* From the Columbia Chronicle…
Columbia will not fund student Monetary Award Program grants for the 2016–2017 academic year, according to President and CEO Kwang-Wu Kim.
The decision announced on April 4, two days after more than 3,000 prospective students attended Open House, reflected the college’s inability to cover another year’s worth of payments if the state’s budget stalemate continues, Kim said.
“It comes down to [the fact that] we just can’t afford it,” Kim said.
Emails were sent April 1 to Columbia’s more than 1,800 MAP grant recipients—whose total financial aid exceeds approximately $7 million—mentioning the school’s subsidy of their 2015–2016 grant money, but omitting mention of the college’s 2016–2017 decision.
Kim said the college was hoping to see the state’s budget crisis be resolved by Gov. Bruce Rauner and other major Illinois leaders, but added that he is not expecting a resolution anytime soon.
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In which I totally agree with Mayor Emanuel
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Tribune…
The mayor struck up a conversation with six children who were talking about the recently released “Batman v Superman” movie. Ever the political animal, Emanuel inserted himself into the discussion and quickly found himself moderating a debate among the kids as to which was the stronger comic book hero – Batman or Superman. […]
Once the mayor finished giving his remarks, Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. revisited the Batman vs. Superman topic, but with his own twist, comparing the two heroes to two feuding Springfield politicians – Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner and Democrat Speaker Michael Madigan.
“What I’m saying is Madigan is Superman and Rauner is Batman,” Burnett proclaimed to no one in particular as reporters gathered their microphones and recorders. “Rauner’s money is the kryptonite, and he’s trying to use it on Superman. But Superman, he always gets around the kryptonite. He always comes back. He can’t be defeated.”
As Burnett waxed on about his Springfield superhero theory, Emanuel was signing a kid’s floppy hat, grinning and shaking his head.
“Walter,” the mayor said, “you got too much time on your hands, man.”
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Today’s number: 549,040
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Translation: 549,040 is the number of pageviews at this website on primary election day last month, according to my server stats (which specifically exclude bots, worms, etc.). That’s pretty amazing considering that all of our content that evening was automatically updated via ScribbleLive and therefore required no screen refreshes. And, as far as I could tell, we had just one minor overload glitch which didn’t last more than a few seconds. The server fixes have definitely worked.
To put that number into perspective, we had 143,269 pageviews here the day Rod Blagojevich was arrested. We had 230,478 pageviews on 2014’s primary day and 322,329 pageviews on general election day that same year.
Thanks!
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RNUG begs to differ
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A Sun-Times story on last month’s Illinois Supreme Court pension decision…
The ruling also states, “The pension protection clause was not intended to prohibit the Legislature from providing ‘additional benefits’ and requiring additional employee contributions or other consideration in exchange.”
The Emanuel administration seized on that as charting a path forward.
“Obviously, we would have preferred a win, but we don’t think the door is completely shut. They left the door open to collective bargaining,” said a top mayoral aide who asked to remain anonymous.
“Individual employees get to decide whether to make future pay hikes pensionable. In exchange for that, they agree to modification of pension benefits. Or, they get to keep the current benefit structure and give up future pay increases being pensionable.”
Illinois Senate President John Cullerton has applied that same “consideration model” to the state’s pension crisis. He called Thursday’s ruling “more than a glimmer of hope” for Chicago.
“We have a clear path on how to solve it. This is a positive decision. The court is basically saying if you do that in a collective bargaining setting, that’s a contract and you can ratify it,” Cullerton, Emanuel’s closest ally in Springfield, said Thursday.
“They could go in and renegotiate the same bill we passed, ratify it in a collective bargaining setting and it would be fine. Reduce certain pension benefits. Increase contributions. They could go back to the table and negotiate the same thing and that contract would be constitutional where the bill was not.”
* I asked our resident pension expert RNUG to address these points…
Çullerton is misunderstanding the road map the court is pointing at.
I’ve argued several times that they can’t make raises to salary non-pensionable by playing games and calling it a bonus or something else. You can refuse to give a raise, but if you do, it has to be pensionable.
I’ve also previously noted that all the unions can do is negotiate a framework within which each individual employee can make a voluntary decision, with one of the choices being keep current benefit structure, including benefits yet to be earned under the existing formula.
I think the IL SC is saying something just a bit different from the way Emanuel and Cullerton are reading it. The court is saying it IS a contract and you can change it with the consideration model, but it has to be done voluntarily. In other words, if the employee is foolish enough to agree to a bad deal, OK. If you can offer something of enough perceived value to get the employee to surrender the benefits and protections they already have, then buyer beware.
One possibility would be to offer some kind of benefit, like shorter hours for same salary or immediate cash, in exchange for changing the terms of the pension contract.
Another possibility would be to offer even better benefits (better formula, earlier retirement, improved survivor’s as examples), but make the cost (contribution rate) extremely high or a lower rate contingent on surrendering something, say the 3% AAI for some kind of reduced COLA.
There are a couple of past models for this in previous pension changes. One was when the State moved new hires to the coordinated plan (state plus Social Security) circa 1970-1972 where people already in the system had to choose to either keep what they already had or change to the new plan with a different benefit structure and contribution rate. Another time was when the AAI was implemented; it required an additional contribution that, in theory, you could have opted out of … but it was a no brainer to take that deal. Model a new offer in a similar manner. I think the coordinated plan was State initiated but the AAI was a union contract initiative.
I didn’t mention health insurance because I’m not sure anyone would trust the State to keep any promises in that area, but it is a possible negotiating point. The State will probably lose money in the long run, but promise zero premiums for dependents of retirees and zero deductibles and co-pays and a limited COLA in exchange for surrendering the 3% AAI. That would, I believe, be valid.
It may seem like I am splitting hairs with where Emanuel and Cullerton are coming from, but those nuances are the difference that would make it constitutional.
Discuss.
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AG Madigan to Rauner: No
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* No surprise because the law is pretty clear…
Gov. Bruce Rauner’s attempts to give the Illinois Board of Education greater control over Chicago Public Schools hit a potential snag [last] week, with the state’s chief legal officer saying the board has no authority to interfere with CPS borrowing money.
“Specifically, the plain and unambiguous language … of the [Illinois] School Code draws a distinction between CPS and other school districts when it sets forth the state board’s powers to assist school districts in financial difficulties,” Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan wrote in an opinion dated Thursday. […]
The state board can investigate the financial state of any school district in the state, including CPS. But rules requiring Illinois school districts to get state approval before taking on debt don’t apply to CPS, Madigan wrote.
“As a result, the state board may not preclude the Chicago Board [of Education] from establishing a line of credit unless the School Code is amended to grant the state board this authority,” Madigan wrote.
* Tribune…
The state has broad authority to approve budget plans of troubled districts outside of Chicago, including the ability to block borrowing. But when it comes to CPS, the state’s role after determining the district is in financial difficulty is only to “notify the governor and the mayor,” according to Madigan’s reading of the law. […]
In February, Chicago Public Schools borrowed $725 million to cover debt payments and construction projects, but it came with extraordinarily high interest rates — which Emanuel has blamed, in part, on Rauner’s talk of a state takeover.
State Board of Education spokeswoman Laine Evans said late Friday that the agency “will continue to review all of its options.”
The full opinion is here.
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It’s just a bill
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A bipartisan bill that looks to have some, um, l’eggs…
State law says if just one egg in a carton is cracked, the grocery store has to pull the whole dozen from the shelves. The store isn’t allowed to toss the bad egg and replace it with a good one.
A proposal in Springfield would let grocery stores consolidate eggs from the same brands, grades and sell-by dates, potentially reducing waste and not letting one bad egg spoil the bunch. […]
The Illinois Farm Bureau has concerns. Spokesman Kevin Semlow said the law exists to help track when something goes wrong in a batch of eggs and not spread problems further. […]
The legislation also would require store to train its workers on the consolidation rules, and the Illinois Retail Merchants Association supports the idea, saying 41 other states have similar laws.
* On a more serious note, here’s a bill that probably isn’t going much of anywhere…
Illinois lawmakers may soon take up the controversial question of which bathrooms should be used by transgender students.
A measure filed by State Representative Tom Morrison, a Republican from Palatine, would require schools to make sure students use bathrooms matching the sex listed on their birth certificates. He says schools could provide other accommodations, such as single-occupant restrooms, if parents request it in writing.
“What my bill does is it provides an accommodation for those individuals who cannot neatly fit into either the male facility or the female facility,” Morrison says. “We want every student to have access to a restroom during the school day. We want every student to have access to a private place to change for PE. That’s what we want, and that’s what this bill provides.”
* And on the other side of the coin…
The Illinois House Human Services Committee is set to hear testimony on Tuesday, April 5th on House Bill 6073, an amendment to the Illinois Vital Records Act. The measure is a careful update of the state’s birth certificate law recognizing the needs of transgender people for accurate identity documents advances in medicine and science. Under the proposal, someone seeking to change the gender marker on their birth certificate will no longer be required to have surgery, instead submitting an affidavit from a medical or mental health care provider that the person has undergone treatment appropriate to make such a change. Twelve other states and the federal government have modernized their laws in this way. Illinois was the first state that allowed someone to change the gender marker on their birth certificate, and this policy would update that law.
State Representative Greg Harris will be joined by advocates and individual Illinois residents who would be able to change their birth certificate when House Bill 6073 becomes law. All the participants will take questions from the media.
* And on another topic…
Medical marijuana in Illinois would be required to carry warning labels about possible side effects under a bill proposed by a Republican lawmaker.
Rep. Dwight Kay said the goal is to treat medical marijuana like other prescription drugs that warn patients about possible adverse effects. His bill, which is up for a House committee vote Monday, doesn’t specify what warnings should be on the products, leaving it to the state health department to decide.
But Kay said he would like to see warnings about how marijuana can cause drowsiness and impaired driving, and that it can affect pregnancies.
* Yet another topic…
Dana Pfeiffer, the executive director of the Springfield-based Grounds of Grace, said it’s a misperception that human trafficking is an international issue.
Grounds of Grace helps around 30 clients per week from central and southern Illinois. Ninety percent of the victims it helps are trafficked by family members or significant others, she said. […]
They’re pushing a bill that would let victims have 20 years to file charges against their abusers instead of one year. The legislation hasn’t gained much traction though due to the budget impasse, she said.
“Are you really going to turn your father in, brother in, or mother in during that span,” Pfeiffer said. “You need more time.”
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Question of the day
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Greg Hinz…
Pothole season has bloomed again in beautiful Chicago. It was hard to escape that the other morning when, instead of trying to cram into a train that runs too slowly and infrequently, I decided to take my chances with a bicycle on a street that, like the el, doesn’t get replaced or upgraded nearly often enough.
People all over the metropolitan area can tell tales like that. If it’s not the crumbling and backed-up roads, it’s inadequate public transit that pales next to what big cities in Europe and Asia offer. Our infrastructure stock is deteriorating in a city that considers itself to be America’s transportation capital, and we all know it.
Now someone is proposing to do something about it. The cost would be huge, but then so is the need.
In a presentation to the City Club today, the Metropolitan Planning Council will unveil a 10-year, $43 billion plan to provide more money for state and local roads, public transportation, the Create freight-rail decongestion plan and as yet unspecified “new and large-scale projects of all types.” In other words, funds for mostly deferred maintenance that are not available from current revenue sources.
To pay for it, the council would impose a 30-cents-a-gallon hike in motor fuel taxes, more than double today’s state tax of 19 cents a gallon on gasoline, and a 50 percent hike in the state’s vehicle registration fees, which now cost $101 for a car or truck. Both would be indexed to inflation in the future.
* From the MPC…
Since it was last raised in 1991, the purchasing power of the state’s fixed per-gallon gas tax has declined by more than 40 percent—reducing the average Illinoisan’s contribution from the equivalent of $160 to under $100 per year (in 2013 dollars). In turn, transportation spending has fallen by 40 percent, from 13 percent of state spending in 1991 to eight percent in 2014. Meanwhile, the portion of our roads in good condition has fallen from the standard of 90 percent to only 79 percent in 2015. Without action, this will decline to 62 percent by 2021. Transit systems in Northeastern Illinois have also fallen behind dramatically. RTA estimates that only about 67 percent of the region’s transit network is in a state of good repair. At existing levels of funding, less than half of the system’s buses, trains and infrastructure will be in a state of good repair by 2030.
In the past we’ve relied on large but infrequent capital bills to patch together funding. The resulting boom-and-bust cycle was unpredictable and ultimately inefficient. To allow us to return our infrastructure to good condition and accommodate growth, we need a substantial, regular, reliable source of additional revenue.
To start catching up on our maintenance backlog and adequately plan for the future, Illinois needs a sustainable, reliable revenue source that can raise an additional $2.7 billion in revenue each year (on top of existing federal and state sources). Of this $2.7 billion, about half can be used for pay-as-you-go spending, with the other half to support $25 billion in bonds over the 10 years, meeting the $43 billion need. (After the first ten years, the continued revenue will fully support the repayment of the bonds over their 25 year life. We assume a five percent rate.)
This is equivalent to a $0.30/gal increase in state motor fuel taxes and a 50 percent increase in vehicle registration fees. The tax and fees should be indexed to the consumer price index to keep pace with inflation. MPC recommends the state constitution be amended to create a transportation trust fund to protect this revenue. To acknowledge the effect of these increases on lower- and middle-income Illinoisans, the state earned income tax credit should double to 20 percent of the federal amount.
* More…
The additional gas tax and the increase in vehicle registration fees would cost the average person $12.25 each month, or $147 each year. To put this in context, the average Illinois household spends more than $10,000 a year on transportation.
* The Question: Do you mostly support this idea? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
survey solutions
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Today’s quotable
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From Finke’s latest column…
“It’s loud, it’s dirty, it’s old. The taxpayers of Illinois spend millions of dollars each year heating and cooling a terrarium.” Rauner discussing the shortcomings of the Thompson Center in Chicago, which he wants to sell.
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The perils of hiring protesters
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This happened while I was away…
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Tammy Duckworth’s campaign initially wasn’t going to let reporters inside a post-primary “unity breakfast” in Bronzeville on Monday, then some protesters showed up.
It’s unclear who organized the group of roughly three dozen mostly African-American people who gathered outside Pearl’s Place chanting, waving signs and shouting “Shame on you!” at Democrats walking into the meeting. That’s because the group’s leaders declined to give their names or explain their affiliations.
One man holding an anti-Duckworth sign asked a Tribune reporter whether Duckworth is a Democrat or a Republican, then said he expected to get paid for his time outside Pearl’s “by the man who sponsored” the protest. Before he could explain further, other protesters nearby told him to be quiet. They declined to discuss why they were demonstrating or whether they supported incumbent Republican Sen. Mark Kirk.
There was at least one Kirk campaign staffer on hand outside Pearl’s shooting video and speaking to protesters. But Kirk campaign manager Kevin Artl said the staffer was simply there as part of his regular duties tracking Duckworth at events and had nothing to do with the protest.
This is not unusual in Chicago, where people make a few bucks by rounding up small crews of rabble rousers. Gov. Rauner’s campaign was accused of doing the same thing to Pat Quinn.
* But this one was particularly inept…
A dozen protesters, all African-Americans, lined the sidewalk in front of the restaurant, holding signs and chanting. But they wouldn’t answer questions about the protest or say which organization they represented. Most held hand-lettered signs that bore one of three messages: “What’s Our Vote Worth Duckworth?”, “Picked by Washington In$iders” or “D.C. Hatched a Plan,” showing a duckling emerging from an egg.
Kirk campaign staffer Matt Custardo mingled with the protesters outside the restaurant. The Kirk campaign said he was on hand to tape the event, but he appeared to be helping pass out coffee and doughnuts to the demonstrators. And whether they liked Duckworth or not, the protesters were happy to accept breakfast from the candidate, munching on bacon and eggs Duckworth staffers brought out of Pearl’s in foam boxes after the meeting adjourned.
Jeffrey Coleman was one of the few people standing among the protesters who was willing to talk with a reporter, though he admitted he had worked for Kirk’s campaign. Coleman, who is black, said African-American voters should not vote reflexively for Democrats.
Two of those three slogans come directly from the NRSC talking points about this campaign. The NRSC even posted TV news video of the event.
* More…
BNR has learned that an attendee of the event recognized some of the protesters as residents of a local homeless shelter. Several of the protest signs, pictured below, were duplicates and appeared to be written with the same hand:
Kirk campaign manager Kevin Artl dismissed the notion that they organized or paid the Duckworth protesters, telling the Tribune that there was only one staffer at the event who was “simply there as part of his regular duties tracking Duckworth at events and had nothing to do with the protest.”
But an Illinois Democratic party official told BNR that there were two Kirk staffers there, Kirk’s regular campaign tracker (pictured below in a gray hat) and Custardo, who was shown in the video above.
The video is here.
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More green shoots?
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Legislative Republicans hold a whole lot of cards, particularly in the House. Every time they’ve risen up and demanded something, the governor has eventually been forced to oblige them. The dynamic has been the Republicans privately threaten to vote with the Democrats, rank and file Democrats embrace them and then the governor works out a deal, sometimes with the cooperation of Speaker Madigan (local government funding, etc.) and sometimes without (child care funding). Is it happening again with the universities? We’ll see…
Rep. Dan Brady, R-Bloomington, said ending the impasse is “going to take continued pressure from rank-and-file legislators to the governor, to the speaker and the other leaders.”
“There is so much depending on us bringing this to a resolution,” he said, adding just because lawmakers haven’t been in Springfield doesn’t mean they haven’t been working behind the scenes.
For example, Brady, who serves on two House higher education committees, said he’s been working with Rep. Kelly Burke, D-Evergreen Park, on a compromise to fund higher education.
“Rank and file continue to push, and they’re going to have to push harder,” he said.
Yep. They are. Lots harder.
* Meanwhile, it’s hard to disagree with this House Republican…
State-owned vehicles should be pulled from the road until there’s an appropriation to pay to self-insure them, state Rep. Bill Mitchell, R-Forysth, said Friday.
Mitchell said that one of his constituents was involved in a collision with a state-owned automobile and has been unable to get paid for the damage.
“It was the state vehicle’s fault and we can’t pay out,” Mitchell said. “He said he’s out thousands of dollars. He’s not a happy person.”
Because of the state budget deadlock between Gov. Bruce Rauner and the Democratic-controlled Legislature, no money has been appropriated to pay out settlements for vehicle repairs or replacements, Mitchell said.
“In essence we’re driving uninsured cars, and that makes people mad because the state requires, correctly, that they have insurance. But we, in essence, don’t,” Mitchell said. “Now, the state will say we do have insurance but we just can’t pay out. So I think we should just ground the fleet until we can pay out.”
* Related…
* Late payments cost state over $900 million the last six years: The figures from Comptroller Leslie Munger’s office do not include any outlays for the current fiscal year where the state has been operating without a budget since July 1.
* Illinois late license plate fees growing without reminders: Thanks to the cash-strapped state’s decision to stop mailing renewal reminders, Illinois motorists have paid nearly $5 million this year for failing to renew vehicle license plates on time, more than double the amount collected in the same three-month span last year. Fines reached $1.9 million in March alone, according to the latest figures provided to The Associated Press on Friday by the secretary of state’s office. In March 2015, the state collected just more than $818,000 in fines.
* The Illinois House returns to action Monday with a long list of legislation slated for committee hearings - but none about the unsettled budget that should have taken effect last July: Bills up for consideration include regulation of daily fantasy sports betting and easing access to police video under the Freedom of Information Act. There is a bill requiring warning labels on medicinal marijuana to provide buyers information about side effects of marijuana use. Other legislation would criminalize cyberbullying by parents, ban drone flights when they could potentially deliver prison contraband.
* Iles Park Place leases total $1.2 million a year: The state of Illinois has agreed to leases totaling nearly $1.2 million annually to relocate approximately 290 workers to the Iles Park Place development in Springfield. Costs range from $7 to $12.50 per square foot, per year.
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Grandstand lineup announced
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A bit heavy on the pop country side for my taste, but this is central Illinois, after all. So, it doesn’t totally suck…
Planning is well underway for the 2016 Illinois State Fair, and each year the most anticipated annoucement is the unveiling of the Grandstand lineup. At this time, the Illinois State Fair management team is pleased to announce five nights of high-calibur entertainment, with at least three more grandstand announcements pending.
Known for his barefoot performances, Jake Owen will take the stage on Sunday, August 14. This will be Owen’s second performance at the Illinois State Fair. He previously performed at the Grandstand in 2014. Owen is best known for hit songs “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “Beachin’,” and “Anywhere With You.”
Opening for Jake Owen will be the 2016 Academy of Country Music New Vocal Group of the Year, Old Dominion. Rolling Stone magazine has called Old Dominion ‘the group to watch’ in country music. The band is best known for the debut hit single, “Break up With Him.”
Tickets for Jake Owen with Old Dominion will range from $15 for Tier 3 seats to $37 for VIP tickets.
Also, signed up to play at the 2016 Illinois State Fair is Grammy nominated singer/songwriter, Dierks Bentley. The Arkansas native is best known for hits like, “Drunk on a Plane,” What Was I Thinking,” and “Free And Easy (Down the Road I Go).”
Opening for Dierks Bentley will be Tucker Beathard. Ticket prices for the Tuesday, August 16th concert will range from $42 for Tier 3 seats to $64 for VIP tickets.
Also pulling into Springfield for the 2016 Illinois State Fair will be Cole Swindell. The country music newcomer has a growing reputation in Nashville as one of the city’s most exciting young performers. The Georgia native is best known for number one hits such as, “Chillin’ It,” and “You Should Be Here.”
Opening for Cole Swindell on Friday, August 19th will be Kane Brown, LANco, and Jon Langston. Tickets prices will range from $18 for Tier 3 seats to $40 for VIP tickets.
GRANDSTAND/2222
Scheduled to take the stage on Saturday, August 20 is the Grammy award winning group Little Big Town. With multiple number one hits to their credit, the harmonizing vocal group is sure to be a crowd pleaser at the Grandstand. Their hits include, “Pontoon,” “Bring It On Home,” “Boondocks,” and ACM nominated for Single Record, Song and Video of the Year, “Girl Crush.”
Opening for Little Big Town will be David Nail. The Missouri native is best known for the songs, “Red Light,” “Whatever She’s Got” and “Let It Rain.” Tickets for this concert will range $27 for Tier 3 seating to $49 for VIP tickets.
The Grandstand will be rockin’ on the last night of the Illinois State Fair, August 21 when ZZ Top takes the stage. The group has been praised by critics and fellow musicans aliike for their technical mastery. Known for their long beards and hard-core guitar rifs, ZZ Top has been performing since 1969. Their hits include, “Sharp Dressed Man,” “Legs,” and “La Grange.”
Also performing that night will be Gregg Allman. Allman, a recipient of Classic Rock magazine’s ‘Living Legend’ award, is one of the most-acclaimed and beloved icons in rock and roll. He is best known as a founding member of the Allman Brothers Band. Tickets will range from $34 for Tier 3 seats to $54 for VIP tickets.
An on-sale date for the above mentioned acts has not been set at this time.
Ticket prices for each of the shows are listed below:
August 14: Jake Owen / Old Dominion
Tier 3 - $15 / Tier 2 - $20 / Tier 1 - $25 / Track $25 / VIP - $37
August 16: Dierks Bentley / Tucker Beathard
Tier 3 - $42 / Tier 2 - $47 / Tier 1 - $52 / Track $52 / VIP - $64
August 19: Cole Swindell / Kane Brown / LANco / Jon Langston
Tier 3 - $18 / Tier 2 - $23 / Tier 1 - $28 / Track $28 / VIP - $40
August 20: Little Big Town / David Nail
Tier 3 - $27 / Tier 2 - $32 / Tier 1 - $37 / Track $37 / VIP - $49
August 21: ZZ Top / Gregg Allman
Tier 3 - $34 / Tier 2 - $39 / Tier 1 - $44 / Track $44 / VIP - $54
More details regarding ticket sales, special events, and additional grandstand acts will be released in the coming weeks and months. Dates for the 2016 Illinois State Fair are Aug. 12-21.
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A tale of two editorials
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From a Tribune editorial on free speech issues at college campuses…
There is a lot to be said for making people aware of the ways in which their words and deeds can do harm. No one wants to go back to the days when casual expressions of racial prejudice were common, or when women were mocked for taking places that should have gone to men, or when some professors made passes at students.
But it’s important not to go so far in protecting undergraduates that they lose the spontaneous and open interactions they need to understand the world and the society in which they live. An education that spares students from unwanted challenges to their thinking is not much of an education.
Luckily, there’s pushback against this trend. University of California regents issued a report deploring anti-Semitism but rejected demands to include all forms of anti-Zionism in the condemnation. When students at Emory University protested messages in support of Donald Trump chalked on campus sidewalks as an attempt to intimidate minority groups, the school president heard them out but took no action.
A female undergraduate at Harvard wrote an article that assailed the prevailing atmosphere there, recalling a class in which one student said “she would be unable to sit across from a student who declared that he was strongly against abortion” and a discussion in which she was rebuked for citing a Bible verse because it violated a “safe space.”
* The basic counter-argument to the Tribune is that since individual students pay mandatory tuition and student fees, then each individual student can dicate what their own personal free association rights are. That counter-argument is completely ludicrous, of course. One person’s “safe space violation” is another person’s right to say what’s on his or her mind in a public place. Plus, there are things like student elections which settle these matters. I’m with the Trib on this one.
Our job as a society is not to pamper folks who incessantly worry about “triggers.” People who demand that society ensures their lives remain pristine and completely unencumbered by challenges and contradictions cannot possibly be catered to because it would never, ever end.
* Now, let’s move on to another Tribune editorial…
On Tuesday, the eight surviving justices of the U.S. Supreme Court supercharged an already white-hot issue in the 2016 presidential campaign. With their 4-4 split but no opinion or other explanation, the justices in effect gave a big but perhaps temporary win to public employees unions. The implications for personal freedom, though, are unfortunate.
At issue in the case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, was whether it’s unconstitutional for public-sector unions to charge “agency fees” — essentially dues — to nonmembers whom they represent but who don’t want to support union activities. […]
The problem with the unions’ position is that it starts and stops with that argument against workers they denigrate as “free riders.” The unions are a lot less eager to talk about workers’ rights to free speech and free association. With Scalia still on the bench, the court might well have undone a 1977 precedent, Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, and said the employees’ First Amendment rights are paramount. The court set the table for that new direction when it ruled in a 2014 Illinois case that home caregivers shouldn’t be forced to join a union. That opinion said that “except in perhaps the rarest of circumstances, no person in this country may be compelled to subsidize speech by a third party that he or she does not wish to support.”
In a meeting with the Tribune Editorial Board before the court heard her case, lead plaintiff Rebecca Friedrichs, a third-grade teacher now in her 28th year as an educator, offered a compelling rationale: “The unions call me a free rider. But the benefits they negotiate for me are not worth the moral costs. The defined benefit program and the expense to my community and my nation, and using my money to protect teachers who are ineffective and sometimes abusive in class — this is a liberty issue for me.”
The last time I checked, there are no laws mandating kids attend specific universities nor that people take jobs at unionized public schools.
If college kids don’t like what’s going on, they can organize, they can run for student office, or they can transfer to another school or even drop out. The same goes for teachers who don’t want to contribute their fair share dues.
I seriously doubt that the Tribune would advocate allowing college students to stop paying tuition and fees any time they disagree with something that happened on campus. The same goes for unions. You get a benefit, you pay. Simple.
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Let it play out a bit more
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Gov. Bruce Rauner’s full statement on the Chicago Teachers Union’s one-day walkout last Friday…
“It’s shameful that Chicago’s children are the victims in this raw display of political power. Walking out on kids in the classroom, leaving parents in the lurch and thumbing their nose at taxpayers — it’s the height of arrogance from those we’ve entrusted with our children’s futures. By breaking the law in Chicago and forcing passage of a bad law in Springfield, powerful bosses are proving they have an unfair advantage over Illinois families. When we lose the balance between taxpayers and special interests, property taxes go up and the quality of education goes down.”
* And then…
“We are outside the state of Illinois building. Why? Because the governor of this state has decided to hold everybody hostage,” [CTU President Karen Lewis] told the crowd. “He’s a terrorist. And he calls me names.”
Ugh.
* With one major caveat, my own views are close to those of Greg Hinz…
The truth is that the April 1 “Day of Action” is at least as much about internal CTU politics as it is about carving out a path to success—and that’s no joke.
Though CTU has strived mightily to extend the upcoming protest into a sort of mini-general strike, the action is a reaction to the stalled negotiations with CPS.
The union is playing defense in the current round of talks, attempting to protect things such as annual “step-and-lane” pay hikes and the fact that workers now pay only 2 percent of salary toward their generous pensions. Unions don’t like playing defense—especially a union led by Karen Lewis. But the fact is, CPS is effectively broke, its debt so much junk. The only true exit route runs through Springfield.
Now Lewis, however much she adopts the stance of a provocateur, is smart enough to know that the CPS’ options are limited. That’s why she and her leadership crew agreed several weeks ago to major concessions, particularly on the pension side, as part of a new contract.
But Lewis’ members aren’t as smart. Presented with the deal she negotiated, they revolted. The CTU’s expanded bargaining committee unanimously rejected the package, sending a message to Lewis that, if she wants to be re-elected as president in late May, something will have to change.
Voila, the upcoming Day of Action. A bit of red meat for the CTU’s militant wing.
CTU Vice President Jessie Sharkey disagrees. He terms such a theory “wrong.” If the idea was to shore up Lewis’ militant credentials, the union would walk for real on May 20—a few days before the CTU elections—when even CPS agrees that a contract strike would be legal, Sharkey said.
It’s not that Lewis’ members aren’t “smart,” they’re just very, very angry (and for good reason, just look around Chicago right now). Angry people don’t always think too clearly.
* To my mind, anyway, this strike was about “member management.” I think Lewis showed her pragmatic side when she cut a deal with CPS just ahead of the big bond sale. In order to get back to the neighborhood of that deal, she has to first let her members blow off some steam and demonstrate she’s solidly in their corner (ergo, Rauner as “terrorist”).
After the primary, when support for the CTU and an endorsement by the union were both viewed as highly positive by Democratic legislative incumbents and candidates (including Speaker Madigan), the union leadership knew there was little to no immediate danger of sparking a General Assembly backlash with a one-day walkout.
But they need to eventually make a deal, or there could be consequences. I think Lewis understands this. So, the process is going to take some time. The framework of the final agreement will have to be altered, but I do not yet see Friday’s walkout as a harbinger of doom.
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Time to update the talking points
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Apparently, the governor’s latest catch-phrase is “supermajority,” even though Rep. Ken Dunkin’s defection means the Democrats have no real working supermajority in the Illinois House. The governor got called on that by Chris “Budget Beard” Kaergard after a Rauner appearance in his neck of the woods…
(J)udging from Rauner’s presentation, the fault rests solely with the Democrats’ “supermajority” in the Legislature. He was so certain of that, he invoked the word 17 times in public on his trip — 14 of them during his talk, and a further three during a brief question-and-answer session with the media.
That line of thinking is simplistic — suited to a sound bite, not to governing. It assumes all members of a party vote in lockstep at all times and all issues. They don’t.
We’ve seen that demonstrated after Rauner spent time wooing state Rep. Ken Dunkin, D-Chicago, effectively peeling off one lawmaker from House Speaker Michael Madigan’s one-vote supermajority. But a number of other lawmakers have voted their minds — or their districts — on issues during every session. […]
Rauner referred to [Rep. Dunkin’s] recent defeat in the March 15 primary election by a candidate backed by Madigan, implying it was a lesson to others who might think about breaking ranks: “You don’t vote your conscience in the state of Illinois. You vote the way you’re told to vote.”
That ignores the fact that Rauner tried to apply that same muscle to one of his own Republicans, state Sen. Sam McCann of Jacksonville, when he voted against Rauner’s interests and for his district’s many union workers on some legislation. Rauner took to the stump himself with McCann’s primary challenger, implying the same thing to Republicans — many of whom are just as dissatisfied with their party’s leadership and just as concerned about the threats of retaliation from above.
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It doesn’t look like we’re any closer
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* After Chicago State University’s leadership told workers to turn in their keys in the runup to layoffs, Gov. Rauner was quoted as saying this…
“It should never happen. There’s really no excuse for it. I believe that the supermajority in the Legislature is using Chicago State University and many other service providers in Illinois as leverage to try to force a massive tax hike. I believe that’s what’s going on, and that’s wrong,” Rauner said.
The school eventually backtracked, but here’s the House Dem response…
“The governor is ignoring the fact that the reason the higher education disaster is occurring is because he vetoed that appropriations bill. He claimed to be in support of education, and yet he left them high and dry. And that’s devastating,” Brown said.
* I think both sides are at fault, but it’s important to look at some recent history here. From almost exactly one year ago…
Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner kicked off a campaign-style statewide tour Monday by indicating he’ll try to “leverage” the state’s money woes into securing a series of pro-business changes from a General Assembly controlled by Democrats likely to fiercely oppose them… “Crisis creates opportunity. Crisis creates leverage to change … and we’ve got to use that leverage of the crisis to force structural change,” said Rauner,
* Meanwhile, there’s more…
“Why can’t we meet today? What’s the reason? There’s no reason. It’s game-playing on their side. They’re trying to force a tax hike, and they’re playing games right now,” a clearly exasperated Rauner said during an event to promote a revamp of the state’s information technology systems.
Madigan spokesman Steve Brown responded by blaming Rauner for the budget impasse, noting that it was the governor who vetoed the spending plan lawmakers sent him last year.
“Now he wants to pretend that this is something that Democrats did,” Brown said.
Rauner said he vetoed the budget because it was billions out of balance. He added that he’s willing to meet with Madigan whenever: “I’ve told him I’ll meet in Springfield, Chicago, any time, any day of the week. I hope we can get together soon.”
Asked if Madigan is willing to meet with the governor, Brown said: “I haven’t asked the speaker that so I wouldn’t know.”
Maybe Brown should ask the Speaker about it. Just sayin…
* Bernie…
“I’ve been traveling the nation, lookin’ for companies to come,” Republican Rauner said last week at the AutoZone distribution center in Danville. “I’ve got dozens of ’em ready to come. They said, ‘Governor, can you change the regulations and get the government so it stops running these deficits and is actually workin’ for the people of this state? If you could do that, I’ll come.’”
He then mentioned how General Electric recently announced it was moving its corporate headquarters from Fairfield, Connecticut, to Boston. He said part of the negotiations he had with the firm to try to bring it to Illinois involved him asking for more time because “getting the supermajority, the Chicago machine, to do anything is really hard.” […]
“He seems to be talking about recruiting trips,” said Madigan spokesman STEVE BROWN, of the governor’s Danville comments. “I’m not aware of any of those, are you? That sounds like another instance of the governor and his imaginary friends at work.” […]
“I would suspect that GE’s decision-making process had more to do with fallout from the governor vetoing university budgets,” Patterson said, as officials could see “Governor Rauner slashing and eliminating higher education funding, resulting in university layoffs and program closings.”
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Not the governor’s strong suit
Monday, Apr 4, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
It’s almost impossible to make a deal with somebody who won’t accept reality. And that’s been the case in Illinois for over a year, as Gov. Bruce Rauner has made one politically unrealistic demand after another while refusing to negotiate a budget until those demands were met, all the while blaming the entire impasse on House Speaker Michael Madigan’s intransigence.
Because the public debate is so wrapped up in partisanship and ideology, it’s been tough for a large segment of the population to wrap its collective mind around what’s really been going on. Many see this fight as the “new, good” Rauner versus the “old, bad” Madigan. While that argument certainly has plenty of merit, it’s not nearly the entire story.
It takes two to tango, and the truth is, and has always been, that Rauner doesn’t even have enthusiastic support among legislative Republicans for a big chunk of his “Turnaround Agenda,” particularly his demands which are opposed by labor unions. His complete agenda cannot pass both legislative chambers no matter who the House Speaker is.
After what happened the day after the March primary election, however, Rauner’s obvious inability to accept some stark political realities may finally help more folks understand what the rest of us have been seeing for the past year or more.
There is no doubt that Rauner had a bad March 15. While he wasn’t directly involved in Speaker Madigan’s Democratic primary, there’s zero doubt that the people who funded Madigan’s opponent were friendly to the governor’s interests. They made the campaign a referendum on Madigan’s entire career, and Madigan won handily.
The same money conduit Rauner used to fund other races, Dan Proft, somehow came up with $1.3 million in cash via a “dark money” group to give directly to Rep. Ken Dunkin (D-Chicago). All that other Raunerite money ($1.6 million) spent on Dunkin’s behalf didn’t just appear out of nowhere, either. And nobody really believes that the Illinois Chamber decided without prompting to all of a sudden run an additional million-dollar TV ad supporting Dunkin (who had one of the lowest Chamber ratings of any state legislator) without first consulting its own board of directors. That race became a very public referendum on Rauner, but Dunkin ended up winning just 32 percent of the vote. Oops.
And, of course, there’s state Sen. Sam McCann (R-Plainview). Rauner personally endorsed McCann’s GOP opponent Bryce Benton, funneled millions of dollars into Benton’s race, both via Proft and through a $50,000 contribution from himself, and personally campaigned with Benton in the days leading up to the election. He threw the kitchen sink at McCann, with a boatload of cash spent to make the race about how McCann was Speaker Madigan’s “favorite Senator.” Sen. McCann won by more than 5 percentage points. That’s a solid Rauner defeat in anyone’s book.
Everyone with even semi-honest eyes could see that Rauner was a big loser. Yes, he won several other primary races, but he basically steamrolled a bunch of unprepared amateurs with overwhelming financial resources and (in most cases) viciously negative ads. Without a doubt it’s important to win those little races (Madigan himself does it a lot), but the marquee contests against formidable foes—who are far more like the legislative Democrats Rauner will face in November—most definitely went south.
And, yet, there he was, claiming via press release that Madigan was the primary election’s real loser, even though all of Madigan’s candidates won.
“There were many races last night where special interests backed by Speaker Madigan failed to defeat Republican incumbents and candidates who support Governor Rauner’s call for structural reforms,” his post-election press release bellowed.
Somehow, in Rauner’s mind, it’s Madigan’s fault that some Republican hopefuls with a smidgeon of union backing lost their races to Rauner’s heavily financed candidates.
The excuse I heard afterward was that Madigan had issued his own press release pointing out the governor’s losses and the governor felt he needed to respond. Okay, I get that. Madigan didn’t have to rub Rauner’s nose in the previous day’s humiliations. But has nobody ever heard of taking the high road, or at least a road which exists in the real world?
Like I said at the beginning, accepting political reality is not this governor’s strong suit. If that wasn’t abundantly clear before the primary election, it surely became clear the day after.
And this governmental impasse ain’t ever gonna end until that stark fact of life changes.
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