s Law.” Andrea Will was an Eastern Illinois University student murdered by her ex-boyfriend in 1998. He was released from prison after serving half of his 24-year sentence. If approved by Gov. Quinn, it is estimated between 400 and 500 first-degree murderers currently on parole would have to register with the state police. The Internet database would include mug shots and addresses, similar to the state’s sex offender registry.

* But the Sun-Times editorial board thinks it should be vetoed

But this bill would make it all but impossible for ex-offenders to make a fresh start, while offering only the illusion of greater public safety.

The logic of sex offender registries is that at least some small percentage of sex offenders cannot be rehabilitated; released from prison, they will repeat the same crimes. Society must know who they are to protect itself.

There is no compelling evidence, however, that people who kill once tend to do so again, especially after serving a 20- to 30-year prison term.

What we do know is that making it harder for ex-offenders to fully integrate into society after prison — with friends, family and a job — increases the likelihood that they’ll return to crime.

In a cash-strapped state that already has public registries for sex offenders, child murderers and arsonists, we also question whether Illinois has the resources to keep track of the thousands of convicted murderers who would be required to register.

* Related…

* Cellini ready for trial in October, attorney says

* Gov. Quinn bars disclosure of gun-permit holders

* Did Cicero’s Dominick slur Hispanics?

* Mayor Rahm Emanuel proposing new round of ethics reforms

* Jody Weis to be named deputy head of the Chicago Crime Commission

* Going it alone: Other towns not following Palatine’s lead on smoking

  10 Comments      


The other three charges

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column is about the three felony counts that didn’t stick to Rod Blagojevich

While Rod Blagojevich’s jury found him guilty on 17 felony counts last week, jurors found him not guilty on one count and deadlocked on two others. Not much has been written about those other counts, so let’s take a look.

The paucity of electronic surveillance evidence related to those verdicts, the lack of credible witnesses for the prosecution and absence of actual harm appeared to hurt the federal government’s case.

Jurors deadlocked on whether Blagojevich actually attempted to hit up Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s brother for a big campaign contribution in exchange for releasing funds to a school in Emanuel’s old congressional district. But this allegedly happened in 2006, long before the feds began bugging Blagojevich, so there were no tapes. And Mayor Emanuel testified at trial that he’d never been told the grant would be made if his brother held a fundraiser. His testimony undermined the feds’ case and jurors deadlocked.

There was some surveillance involving the other two counts, which centered around whether Blagojevich tried to shake down a road builder in exchange for giving him tollway contracts. But nothing concrete could be promised to the builder since a $6 billion tollway construction plan that was constantly mentioned on tape was just a dream in Blagojevich’s head at the time.

Blagojevich, in other words, was just dangling the possibility of government work in exchange for money from the road builder. But demanding a contribution from someone who does business with the government is not illegal under federal law.

The targeted road builder testified that he felt pressured to contribute, but he initially told the FBI that there was no pressure. And the builder’s bosses testified that Blagojevich never directly connected campaign contributions to contracts. Blagojevich was declared not guilty on one count and the jury deadlocked on the other

“No harm, no foul,” may be a good way of summing this up. Emanuel’s school got the cash and no fundraiser was held. The road builder was never promised or given anything specific and no money was contributed.

Blagojevich was convicted of two other similar shakedown attempts. He was recorded being told that for every day he didn’t sign a horse racing industry bailout bill that track owner John Johnston would lose $9,000. Real harm was being done. Blagojevich was also caught on tape instructing his aide how to approach Johnston and appeared to admit that he was holding off signing the bill until he got his money. He didn’t sign the bill until after his arrest. There was nothing hypothetical about that charge and harm was done, and the former governor was found guilty.

The same reasoning goes for the shakedown of a Children’s Memorial Hospital executive. Blagojevich was repeatedly caught on tape plotting to hit the exec up for a large contribution in exchange for releasing funding for the hospital. Blagojevich was also busted checking out whether he could hold up the money. And the exec credibly testified that he believed he was being shaken down. The state cash wasn’t released until after Blagojevich was removed from office. Once again, real harm was done and there was plenty of recorded evidence and credible testimony to back up the government.

But if hypothetical situations and lack of actual harm undermined the government’s case on three counts, why then did the jurors decide to back the prosecution’s case all the way on the attempted sale of Barack Obama’s US Senate seat? After all, none of the schemes were ever followed that far. Nobody was really harmed by the delay, and much of what Blagojevich was caught on tape saying was obviously crazy talk.

Besides the audacity of Blagojevich’s crassness, the answer may have been the huge amount of electronic surveillance. The jury was obviously impressed with the vast number of recordings involving the Senate scheme. “There was so much more evidence to go on,” said one juror after the verdicts were issued.

And, unlike his last jury, which deadlocked on all but one charge, these jurors seemed to comprehend the fact that this wasn’t about whether Blagojevich followed all the way through on his Senate schemes. “He was being tried on attempting, not committing a crime,” a juror correctly explained to reporters.

Prosecutors also did a better job of explaining a much more streamlined case this time. The last jury got lost in a jumbled maze. But the feds used a PowerPoint presentation during summation which so impressed one juror that she said she wished the jury could’ve had it during deliberations.

* Related…

* Blagojevich appeal complicated by testimony?: So even if the appeals court finds Judge Zagel made an error, they’re unlikely to grant an appeal. They’d consider most judicial errors unimportant compared to the role Blagojevich’s testimony played in the jury’s decision.

* Prison terms for political corruption affect families

* WLS: Former Blago Lawyer says suppressed tapes could clear Blago

  6 Comments      


Most big Illinois companies pay less than 2 percent for state, local income taxes

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune has published a very good article on corporate tax burdens. But keep a few things in mind. These numbers are for state and local income taxes. Illinois has no local income tax. Also, these numbers are for all states, not just Illinois. And Illinois changed its tax laws several years ago to what’s known as the “single sales factor.” Only Illinois sales are counted toward a company’s income taxes. The change was meant as a boost to the state’s manufacturers…

In 2010, a majority of Illinois’ top 50 publicly traded corporations paid less than 2 percent of their earnings in income taxes to states and municipalities across the country, with some paying nothing at all or receiving refunds.
[…]

Peoria-based Caterpillar, with $42.6 billion in sales and revenue last year… does 70 percent of its sales outside the U.S. and saw sales plummet by 37 percent in 2009. Its state and local income tax burden that year was minus 3.3 percent of global earnings, which means it was owed money back. In 2010, a year when its sales began to recover, its liability was just 0.7 percent. […]

Infant-formula maker Mead Johnson Nutrition has a low state and local tax burden, 0.2 percent, because only 17 percent of pretax income came from the United States, and within that segment, a lot of sales occur in other states.

* But not every corporation has it so good…

Integrys’ [which owns Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas] state and local income tax burden for 2010 was 5.1 percent of global earnings, tying the electronic health records company Allscripts for the second-highest effective rate among the region’s largest companies, according to the Tribune analysis. At the top was CME Group, owner of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade, at 5.8 percent. All tax-burden figures in this story include an allowable federal deduction.

* More relevant numbers…

While Illinois income taxes generally make up a small portion of expenses for major corporations, and corporate income tax revenues accounted for only 4.5 percent of the state’s general fund revenues in 2010, 18 of the state’s 50 largest public companies have been granted state tax credits in the past decade.

Discuss.

* Related…

* John Cullerton talks workers’ comp, tax increase

* Menard workers still get disability even though doctors clear them to return to work

* Committee to examine state’s business atmosphere

* A drop in downtown day-trippers - City’s attractions are drawing fewer suburban visitors

* Technology replaces brawn in Ravenswood corridor

* Joffrey letter to dancers threatens to cut season: The drastic action — which constitutes a lockout not dissimilar to what the NFL is facing — is the result of an ongoing, unresolved contract negotiation between the ballet company and the dancers union, the American Guild of Musical Artists, which also represents major companies such as American Ballet Theatre in New York.

  24 Comments      


AFSCME contract open thread

Tuesday, Jul 5, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For the complete story on how and why Gov. Pat Quinn decided to cancel scheduled pay raises for thousands of union employees, click here and here.

* The reasoning basically boils down to this: The state Constitution gives the General Assembly the sole authority to appropriate funds. The state’s Labor Relations Act has a clause that makes all union contract provisions subject to appropriations. Therefore, since the GA shorted the approps for personnel, the governor had no choice but to cancel scheduled pay raises. Even so, AFSCME claims that the action is illegal and vows to fight it in court

* Quinn was asked about his action over the weekend

Approximately 30,000 state workers, from prison guards to health care workers, were supposed to get a raise Friday, after having time-deferred their previous two raises.

The governor said ‘no’. Legislators did not put money in the budget for the raises, so for now, they will not happen.

“We have got to run the government, got to make sure it lasts for an entire fiscal year - all of the services that people need - and when the money was not provided for the pay raises, I had no choice,” said Quinn.

Listen…

* Frank is not a lawyer, so you can’t take this to the bank

Quinn wanted a budget $2 billion larger than what was approved by the Democratic-led legislature. But a leading legislative budget negotiator said the administration never signaled that it would try to bypass a collective bargaining agreement with union workers as a financial management strategy.

Rep. Frank Mautino of Spring Valley, the House Democrats’ budget point man, also said he doesn’t think Quinn’s pay raise move is enforceable.

Mautino acknowledged lawmakers cut the personal services budget lines of state agencies, but said this was to allow Quinn to eliminate unfilled positions because the governor struck an election-year deal with AFSCME not to seek layoffs.

Discuss.

…Adding… Ghost makes several strong and quite important points in comments…

Set aside that it is AFSCME and just insert “contract” here.

Right now every Gov can only spend money which has been appropriated for that purpose. Quinn can not sign a contract to buy the Dodgers, for example, if no money has been appropriated for it. It is a fundamental check and balance of our system. Only the GA can authorize and approve spending.

If the GA does not approve the spending, then the money can not be spent. There is no legal remedy as the court does not have appropriation authority either.

If the court upholds that a Gov can spend money without spending authority form the GA stand back, you think our budget situation is bad now, imagine a Blago who could enter into contracts for health care without any money being appropriated to cover them…or to build buildings or roads etc.

In essence if the court sides with AFSCME, it is giving the Gov authority to spend money without the approval of the general assembly, which tosses out any need for the general assembly to appropriate and approve spending. [a few minor spelling corrections made]

  87 Comments      


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