Behind the creepiness
Wednesday, Oct 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* As I’ve told you before, the DCCC has been posting opposition research and raw tracker videos online this cycle. The idea is to let other groups, PACs etc. who are running “independent expenditure” campaigns have access to stuff that could be useful in their TV ads.
That appears to be what’s behind this Illinois Review story, headlined “DCCC threatens Congressman Schilling with chilling drive-by videos”…
A Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) staffer is publishing creepy videos of the homes of Congressman Bobby Schilling, his family members, neighbors, and supporters (see videos below) …the Schillings are understandably concerned about their family and friends’ privacy and safety — especially after a YouTube stalker incident just a year ago.
Last October, Congressman Schilling was the victim of a cyber death threat. A YouTube that went viral offered $75,000 for the congressman’s assassination or for the rape or murder of a member of his family (see video HERE).
With those memories still fresh in the Schilling family’s minds, the congressman’s sister-in-law visited Schilling’s Democrat opponent’s office and asked them to take the videos down. Staffers at Cheri Bustos’ headquarters said they would look into it, but the videos are still viewable.
“Frankly I am sickened by someone creeping around my sister’s house and our neighborhood, videoing homes,” Christie Schilling, the congressman’s wife, told Illinois Review. “I don’t want to sound like an alarmist. I’m sorry, but I don’t like not feeling safe.”
The videos of the homes have since been taken offline. But they were for houses that also appeared in the DCCC’s opposition research book.
For instance, Schilling owned a house on Ponderosa Drive in Colona that, according to the OR book, had some tax liens on it. A house in Silvis was bought and sold quickly, indicating it was flipped. A house in Geneseo was bought and sold within five years.
* Why is this important at all? Well, according to the OR book, Schilling earned no income from his now-legendary pizza restaurant in 2009 and earned just $1,750 in 2010. So, the idea is, apparently, to encourage somebody else to tell voters that Schilling ain’t much of a pizza guy. Instead, he’s… I dunno… something else.
Whatever. I suppose this is somewhat relevant because the Republican Party is making a big deal out of Democratic congressional candidate Brad Schneider’s lack of income from his consulting business.
But I’ll bet the DCCC doesn’t post video of Schilling’s house ever again. And that’s a good thing.
Sheesh, people. Take it easy out there.
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ComEd potpourri
Wednesday, Oct 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Today’s Sun-Times headline “South Side left without power more often than North Side” probably wasn’t much of a shock (pardon the pun) to most folks. People would likley just assume that the black-dominated South Side would be more likely to get the shaft…
The utility’s listing of each individual power outage in its annual reliability report showed the North Side had 15 wards with the smallest level of power outages, according to a Sun-Times breakdown of the numbers.
But on the South Side, only two wards made it into the lowest category of the Sun-Times analysis: wards that had fewer than 64,000 customer-hours of outages in 2011. […]
Shuman’s business and Lewis’ home are in the 3rd Ward, which runs along either side of King Drive and includes parts of Bronzeville, Grand Boulevard, Fuller Park and Kenwood. ComEd reported nearly 158,000 customer-hours without power in the ward in 2011, the fourth worst total in the city.
By comparison, the 43rd Ward’s Lincoln Park neighborhood on the North Side had only 57,000 customer hours of outages.
Qiana Acklin, 33, lives in the 4500 block of South Drexel Boulevard in the nearby 4th Ward, which endured 145,000 customer-hours without electricity.
“I think maybe it has to do with race, that plays a factor,” she said when told of the disparity between her 4th Ward and most North Side wards.
* But is race the biggest factor?…
The 3rd and 4th wards are majority black, but white wards on the South Side were also hit hard. The 19th Ward, which covers parts of Beverly and Mount Greenwood, is 66 percent white and had 162,000 customer-hours of outages. Whites are the largest group in the 23rd Ward, which includes parts of Garfield Ridge. That ward had 146,000 customer-hours of outages.
The 41st Ward in the far northwest corner of the city was atypical for the North Side in that it posted the highest outage customer-hours in the whole city: 283,000. This was mostly due to storms that hit the Edison Park and Norwood Park neighborhoods in July 2011.
* Or is it the number of trees and above-ground lines?…
“The South Side tends to have much more overhead [cable] exposure,” said Terry Donnelly, chief operating officer and executive vice president of the utility. “The North Side tends to have more underground conductors and the South Side tends to have more tree density.” […]
Suburbs, with even more above-ground power lines and more trees to knock them down, suffered more frequent and longer outages than the city.
Areas in wealthy North Shore suburbs were harder hit in 2011 than middle- and working-class south and southwestern suburbs.
Highland Park, for example — with a population of 29,000, smaller than any Chicago ward — had 305,000 customer-hours of outages.
Statistics can be manipulated to say lots of things, so I don’t think the article really answered the question.
* But, at the least, ComEd needs to vastly improve its infrastructure. And on that topic, the company’s plans to roll out a “Smart Grid” have been stymied by the Illinois Commerce Commission. As the Tribune notes, the ICC won’t have annual control over the company’s rates once it finalizes how certain returns on investments are calculated, and the Commission has been making it very tough on ComEd, although it gave in a bit after pressure from the General Assembly…
The Illinois Commerce Commission on Wednesday gave Commonwealth Edison a mixed decision on recovering the cost of ComEd’s smart-grid infrastructure project. The ICC allowed ComEd’s way of figuring its pension assets, but denied both interest rate costs and rate base that ComEd wanted to recover the costs of the project.
ComEd spokeswoman Judy Rader said ComEd still needs to review the order. But ComEd spokespeople in earlier statements have said the utility will appeal to the Illinois Appellate Court if it decides it cannot recover enough costs to proceed.
The ICC previously approved a rate that ComEd claimed was inadequate. In part, the ICC ruled that the electric utility can’t earn a rate of return on a pension asset that isn’t fully funded.
ComEd had proposed a decrease in its electricity rates totaling $40 million to $50 million, but because of the pension issue, the ICC decided May 29 to cut customers’ rates by four times that, for a total of $168.6 million.
More…
The ICC did not rule in ComEd’s favor regarding two other items that also affect the returns ComEd will receive on its infrastructure build out.
Instead, it offered a compromise that involves archaic technicalities that have to do with interest rates the company will receive and how the ICC will determine how costs are determined.
And…
Asked whether ComEd would urge state lawmakers to force the ICC to go along with the utility on the two remaining disputed issues, [ComEd spokeswoman Judy Rader] said, “It’s too early to say.”
It’s never “too early to say” on this topic. You can safely bet ComEd will be back in the GA with this issue very soon.
* And it’s a friendly General Assembly at that…
An email shows that the utility giant ComEd wrote a column for state Rep. Charles Jefferson to submit to a local newspaper under his own name.
The Rockford Register-Star ( http://bit.ly/ODiNyJ ) reported Wednesday that Jefferson sent in a 420-word column urging state regulators to reverse a rate cut that he says would impede ComEd’s efforts to modernize its power grid.
An email accidentally forwarded to the newspaper showed ComEd had written the column. The company asked Jefferson to submit it “at your earliest possible convenience” if he agreed with the content.
Oops.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Oct 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* What one word would you use to describe your feelings about tonight’s presidential debate?
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* Richard Ingram, the executive director of the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, had an interesting take on what the Chicago Democratic leaders’ pension “cost-shifting” plan could do…
Mr. Ingram said such a change might give TRS more power to compel pension fund payments than it has now. It can’t pursue legal action against the state, but it could against school districts if they fail to make required contributions. Part of the reason the pension fund is underfunded is due to the state missing payments in the past.
Hadn’t thought of that, but he’s probably right. The IMRF has a similar power over municipalities.
* Meanwhile, the cost-shifting plan continues to cause problems for Downstate Democrats…
Republican state Senate candidate Bill Albracht said his opponent, state Sen. Mike Jacobs, D-East Moline, will follow party orders and support a plan that could lead to big property tax increases to cover teacher pension costs.
Sen. Jacobs, however, said the claim was “baseless.”
At a news conference in Moline, Mr. Albracht said his District 36 opponent would support a plan backed by Democratic leadership in Springfield to shift the cost of pensions to local school districts, which has met with widespread opposition from lawmakers outside Chicago.
“If he thinks I’m for that, he’s crazy,” Sen. Jacobs said.
Mr. Albracht was joined in Moline by Illinois Senate Republican leader Christine Radogno to warn against the cost-shift plan.
“They plan to do this in the lame duck session,” Sen. Radogno said.
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* From the Southern Illinoisan…
Nearly one in ten Illinois voters don’t have a photo ID, according to the latest poll results from the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute.
Roughly 9.4 percent of registered voters asked in the poll said they don’t have “a current, unexpired Illinois-issued ID” that includes a photo, the institute, housed at SIU Carbondale, found in its recent statewide poll.
The institute released the findings Wednesday in light of a Pennsylvania judge putting a stop Tuesday to that state’s new and controversial voter ID law. Many states require people show a photo ID at the poll.
It’s aimed at preventing fraud, but in this election cycle critics have complained the rules keep away poor and minority voters, which tend to be the people without a current photo ID.
* The paper left out some information, however. From the Institute’s press release…
Subgroup responses in the Simon Poll show that instances of voters without IDs are higher in groups that tend to vote Democratic.
Registered voters with a high school education or less were more likely than average to be without ID (14.6 percent), as were African Americans (16.2 percent), voters under 35 (13.4 percent) and those with household incomes below $50,000 (14.0 percent).
According to the crosstabs, 18.2 percent of Latinos say they have no state-issued photo identification card.
…Adding… Per a commenter’s request, the poll found that 7.2 percent of whites said they had no state ID card.
9.6 percent of Chicagoans, 9.1 percent of suburbanites and 9.6 percent of downstaters say they have no state-issued identification. 10.5 percent of Democrats, 11.3 percent of independents and 7.7 percent of Republicans say they don’t have a state ID. Just 3.6 percent of people making over $100,000 a year have no official ID card.
* More from the Institute…
Illinois’ number is slightly less than the national statistic provided by the Brennan Center for Justice, which estimates that as “many as 10 percent of eligible voters” do not currently have or will be able to get proper identification in order to vote. Illinois is in line with estimates that show Pennsylvania with 9 percent estimates of eligible voters without a picture ID. The Simon Poll’s estimate of 9 percent is higher than a recent 7 percent estimate in New Hampshire and a 6.7 percent estimate in Minnesota.
…Adding… Here’s how the question was asked…
Do you have a current, unexpired Illinois-issued ID with your picture on it, like a driver’s license?
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* Drudge’s reaction was completely expected…
* And these reacts were totally predictable…
“Today’s actions are just the latest in series of disconcerting moves by this Justice Department, including its handling of the Fast and Furious Operation, allowing nepotism in hiring, its questionable dismissal of voting rights cases and the politicization of decisions that benefit special interest groups,” Wolf said in a statement. “This may be the most disreputable Justice Department in modern history.”
“This back-door move by the Obama Administration to open Thomson and reject the will of Congress and the American people is dangerously irresponsible, and will be met with the full and unfettered opposition of the Appropriations Committee,” Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) said in a statement.
* Call me naive, but I thought this react by Speaker Boehner was just way out of line…
Speaker Boehner: Obama Administration’s Purchase of Thomson Prison a Backdoor Move to Import Terrorists Into America
“A majority of the American people and a bipartisan majority in Congress oppose bringing the terrorists imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay into the United States, yet the White House continues to take steps to move forward with its dangerous plan. The unilateral decision to purchase the Thomson Prison – even though Congress has repeatedly opposed the Obama administration’s effort to use taxpayer funds to do so – underscores the administration’s desire to move forward and bring these detainees to U.S. soil. House Republicans have kept our Pledge to America to keep the terrorist detainees at Guantanamo Bay out the United States, and we will continue to keep our pledge. President Obama owes the American people an explanation about how importing these dangerous terrorists and giving them the same rights as U.S. citizens will make us any safer. Republicans will continue to oppose this dangerous plan.”
Boehner has a member in a tight race in the Quad Cities area, Bobby Schilling, who wanted the state of Illinois to practically give away the Thomson prison to the federal government. So, now, according to Boehner’s logic, Schilling supports terrorists too?
Not good.
* US Sen. Mark Kirk’s reaction…
“Opening up Thomson Prison to federal inmates will bring more than 1,000 jobs and millions of dollars in new investments to this area and will alleviate the overcrowding in other maximum-security prisons thoughout the country. As long as no suspected terrorists from Guantanamo are moved here, I fully endorse the sale of Thomson to house federal inmates.”
That’s the reasonable Republican line. Good idea, just don’t move terrorists there. Got it.
* Durbin explained the work-around to the Tribune editorial board…
We’ve been hammering Wolf for months to get out of the way, to no avail. So our first question was, how did the administration get around him? Getting Wolf’s signature is “a tradition and a courtesy,” not a legal requirement, Durbin said. Second question, then: Why didn’t the president bigfoot Wolf a long time ago?
“We tried to be respectful,” said Durbin, who appealed to House Speaker John Boehner to intervene after exhausting the usual channels. “The president and the department still have to work with the guy.
“But we reached the point where we thought this was never going to happen.”
The Trib concludes…
This is a win-win deal: The feds get a bargain price on a state-of-the art prison, and Illinois will add all those jobs without forfeiting its investment. The only loser here is Rep. Frank Wolf.
The other loser here is Schilling.
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* This A-1 was filed last night by indicted former state Rep. Derrick Smith (D-Chicago)…
It isn’t a huge amount of money, but it really takes a lot of stones to give that guy any campaign cash.
Sheesh.
* Meanwhile, Greg Hinz reports that Secretary of State Jesse White has convinced House Speaker Michael Madigan to make calls on behalf of Smith’s opponent, Lance Tyson…
At issue is an endorsement rally scheduled for [yesterday] afternoon by Lance Tyson, who decided to run as a third-party candidate after Mr. Smith won renomination in March, despite facing federal corruption charges. Mr. Smith subsequently was expelled from the House, and local Democratic powers, headed by Secretary of State Jesse White, got behind Mr. Tyson. […]
Steve Brown, Mr. Madigan’s longtime spokesman, told me that the speaker, at the request of Mr. White, has called various parties “and asked them to be for Tyson and attend the event.” Mr. Brown wouldn’t say if the speaker will open his war chest in the contest, but suggested it would be clear where the speaker stands, given the preceding comments.
So exactly who will show up? I’ve confirmed that a long list of officials, including U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, Cook County Commissioners John Fritchey and John Daley, and Aldermen Joe Moreno (1st), Emma Mitts (37th) and Michelle Smith (43rd) support Mr. Tyson. And I hear that a couple of deep-pocketed unions are preparing to jump into the contest.
*** UPDATE *** Congressman Danny Davis just called to say that he wasn’t at that Tyson event, didn’t know about the event and is neutral in the race.
[ *** End Of Update *** ]
* It turns out that Smith’s reported benefactor Alliance for Living NFP is also a big contributor to the Speaker’s campaign funds…
* As is Lydia Healthcare…
* As is Albany Care…
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Banks attacking credit unions over taxes
Wednesday, Oct 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I’ve seen this billboard lately near the Metro East…
If you can’t read the sign, it says…
I didn’t know that credit unions don’t pay income taxes!
Did you?
Ask your legislator why
* And now there’s a radio ad running in the region. Have a listen…
* Script…
Man: I heard something really interesting today. A family of four, like ours, pays more income tax than all of the credit unions in the state combined.
Woman: That’s amazing! I didn’t realize that credit unions don’t pay taxes.
Man: It’s true. Get this. The tax subsidy for credit unions is more than $1.5 billion a year. And that’s just federal income taxes. They don’t pay state taxes, either. That subsidy could go a long way to solving the state’s budget problems.
Woman: Well I’m glad we do business with our local bank. Do you know that bank employees just spent the day at Chrissie’s school talking to all the kids about financial literacy? And they’re even going to sponsor Tom’s soccer team.
Man: Our bank sure does a lot in this community.
Woman: They sure do. In my opinion, if credit unions really want to do business in our community, like banks do, they’re going to have to step up to the plate and pay taxes like the rest of us.
Man: Your family should not pay more in taxes than the credit union down the street. Let your elected officials know that you say “No” to credit union tax exemption.
Brought to you by the Illinois Bankers Association.
Credit unions are not-for-profit companies, so they don’t pay income taxes. But pretty much anybody can join a credit union these days, and the banks have been complaining about unfair competition.
We haven’t had a real knock-down, drag-out fight between the bankers and the credit unions in a while. Expect to hear more about this issue next spring.
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* This story about how the Europeans bested the Americans in the Ryder Cup because Rory McIlroy got a ride to the golf course is making the rounds…
Next time the Illinois State Police are looking for donations, their first call should be to Rory McIlroy.
The world’s No. 1 golfer needed a police escort to make it to the first tee on time Sunday after mixing up his time zones. He made it with 10 minutes to spare, just enough time to scarf down an energy bar, take a few strokes on the putting green and hustle to the tee.
“I’ve never been so worried driving to the golf course before,” McIlroy said. “Luckily there was a state trooper who gave me the escort to here. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t have got here in time.”
McIlroy was reading the Ryder Cup tee times on his phone and saw that he and Keegan Bradley were teeing off at 12:25 p.m. One problem: That was Eastern time. Medinah Country Club, outside Chicago, is in the Central time zone.
“All of the sudden we realized Rory was not here, and we started to look for him,” European captain Jose Maria Olazabal said. “Nobody knew.”
Finally, at 11, someone called McIlroy. With the police escort, McIlroy pulled up at the Medinah clubhouse 10 minutes before he and Bradley went off.
* Les Winkler, the sports editor of the Southern Illinoisan blames Gov. Pat Quinn for the American loss…
McIlroy probably misses his tee time and forfeits his match, if he doesn’t get a police escort to Medinah.
With the escort, McIlroy arrives just in time to slip into his golf shoes and sprint to the tee box. He went on to defeat Keegan Bradley in a crucial match.
There it is folks. Our tax money was used to help Europe retain the Ryder Cup.
Worst of all, the governor hasn’t taken any action against the state trooper with seriously misplaced priorities. Seriously, how difficult would it have been to mistakenly drop McIlroy off at Butler National?
Yeah governor, this one is on you.
* But it turns out that the Illinois State Police wasn’t to blame. It was a local cop…
It was Lombard Deputy Police Chief Patrick Rollins who got McIlroy to the altar of golf at the Medinah Country Club on time — saving him from the humiliation of forfeiting a hole, facing disqualification and potentially losing the Ryder Cup to the Americans.
What has been described as the one of the biggest last-day comebacks in Ryder Cup history — the Europeans’ win despite trailing the Americans 10-6 going into Sunday’s matches — almost didn’t happen because McIlroy was accidentally late due to a time zone glitch.
The scenario leading up to Europe’s victory began with a search for the world’s No. 1 golfer — and ended with sirens blaring and an abrupt halt depositing an anxious McIlroy on the front steps of the Medinah Country Club.
“I was just doing my duty,” said Rollins, whose fast thinking and deft driving Sunday is being credited with getting tardy golf ace McIlroy to the Medinah Club in time to snatch the cup from Team USA.
“The Ryder Cup was won on the golf course and not on the road,” chuckled Rollins.
“But I am getting a lot of ribbing for not driving to the wrong golf course or getting a flat tire,” Rollins told Sneed.
“But believe me, I would have done it for the American players if they had wound up being accidentally late like McIlroy.”
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