Pritzker will combine SOTS, budget address
Friday, Jan 25, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The governor’s people say Gov. Pritzker will combine his State of the State address with his budget address. This is a fairly common practice. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve cringed when people who should know better say they wanted to hear more about the budget during the SOTS. They are two separate speeches, unless they’re combined. And considering the budget issues we have, it’s probably best to combine them.
State of the State messages are required by the Constitution, but they don’t have to be given as speeches…
SECTION 13. GOVERNOR - LEGISLATIVE MESSAGES The Governor, at the beginning of each annual session of the General Assembly and at the close of his term of office, shall report to the General Assembly on the condition of the State and recommend such measures as he deems desirable.
Same goes for budgets…
SECTION 2. STATE FINANCE (a) The Governor shall prepare and submit to the General Assembly, at a time prescribed by law, a State budget for the ensuing fiscal year.
Wednesday, February 20th at noon is the date set by the General Assembly.
Thoughts?
20 Comments
|
It feels like déjà vu all over again
Friday, Jan 25, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* So, apparently, the POTUS has agreed to sign legislation that will contain no money for the border wall and will reopen the federal government for three weeks with back pay for the furloughed workers.
Air traffic controllers were calling in sick and IRS employees were refusing to return to work.
This thing was doomed from the start.
As Bruce Rauner found out, your first big fight with the other party shouldn’t be one which unites the other party. In Rauner’s case, that fight was “right to work.” Didn’t end well.
In any event, now you know why Gov. Rauner tried so hard to make sure that all state employees were paid during Illinois’ impasse. He would’ve had to cave within weeks if the courts went the other way.
* But will signing this bill do to the president’s hardcore GOP base what signing HB40 did to Rauner’s? I guess we’ll see. While there are many lessons to be learned from the past, history never exactly repeats itself. And national politics are quite different from state politics. And taxpayer-funded abortions and not building a promised wall on the Mexican border are very different things.
57 Comments
|
Vaccinate your kids!
Friday, Jan 25, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* WAND TV…
Health officials have confirmed a case of measles in the Champaign-Urbana area.
The person who has measles was possibly exposed at several locations across the two towns between Jan. 12 and Jan. 19, 2019, according to the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District (CUPHD). […]
“It is important for everyone who can be vaccinated to get vaccinated, if they aren’t already,” said Illinois Department of Public Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Jennifer Layden. “Getting vaccinated not only protects you, it protects others around you who are too young to get the vaccine or can’t receive it for medical reasons. Two doses of measles vaccine are about 97 percent effective in preventing measles.”
And no does of measles vaccine are almost totally ineffective at preventing measles.
* Seriously, don’t be stupid…
“Many people have no idea what measles are or how serious they can be because VACCINATION WORKS,” the CUPHD Facebook post said. “Due to the fad of not vaccinating, vaccine-preventable diseases are once again becoming a concern.”
Furthermore, the CUPHD wrote, “In 2011, the WHO estimated that 158,000 deaths were caused by measles. This is down from 630,000 deaths in 1990. As of 2013, measles remains the leading cause of vaccine-preventable deaths in the world. In developed countries, death occurs in one to two cases out of every 1,000 (0.1–0.2%).”
* If you click here you’ll see possible exposure sites in the area. Looks like someone who is affiliated with UIUC.
26 Comments
|
Comments Off
|
* We Ask America poll for the Sun-Times. 644 likely voters contacted this past Monday through Wednesday with a +/-3.88 MoE. Dorothy Brown was included and received 4.7 percent, but she’s now off the ballot. Undecideds totaled 26 percent…
Full results are here.
* More…
Asked who they’d prefer in a match-up between Preckwinkle and Mendoza — two candidates who have repeatedly targeted one another — voters gave Mendoza the edge. The poll found the comptroller with 43.5 percent compared to Preckwinkle’s 35.1 percent. Another 21.4 percent were undecided.
In a race between Daley and Preckwinkle, the poll found Daley with a slight lead over Preckwinkle — 40.1 percent over 38.2 percent, another statistical dead heat. Another 21.7 percent were undecided.
In a hypothetical match-up between Mendoza and McCarthy, the comptroller clobbered the former top cop, 54 percent to 24.2 percent. Again 21.7 percent were undecided.
It looks like the other candidates had better beat up on Mendoza to keep her out of the second round or their gooses could be cooked.
* More from the poll…
Which of the following list of issues do you think is MOST important to you as a Chicago resident?
Chicago’s Crime 29.2%
Chicago’s Financial Crisis 22%
Quality of Chicago Schools 21.1%
Political corruption 9.0%
Police reform 7.8%
Race relations 7.1%
None of these 3.7%
Notice that “corruption” was in fourth place at 9 percent. Voters seem keen to hear more about candidates’ actual plans. But the political types are all focusing on scoring gotchas over Ed Burke.
* Among African-Americans, Willie Wilson is clobbering Toni Preckwinkle 20-11. Dorothy Brown was getting 9 percent of black voters, and the expectations are that she will endorse Wilson, but I don’t know if that will transfer. In third was Bill Daley at 7 percent. 28 percent were undecided, however.
Among whites, Daley has 17 percent to Chico’s 12 percent, with 24 percent undecided.
Among Latinos, Mendoza led with 19.5 percent to Chico’s 17. Preckwinkle and Daley were essentially tied for third with 14.6 percent.
* Among 18-24 year olds, Daley and Wilson were tied at 15.4 percent, with nobody else breaking double digits.
* This older poll was robo-called…
Preckwinkle’s new poll was commissioned by SEIU Illinois Local 1. Public Policy Polling, a Democratic automated polling firm, surveyed 798 Chicago voters from Jan. 18-20. The poll found Preckwinkle “is in the lead with 15% of Chicago voters supporting her,” according to a poll memo released to POLITICO. Bill Daley was second with 12 percent; Gery Chico had 11 percent; Wilson, 10 percent; Paul Vallas and Susana Mendoza each got 9 percent; Lori Lightfoot, 8 percent, and Garry McCarthy and Amara Enyia had 6 and 4 percent, respectively. But 17 percent were “undecided.”
73 Comments
|
Van Dyke sentencing roundup
Friday, Jan 25, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* AP…
The Illinois attorney general’s office has signaled it may be considering a rare sentencing-related appeal if it concludes that the less than seven years in prison a white Chicago police officer received in the killing of black teenager Laquan McDonald was wrongly calculated.
The office said in a brief statement emailed Thursday it is reviewing Jason Van Dyke’s sentence. With credit for good behavior, Van Dyke will likely serve only around three years for firing 16 bullets into McDonald in 2014. Dashcam video of the shooting released by the city in 2015 showed Van Dyke continued to fire as the 17-year-old crumpled to the street and lie on the ground. […]
One Chicago-based attorney Steve Greenberg, who has defended clients at more than 100 murder trials, said such appeals rarely succeed unless the sentencing judge’s error is egregious.
“From a logical standpoint, I think the sentence is correct,” he said. “From a legal standpoint, it might not be.” He added: “I think there is a fair chance the higher court would say the sentence was wrong.”
We’ve already discussed why the Supreme Court could very well strike down Van Dyke’s sentence.
* Sun-Times…
If the AG’s office were to intervene in the case, it would be unusual, but not unprecedented. The office has standing to intervene in nearly any criminal case, and if the AG is taking an interest in Van Dyke’s case, Raoul’s staff is likely looking for grounds to file what is known as a writ of mandamus, seeking to have the state Supreme Court rule that Van Dyke’s sentence violated state sentencing laws. […]
Any challenge would have to be based on an argument that [Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan] made an error in sentencing Van Dyke, not just that Van Dyke’s sentence was not severe enough.
Gaughan’s sentence would seem a potential target, Richards said, not because it was shorter than some anticipated or hoped to see, but because Gaughan made an unusual— and possibly unlawful — decision on which counts Van Dyke was sentenced for.
Gaughan ruled that he had to sentence Van Dyke based on his conviction on a single count of second-degree murder, rather than on any of the 16 counts of aggravated battery with a firearm for which Van Dyke was also found guilty. Second-degree murder carries a sentence ranging from probation to a four- to 20-year prison term. Aggravated battery with a firearm carries a sentence of six to 30 years.
In court last week, Gaughan said he based his decision on a state Supreme Court ruling that said Van Dyke had to be sentenced based on the most-serious count of conviction, which Gaughan ruled was second-degree murder, not aggravated battery. But his ruling was based on a concurrence to that ruling issued by a single judge, rather than the order drafted by the majority of judges who ruled on the case, Richards said.
Emphasis added because it’s something I pointed out to you last week.
* And here’s a very telling passage from the Tribune story…
The shorter sentence prompted the defense to back off promises to appeal Van Dyke’s conviction out of concern that such a move could result in added prison time for the ex-officer.
Yep. Even the defense counsel apparently knows that the judge deciding this wrong.
* Judge Gaughan is no stranger to writs of mandamus…
In 2016, the state Supreme Court granted a writ ordering Gaughan to resentence a man convicted of aggravated criminal sexual assault, concluding the judge should have imposed an additional 15-year penalty enhancement.
* But as with every other aspect of law, you can always find attorneys who disagree…
More specifically, the state Supreme Court determined through its decision that aggravated battery with a firearm is a more serious offense than second-degree murder because of their respective sentencing ranges. The battery charges are Class X felonies carrying a six- to 30-year prison range. Second-degree murder is a Class 1 felony with a four- to 20-year range.
Darren O’Brien, a veteran attorney hired to handle Van Dyke’s planned appeal, disagreed with that reasoning. He cited more recent state Supreme Court cases in arguing that prosecutors cannot charge out a case in a way that “eliminates” second-degree murder by rolling it into other charges. Instead, he argued, Lee should not apply here and the charges should merge the opposite way, with second-degree murder as the more serious offense.
“The common sense answer to that would be the lesser harm merges into the greater harm,” he said. “The woundings merge into the death.”
24 Comments
|
* From last November…
For the last decade, Illinois has had the nation’s most rigorous law protecting citizens’ biometric privacy information. It’s also a heavily litigated piece of legislation that’s pulled high-profile companies like Google and Facebook into class action lawsuits. Now, Six Flags is contesting a suit that threatens to totally defang the statute.
The Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), passed by Illinois lawmakers in 2008, stipulates that a company doing business in the state must obtain explicit written consent from an individual before collecting their biometric identifiers, such as fingerprints. Penalties are set at a $1,000 fine per violation, and $5,000 per violation if an offending company is found to be violating the statute either intentionally or recklessly. The problem is, the state doesn’t prosecute BIPA violations, it only grants individuals the right to sue. Six Flags is trying to make that very difficult.
The case revolves around the question of whether a company can be held liable for violating BIPA if a plaintiff is unable to demonstrate “harm.” Stacy Rosenbach claims that the theme park fingerprinted her 14-year-old son when he was picking up a season pass to the park on a group trip. Rosenbach says she did not give permission for the company to collect and store her son’s fingerprints. Six Flags argues that for Rosenbach to qualify as a “person aggrieved,” she must demonstrate that the collection of her son’s identifiable biometric information resulted in some type of injury.
The Illinois Supreme Court held appellate hearings on the case last week, and according to Law360, at least three of the seven justices hearing the case were skeptical of the arguments made by attorneys representing Six Flags. The initial trial court rejected Six Flags’ argument, but it certified two questions for appeal that revolve around the definition of “aggrieved.” Last December, the Second District Appellate Court agreed with Six Flags, and now the case is in the hands of the states’ highest court. What’s at stake is a legal definition that could affect a similar pending lawsuit against Facebook that could potentially result in billions of dollars worth of fines.
* The Illinois Supreme Court reversed the appellate court today…
In reaching a contrary conclusion, the appellate court characterized violations of the law, standing alone, as merely “technical” in nature. Such a characterization, however, misapprehends the nature of the harm our legislature is attempting to combat through this legislation. The Act vests in individuals and customers the right to control their biometric information by requiring notice before collection and giving them the power to say no by withholding consent. These procedural protections “are particularly crucial in our digital world because technology now permits the wholesale collection and storage of an individual’s unique biometric identifiers—identifiers that cannot be changed if compromised or misused.” When a private entity fails to adhere to the statutory procedures, as defendants are alleged to have done here, “the right of the individual to maintain [his or] her biometric privacy vanishes into thin air. The precise harm the Illinois legislature sought to prevent is then realized.” This is no mere “technicality.” The injury is real and significant. […]
Other than the private right of action authorized in section 20 of the Act, no other enforcement mechanism is available. It is clear that the legislature intended for this provision to have substantial force. When private entities face liability for failure to comply with the law’s requirements without requiring affected individuals or customers to show some injury beyond violation of their statutory rights, those entities have the strongest possible incentive to conform to the law and prevent problems before they occur and cannot be undone. Compliance should not be difficult; whatever expenses a business might incur to meet the law’s requirements are likely to be insignificant compared to the substantial and irreversible harm that could result if biometric identifiers and information are not properly safeguarded; and the public welfare, security, and safety will be advanced. That is the point of the law. To require individuals to wait until they have sustained some compensable injury beyond violation of their statutory rights before they may seek recourse, as defendants urge, would be completely antithetical to the Act’s preventative and deterrent purposes.
In sum, defendants’ contention that redress under the Act should be limited to those who can plead and prove that they sustained some actual injury or damage beyond infringement of the rights afforded them under the law would require that we disregard the commonly understood and accepted meaning of the term “aggrieved,” depart from the plain and, we believe, unambiguous language of the law, read into the statute conditions or limitations the legislature did not express, and interpret the law in a way that is inconsistent with the objectives and purposes the legislature sought to achieve. That, of course, is something we may not and will not do.
The consequences of this ruling are gonna be huge. Six Flags isn’t the only entity that’s been sued over this law.
…Adding… Illinois PIRG…
The decision is a victory for consumers across Illinois over Facebook and other tech giants, who argue in courts that consumers do not face “harm” from privacy violations and have pushed legislation in recent years to undermine the Illinois law. Consumer and privacy advocates such as Illinois PIRG Education Fund continue to defend BIPA in the courts and in the Illinois General Assembly. Illinois PIRG Education Fund’s national staff is fighting Congressional efforts by Facebook and others to enact a national law that would permanently preempt any existing or prevent any future state actions on data protection.
…Adding… ACLU of Illinois…
Today’s ruling protects Illinoisans’ right to control their own fingerprints, iris scans, and other crucial information about their bodies. This is exactly what the General Assembly had in mind when it enacted BIPA.
Your biometric information belongs to you and should not be left to corporate interests who want to collect detailed information about you for advertising and other commercial purposes. The Court recognized that individuals must have the right to sue companies that unlawfully collect their personal information; otherwise, the companies will not be held accountable.
More than a decade after BIPA’s enactment, we constantly hear new examples of companies that have collected, shared, and misused the personal information of millions being shared without their knowledge or consent. The strong protections of Illinois’s law are more critical than ever.
…Adding… Illinois Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Todd Maisch…
We fear that today’s decision will open the floodgates for future litigation at the expense of Illinois’ commercial health.
32 Comments
|
* Sun-Times…
The Democratic lawmakers with plans to promote legalizing recreational pot use in Illinois said Thursday they’re waiting for Gov. J.B. Pritzker to name a “point person” in his administration before they introduce their legislation.
State Sen. Heather Steans and state Rep. Kelly Cassidy laid out their proposal to end Illinois’ prohibition on pot in the coming months for more than 200 people Thursday night at a forum on recreational pot legalization at the Athenaeum Theatre in the Lake View neighborhood. The North Side Democrats previously introduced similar legislation in 2017 that failed to gain much traction in Springfield. […]
Under Steans’ and Cassidy’s proposal, Illinoisans over the age of 21 would be able to buy up to an ounce of marijuana from licensed dispensaries. Additionally, Illinois residents would be allowed to grow up to five cannabis plants at their home, something that is currently prohibited under the state’s medical cannabis law.
Revenue from legal pot sales would be used to “support law enforcement and pay for public education campaigns, substance abuse treatment and programs to reverse harms to communities adversely affected by the War on Drugs,” according to a slide projected during the presentation. […]
“We really have tee’d up a whole bunch of questions that we need to work through with [the Pritzker administration], or that’s the goal anyway,” Steans told the Sun-Times. “So, once we have that [gubernatorial point person] identified, we’ll sort of work through some of those issues and get it out there.”
Gov. Pritzker has said he wants to use cannabis revenues for all sort of things, including funding a capital bill. But that’s not how it’s developing at the moment. Stay tuned.
* More from the event…
* Related…
* Foxx vows to expunge all misdemeanor pot convictions, pushes full legalization: “At the [state’s attorney’s office], we have moved away from prosecuting most possession cases — but that does little to help the person who can’t get a job or apartment due to a marijuana conviction,” Foxx wrote. “The research and evidence indisputably show the housing and employment barriers associated with a marijuana conviction.” People with misdemeanor pot convictions will not have to petition individually to have them expunged from their records, according to Kiera Ellis, a spokeswoman for the state’s attorney’s office.
* State’s Attorney Kim Foxx announces support for legalizing pot, calls for expunging misdemeanor convictions: In the 1960s, possession of even one joint under Illinois law was a felony with a mandatory prison sentence. By 1970, a misdemeanor possession charge of 2.5 grams of marijuana could yield a one-year sentence in county jail and a $1,000 fine, while a felony conviction was punishable up to 10 years in prison, according to a Tribune article from that time. But public opinion has swayed in favor of marijuana legalization over the decades, with 62 percent of Americans in support as of last October, a five-fold increase from 12 percent in 1969, according to the Pew Research Center.
42 Comments
|
Comments Off
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax
Advertise Here
Mobile Version
Contact Rich Miller
|