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Question of the day

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was apparently in Du Quoin today and stopped by the local Walmart

* The Question: Caption?

Also, if you want to know how to get banned for life from this blog, click here and read through the comments about the same photo over at the Boycott the Du Quoin State Fair Facebook page. Yeesh. Those folks have… issues.

  69 Comments      


Students In Springfield District #186 Need Your Help!

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a donated advertisement.]

The 5th Annual Backpack Drive to benefit the students of Springfield District #186 is underway at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum until Wednesday, July 31, 2019.

Receive one free admission to the Presidential Museum for each backpack donation and help students start the school year off right. No time to visit the Museum in July? Vouchers are available, valid until December 31, 2019. Plan now for family visits during the upcoming holiday season.

Donating a backpack could not be easier or more convenient.

Simply bring your backpack to the ticket counter inside the Museum for same day admission.

Two convenient drop-off locations are available.

When downtown, utilize the loading zone at Union Station (500 E. Madison St.) and drop off donation just inside the door to receive a voucher.

A convenient West side location is with our partners, The Real Estate Group. Visit their office at 3701 Wabash Ave. and exchange your backpack for a voucher.

Don’t have time to shop….we understand! Call 217-558-8893 to arrange a cash donation. Those who already have a membership to the museum can still give. We will donate your museum admission to a local non-profit.

Thank you for supporting us as we give back to the community!

  Comments Off      


*** UPDATED x4 - Durkin, Curran still opposed *** Sterigenics announces agreement with Illinois, “strictest EO control environment of any facility in the country”

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

Sterigenics, a leading provider of mission-critical sterilization services, today commented on its agreement with the State of Illinois which will enable the company’s Willowbrook sterilization facility to resume operations and continue sterilization of life saving medical devices for patients and hospitals in Illinois and across the country. The agreement resolves all of the current litigation between the State of Illinois and its representative agencies and Sterigenics, with no finding of liability or fault by either side and with no imposition of penalties.

Under the terms of the agreement, which is subject to court approval, Sterigenics will install additional emission capture and control equipment that will enable the Willowbrook facility to meet the new, stringent standards set by the State of Illinois for sterilization using ethylene oxide (EO). In addition, Sterigenics has agreed to fund $300,000 in community projects designed to benefit the environment and the local community, to be developed in coordination with the State.

The company previously submitted its permit application to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IL EPA) for the installation of the new equipment which will further enhance the state-of-the-art systems already in place at Willowbrook and reduce remaining EO emissions by:

    Increasing the number of emission control stages to increase EO capture;
    Combining the existing emissions stacks into one common stack at the facility; and Eliminating the release of EO “fugitive” emissions from the plant.

Sterigenics has also agreed to reduce EO usage at the Willowbrook facility and to a combination of continuous emission monitoring, emission stack testing and ambient air monitoring to ensure and to demonstrate that the additional controls are working. The Sterigenics Willowbrook facility will resume operations upon approval by the IL EPA following the installation of the new controls.

“We are pleased to have reached this agreement, which creates a path for our Willowbrook facility to resume its safe operation and includes no finding of wrongdoing on the company’s part nor the imposition of any financial penalties,” said Sterigenics President, Philip Macnabb. “The State Government has gone to great lengths to set new standards for the protection of the public that are more stringent than any other location in the country. While our Willowbrook operations have consistently complied with and outperformed the State’s requirements, we have repeatedly stated our support for evolving regulations and our commitment to enhancing our operations in the interest of protecting public health. We remain committed to abiding by the new regulations established by the State. By resolving this matter, we are one major step closer to resuming the critical work of sterilizing vital medical products and devices in Willowbrook for patients in Illinois and beyond.”

The installation of new emissions controls will firmly establish the Sterigenics Willowbrook facility as having the strictest EO control environment of any facility in the country.

I have asked the governor’s office, the attorney general’s office and the House Republican Leader’s office for comment.

*** UPDATE 1 *** Leader Durkin’s spokesperson…

We were just informed this morning when a meeting was convened by the AG and IEPA offices. Leader Durkin, Senator Curran and Rep Mazzochi voiced their extreme opposition and frustration to the potential of Sterigenics reopening.

Yikes.

Sen. John Curran…

I continue to stand with the residents of Willowbrook and the surrounding communities who are fighting for clean air and a healthy future. For years, as testing has shown, Sterigenics has posed a critical public health risk to our communities. They must remain closed.”

The IEPA had scheduled an August 1 public hearing on Sterigenics. Durkin wanted to wait at until after that hearing to do anything.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Stop Sterigenics…

This is far from over. It’s disappointing the state couldn’t go further to protect a community that has been burdened by this company’s emissions for decades. That the company would rush forward this release ahead of the State being able to inform the community is just one more indication that they don’t care about who they may harm in their drive for profit. We expect better from our leaders, there has been no credible threat of medical disruption and, without a demand to do better, industry will not move from ethylene oxide and propylene oxide.

*** UPDATE 3 *** Press release with emphasis in the original…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul and DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin today filed a motion to enter a consent order with Sterigenics U.S., LLC (Sterigenics). Once it is approved by the court, the consent order would resolve a lawsuit filed by Raoul’s and Berlin’s offices in 2018 against Sterigenics over air pollution violations due to the release of the toxic chemical ethylene oxide (EtO) at its plant in Willowbrook, Ill.

Raoul and Berlin filed the proposed consent order today in DuPage County Circuit Court. The proposed consent order builds off of a new law signed by Governor JB Pritzker, which imposes the strictest limits in the nation on EtO emissions from sterilization facilities and other companies that use EtO. The proposed order prohibits Sterigenics’ Willowbrook facility from resuming sterilization operations unless the company installs new emissions capture and control systems, which must be approved by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA).

“The proposed consent order surpasses the emissions limits contained in Illinois law by incorporating all of the emissions and monitoring requirements included in the Matt Haller Act recently signed by Governor Pritzker. In addition, Sterigenics must comply with the strictest capture and control requirements in the nation and cannot reopen until it is in compliance,” Raoul said. “The proposed consent order, combined with the strict regulations in the new law signed last month, will enable the state to act quickly to hold Sterigenics accountable for violating Illinois’ emissions limits.”

“The consent decree entered into today should in no way be considered a license for Sterigenics to reopen,” Berlin said. “The decree will govern Sterigenics going forward and in doing so goes above and beyond the most restrictive regulations in the country placed upon businesses that use EtO in their operations. I would like to thank Attorney General Kwame Raoul, his staff and members of my office for their extended efforts the past several months. Their work is what brought us here today. I would also like to thank Governor Pritzker as well as the Illinois EPA for their commitment to the health and welfare of the residents of Willowbrook and the surrounding communities.”

“Illinois EPA is committed to ensuring Sterigenics complies with Illinois’ stringent new law for controlling ethylene oxide emissions, which were established by the General Assembly,” said Illinois EPA Director John J. Kim. “This agreement calls for Sterigenics to not only comply with those new requirements, but also imposes additional requirements to further protect the public and the environment. The Illinois EPA will devote all necessary resources to enforce the terms of this consent order.”

In June, Gov. Pritzker signed a law prohibiting EtO-emitting sterilization facilities, including Sterigenics, from operating in Illinois unless the facility captures 100 percent of all EtO emissions generated by the facility. Additionally, these facilities must reduce EtO emissions to the atmosphere from each exhaust point by at least 99.9 percent, or 0.2 parts per million. The law also requires facilities to conduct annual emissions tests and submit results to the IEPA. If a facility fails to meet the reduced emissions requirements, it must immediately cease operations. It must also notify the IEPA within 24 hours and is required to conduct an analysis within 60 days to determine why the test failed, take corrective actions, and seek IEPA approval before seeking to restart operations.

The proposed consent order prevents Sterigenics from conducting sterilization operations at its Willowbrook facility – comprised of two buildings, Willowbrook I and Willowbrook II – until significant improvements are made to limit EtO emissions. Under the proposed consent order, Sterigenics will be subject to penalties and contempt of court for violating the terms of the proposed consent order. The net effect of the requirements in the proposed consent order will be to reduce the EtO emissions from Sterigenics’ Willowbrook facility to no more than 85 pounds per year. This represents a drastic reduction from Sterigenics’ reported annual emissions from 2006 to 2018, which ranged from 2,840 pounds to 7,340 pounds per year.

The proposed order also requires Sterigenics to perform environmental projects in the village of Willowbrook or neighboring DuPage County communities. Within 30 days of the consent order’s entry, Sterigenics must put $300,000 into an escrow account, and the company will have 60 days to submit project proposals for state approval. The projects, which must include environmental improvements, or educational scholarships or programs, must be completed within one year of the court approving the consent order.

Handling this case for Raoul’s Environmental Enforcement Division are Division Chiefs Matthew Dunn and Christopher Wells, Bureau Chief Elizabeth Wallace, Senior Assistant Attorneys General Kathryn Pamenter and Stephen Sylvester, and Assistant Attorney General Daniel Rottenberg.

*** UPDATE 4 *** Pritzker administration…

In response to increasingly troubling emission tests, the Governor ordered the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to take the extraordinary measure of sealing the Sterigenics facility to protect the health and safety of the people of Willowbrook. The administration made it clear to members of the General Assembly that he would be willing to sign any measure, up to and including a ban, on the use of ethylene oxide in the state of Illinois. Members of the General Assembly drafted legislation that did not prohibit the use of ethylene oxide but did create the most stringent regulations around its use the country. The Illinois EPA will monitor Sterigenics to ensure they operate within the stringent framework lawmakers created in their legislation. Our top priority remains the health and safety of every citizen and we will continue to work with their representatives in the General Assembly, as we have for the past several months. The consent order that will be signed as part of the litigation creates detailed, enforceable mandates that Sterigenics must comply with if it seeks to do business in Illinois. The consent order will ensure swift judicial oversight to protect members of the community.

* Related…

* In a bid to reopen shuttered Willowbrook plant, Sterigenics proposes tighter controls on cancer-causing gas

  55 Comments      


Your moment of Zen

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oscar likes to hang out on a comfy chair just outside my office. He looked particularly cute today, so I snapped a pic…

  26 Comments      


ISRA files suit to strike down Firearm Dealer License Certification Act

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The filing deadline is today and the story below doesn’t say how old or new the numbers are. Human beings, by nature, tend to wait until the last minute to file paperwork, particularly when it costs them money. [Adding: The numbers are from Monday, a few days before the deadline.] Center Square

An Illinois gun rights group plans to sue the state Wednesday over the new gun dealer certification law set to take effect claiming gun dealers still don’t know the rules.

More than half of the state’s 2,351 federally licensed dealers haven’t applied for the state license, according to numbers provided by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and Illinois State Police.

Illinois State Rifle Association Executive Director Richard Pearson said federally licensed dealers in Illinois don’t know the rules because the state hasn’t set up the rules yet.

“They don’t know what they’re getting into,” Pearson said. “They don’t know how much it’s going to cost them. They don’t know what the inspections are going to look like, they don’t know anything. It’s really has a chilling effect on the firearms business in Illinois and it was meant to. That was the idea of the bill.”

ISRA filed the lawsuit to block implementation of the law because the rules aren’t clear, Pearson said.

“If you were to build a building and say ‘I’m going to build a building,’ and the state says ‘you can build the building and we’ll tell you what rules we’re going to put in place after the building is built,’ you wouldn’t do it,” Pearson said. “So right now, more than half of the Illinois dealers are not going to have an Illinois license, so they’ll be out of business.”

State Sen. Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, who was the chief sponsor of the measure in the previous General Assembly, said he hasn’t reviewed the lawsuit, “although I look forward to doing so.”

“It is my understanding that the State Police are enforcing the law as it was written and signed earlier this year,” Harmon said.

Illinois State Police officials said in a statement that the agency is finalizing and formatting the Gun Dealer Licensing Rules.

* They’re requesting this relief from the court

1. Enter a declaratory judgment that the Firearm Dealer License Certification Act violates Plaintiffs’ state constitutional right to bear arms and are unenforceable, with regard to the following provisions:

    a. The requirement of prohibitively expensive security and alarm systems, as described in Section 430 ILCS 68/5-50;
    b. The requirement of purchasing and implementing an electronic recordkeeping system within the next six months, as described in 430 ILCS 68/5-65;
    c. The certification fee structure, as described in 430 ILCS 68/5-70.

2. Issue a permanent injunction, without bond required of the Plaintiffs,
enjoining the Defendant from enforcing the challenged provisions of 430 ILCS 68/5; 3. Grant Plaintiffs a recoupment of the costs expended prosecuting this
action and
4. Grant Plaintiffs any and all further relief as this court deems just and
proper.

…Adding… Jordan Abudayyeh…

Governor Pritzker was proud to make SB 337 the second bill he signed into law as governor, keeping his promise to prevent senseless gun violence from tearing apart families. This commonsense, bipartisan law makes sure guns don’t fall into the wrong hands and licenses gun dealers just like restaurants and other businesses. We’re certain the state will vigorously defend this important new law.

* Related…

* Exemption for Sparta World Shooting Complex signed into law

  14 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Land of Lincoln Goodwill reverses layoffs, apologizes

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here. Press release…

Land of Lincoln Goodwill has always been committed to our mission: providing people the skills and resources to become self-sufficient through the power of work. In the past year, Land of Lincoln Goodwill has counseled and supported over 100 at-risk youth, we have assisted 500 veterans and 1,050 ex-offenders in their transition to employment, and more than 7,000 individuals have taken advantage of our career centers and the employment training we provide there. Our Vocational Rehab program supports 50 individuals with intellectual disabilities. We have a long history of supporting people with disabilities. We have wrapped our arms around them and worked side by side with them. We have always honored their contributions and our ongoing support of their needs will always be at the heart of our mission.

The outpouring of comments regarding our decision to refocus the Vocational Rehab program and its impact on 12 program participants has caused us to take pause. While we must be good stewards of our nonprofit, we must remain sharply focused on our mission. Our recent decision regarding the Voc Rehab program and the resulting harm it might have caused falls short of living up to our mission and we apologize for this error in judgment. We are reversing the decision to realign our Voc Rehab program and those participants affected will return to their part time skills training program with pay.

As the leader of this organization, some challenges can be overwhelming to the point where the numbers, rather than those we are working to elevate, become the focus. Their challenges and their needs are personally near and dear to my heart. As the President & CEO of this organization, I want to apologize to our constituents, our clients and our faithful donors.

Moreover, Land of Lincoln Goodwill will continue to work with all stakeholders – our leadership and our legislative representatives to assure a living wage is attainable for all those willing to work. I am committed to exploring how the state’s new minimum wage law can help raise up those we serve as well as the 400 employees in our organization. Regardless of the business and financial challenges ahead of us, Land of Lincoln Goodwill will always, first and foremost, remain true to our ideals and our mission of helping others to help themselves through the power of work.

Thank you.
Sharon Durbin President & CEO

*** UPDATE *** Looks like Sen. Manar isn’t impressed by the apology and reversal…



  45 Comments      


Lightfoot picks five casino sites outside downtown

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune reports that Mayor Lightfoot has forwarded the locations of five potential Chicago casino sites to the new consultant

A state-hired consultant will study the economic feasibility of the sites and report its findings to the state and city. City officials stressed that the casino won’t necessarily wind up at one of the five spots, which it characterized as test sites.

The five are: “Harborside” at 111th Street and the Bishop Ford Freeway; the former Michael Reese Hospital site at 31st Street and Cottage Grove Avenue; a site at Pershing Road and State Street, which was formerly public housing; Roosevelt Road and Kostner Avenue; and the former U.S. Steel parcel, known as South Works, which is between 79th and 91st streets along South Lake Shore Drive.

The sites all have previously been considered for a casino or other large-scale developments, the city said.

Notably absent from the list were downtown sites, like the McCormick Place Lakeside Center and Navy Pier, which have been bandied about as possible casino locations by real estate experts and newspaper columnists. They argued that putting the casino downtown would maximize revenue and create the most jobs.

* Ed Zotti wrote about the topic this week

The first is the “island casino” model — the term used by Klebanow and Gallaway in their 2015 report. The casino and related activity — typically a hotel, restaurants and bars, shops, entertainment venues, other attractions and parking — are designed as a single, self-contained complex.

Patrons drive to the casino and don’t leave until they’ve spent their last dime hours later and drive home. They never set foot in the surrounding neighborhood and might as well have been visiting Madagascar. The great majority of U.S. casinos are designed this way, Klebanow and Gallaway found. […]

A casino on the South Side almost certainly would be an island-type facility. The Michael Reese site, among other drawbacks, is separated from downtown by the Stevenson Expressway. The benefit to the surrounding area would be zero.

An island casino might retard redevelopment, suggesting the neighborhood is a dumping ground for uses nobody else wants.

A downtown location would require skillful planning and execution but have greater potential upside. It would check most of the boxes Klebanow and Gallaway cite as “critical success factors for the modern urban casino” — among them a pedestrian-friendly environment, proximity to an existing entertainment/dining district and good transit and highway access.

* Back to the consultant

Union Gaming Analytics was selected from among three bids, two of which were disqualified because they submitted after the application deadline, the gaming board announced Friday.

Those late bids came in along an aggressive timeline set under the massive gambling expansion signed into law June 28. The state missed its first deadline by four days under that legislation, which had required that a consultant be selected by Monday.

The gaming board is still aiming to stay on track with the legislative timeline, despite the initial hiccup that officials chalked up to state procurement regulations.

That is about as “Illinois” as you can get.

* Meanwhile, in Waukegan

As the city of Waukegan extends the deadline for interested casino developers to submit their proposals, the would-be developers behind Waukegan’s 2009 effort claim the city cannot contractually go with anyone but them.

The fight centers on a 2004 redevelopment agreement in which the city granted Waukegan Gaming LLC, then under a different name, the “exclusive right” to develop and operate a casino in Waukegan.

The last casino license Waukegan Gaming LLC was vying for ultimately went to Rivers Casino in Des Plaines, in part over concerns raised by the Illinois Gaming Board about the firm’s ties to William Cellini, a political insider indicted on a pay-to-play scheme. […]

The initially short deadline and the long list of requirements was “drafted to discourage not encourage competing proposals,” according to Waukegan Gaming’s draft counter-complaint. “It was designed to ensure that the City would support and approve only one bidder.”

That bidder, the firm argues, is Bond, a former state senator who now owns a video gambling operation with a heavy presence in Lake County.

Sheesh.

* Related…

* Illinois gambling expansion could take a while. Here’s a look at what’s to come.

* Seven groups interested in building casino in Danville; proposals due July 31: Foster also questioned the mayor about the preferred site, located along Interstate 74 near the Indiana border and Lynch Road. Some have wondered why a downtown location wasn’t given top billing, he added. Williams said that because of the tight timeline to submit a final casino development package to the Illinois Gaming Board — about 100 days from now — a site has to be shovel-ready.

* Hard Rock announces casino proposal for Rockford; further details forthcoming

* Business leaders react to Hard Rock Casino Gary: ‘It’s going to be huge’

  35 Comments      


Go crawl back under your rock

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle took a lot of heat last year about what — and when — she knew of sexual misconduct allegations against her chief of staff John Keller.

She ended up firing Keller shortly before she announced a bid for Chicago mayor, then lost the election in a stunning defeat.

Now, the results of an investigation into how the county handled those allegations appear to clear Preckwinkle’s name. The report released today by County Inspector General Patrick Blanchard said evidence “fails to support the conclusion that the President knew or should have known about the former Chief of Staff’s alleged behavior towards women outside of Cook County employment prior to being made aware of it in 2018.” […]

In an interview, Keller said he felt vindicated in a way.

“I’m glad that [Blanchard] found out the truth,” Keller said. “I acted appropriately at work. In any work environment where there’s lots of people, there were lots of rumors and those all came out to not be true.”

The inspector general launched an investigation last fall regarding allegations that Keller sexually harassed women outside of work during his tenure working for Preckwinkle.

Vindicated, eh? Yeah, I’m thinking not so much.

Nobody, other than himself, claimed that the alleged groping incident did not occur. The IG investigation was focused on Preckwinkle’s office, not about Keller’s off-payroll behavior

Scott Cisek, a key political adviser, said he told Preckwinkle days after the March 20 primary election that he’d “heard some very disturbing rumors” that Keller “had been behaving badly towards women.” And he warned Preckwinkle that someday “one of these women is going to come forward.” […]

Of all nights, one of the allegations that led to Keller’s ouster happened Nov. 8, 2016, the night Hillary Clinton, the first woman to be nominated for president by a major party, was unexpectedly defeated by Donald Trump.

Leaving a River North bar filled with pro-Clinton political operatives, Keller, just weeks away from being promoted to Preckwinkle’s chief of staff, piled into a cab with a group of at least five people to head to a nearby tavern.

A woman sitting in the crowded back seat said Keller did something that shocked her.

“Basically, he used his hands to grab my legs and my crotch, and I repeatedly was basically trying to move him away from me,” the woman told the Tribune in a recent interview. “But it became very difficult, and it was, honestly, very awkward.”

The woman, who barely knew Keller, said she immediately told two colleagues what had happened when they emerged from the cab. She said she didn’t take her concerns to authorities.

  17 Comments      


I still can’t figure out how this is such a thing

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

In a years-long effort to put their allegations of election tampering before a jury, lawyers for [Jason Gonzales] an unsuccessful primary challenger to Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan contend the state’s most powerful politician and his organizations “debased” the ballot, “the very crux of democracy.” […]

Gonzales’ lawyers also argue Madigan’s tactics took a deep personal toll on their client, contending that the “sham candidates being on the ballot left him ‘incapacitated,’ ‘ personally and emotionally devastated, hopeless and helpless.’” […]

While Gonzales’ lawyers seek a jury trial to outline a “scheme to corrupt a public ballot,” they are also pushing for monetary damages. Gonzales was deprived of his constitutional right of equal protection, his lawyers argue.

“Gonzales described his depression and anxiety, his bouts of uncontrolled tears, his panic attacks and hopelessness, and his difficulty functioning for over three and one half months,” the filing says. “He went under mediation (sic) from a psychiatrist.” […]

Lawyers for Gonzales claim that Hispanic voters told him personally that “with the multiple Hispanic candidates there was no reason even to vote.” They also claim Hispanic organizations wouldn’t support him and other Hispanics “told him he was a fool for running at all since there would be no two-man race. He also claimed it affected his ability to fundraise and wealthy donors withdrew the support they had promised.

Madigan is what he is. I can totally understand why people are angry or even furious about how he does business. But how this particular thing is actionable is kinda beyond me. And why the plaintiff is claiming to have been surprised stretches all credulity.

Madigan’s operation has put “sham” candidates on the ballot for years. And Madigan is well-known for being a man of strong habits. When something works for him, he keeps doing it until it no longer works. So this shouldn’t have been a surprise which allegedly rocked Gonzales to his emotional core. Good campaigns plan for these contingencies. Bad campaigns whine.

* Indeed, as Team Madigan pointed out in their own filing, Gonzales said he was ready for this possibility during the campaign

“We’ve come up with a strategy to neutralize these two candidates, and they’re not going to do much harm.”

Also, politics is a very rough business. If every candidate who experienced emotional issues during and after campaigns filed lawsuits seeking monetary damages, the courts wouldn’t have enough time to do anything else.

  43 Comments      


That is one odd and buggy news bot, but there is an explanation

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Proft website

Sen. Aquino-sponsored law appropriating $2 from the General Revenue Fund to the GovernorÂ’s Office of Management and Budget for its FY 20 ordinary and contingent expenses now in effect

A new law sponsored by Sen. Omar Aquino (D-2) that was introduced with the purpose of appropriating $2 from the General Revenue Fund to the GovernorÂ’s Office of Management and Budget for its FY 20 ordinary and contingent expenses went into effect on June 5, according to the official Illinois General Assembly website.

The legislation was introduced in bill SB262 on Jan. 31, when Sen. John J. Cullerton (D-6) filed it with the Senate clerk.

According to the General Assembly website, the bill as introduced was designed to “appropriate $2 from the General Revenue Fund to the GovernorÂ’s Office of Management and Budget for its FY 20 ordinary and contingent expenses”.

After debate, the Senate passed the bill on June 5 and it arrived in the House on May 29, and both chambers agreed to the final version of the legislation on June 1. The bill was sent to the governor and signed into law on June 5. The law went into effect immediately.

Illinois has a bicameral congress. The state enacts laws through bills that can be introduced in either the state House of Representatives or the state Senate, and either chamber of the legislature can reject or amend a bill before it becomes law. Once a bill is passed by both chambers, the bill must be sent to the state governor within 30 days, after which the governor has 60 days to sign it or veto it. If the governor does nothing, it becomes law after the 60 days have passed. [Typos in original]

Weird.

Anybody out there have any theories about what they could be trying to do with absurd stories like these (this is not an isolated incident)? I mean, other than getting it posted here, of course.

By the way, that legislation ended up being the budget bill.

…Adding… A pal explains via text…

The proft bot is some low rent thing because he doesn’t want to pay for real content writing. All the algos are [crud] so auto-writing bots still helps you [manipulate] seo. He just needs the sites to have a high page rank when he actually does want to move [crud].

It doesn’t have to make sense. Computers don’t care about context anyway because they can’t parse it (yet). He just needs to be on news.google.com come campaign season.

  16 Comments      


Still no A-List opponent for Durbin

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tom Kacich

It’s five months out from the filing period for next year’s primary election, and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin still doesn’t have a top-name Republican Party opponent.

The Federal Elections Commission lists three possible Republican opponents, each one less politically fearsome than the next: Peggy Hubbard of Belleville, Thomas Tarter of Springfield and Dean Seppelfrick of Aurora.

Hubbard, a former St. Louis County Police Department court officer, had raised the most money as of March 31: just over $50,000.

Durbin, meanwhile, had more than $2.4 million on hand.

Another Republican recently announced that he hopes to challenge Durbin, although the familiar name Robert Marshall may be even less frightful to the four-term senator from Springfield. Marshall ran for the U.S. Senate in 2010, for Congress in 2016 and for governor last year, each time as a Democrat.

Seppelfrick has reported raising no money and Tarter has reported raising about $1,500 so far.

Hubbard did report raising about $53K, mostly in small, unitemized contributions. But she spent almost all of that money in late February and March. Hubbard reported having just $1,379.65 cash on hand after that spending spree, much of it to out of state consultants.

And she’s not exactly in the political mainstream

“That’s why, if elected to the U.S. Senate, you can count on me to fight to defund Planned Parenthood — entirely — and also fight to end abortion on demand in America through passage of [Kentucky Senator] Rand Paul’s Life at Conception Act,” she said.

* Meanwhile, as subscribers have known for weeks, Durbin has no primary opponent, either

Freshman Democratic state Rep. Anne Stava-Murray of Naperville has formally ended her long-shot bid to challenge three-term U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin in the March 2020 primary, documents filed with the Federal Election Commission show.

Stava-Murray, who announced her challenge to Durbin even before being sworn in to her state legislative seat, filed a termination notice for her federal campaign committee on Monday. She had only raised $175 since formalizing her candidacy — $150 from herself — and ended the second quarter of the year with a balance of $9.72.

It’s the latest move by the unorthodox Stava-Murray, who in the November election upset a Republican incumbent to win a seat in the statehouse without spending much money or getting any financial assistance from powerful House Speaker Michael Madigan.

She became much more comfortable in the House this spring and actually appeared to be having some fun by the end of the session.

* Related…

* Democrats Casten, Underwood ahead of GOP rivals in fundraising

* Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot raises $2.7 million while Emanuel spends big on parties, makes donations

  29 Comments      


Goodwill react roundup

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Looks like the coverage was noticed by the national group…



* Peoria Public Radio

Peoria-area Goodwill shoppers and donors can do so knowing that all employees will continue to be paid. That’s according to Don Johnson, president and CEO of Goodwill Industries of Central Illinois.

Johnson’s comments come after reports that the Land of Lincoln Goodwill Industries — which covers 15 locations in Springfield and Southern Illinois — plans to layoff workers with disabilities in order to offset the cost of Illinois’ rising minimum wage.

WCIA-TV originally broke the story, in which the not-for-profit said it was making changes to the Vocational Rehabilitation Program — even though it collects hundreds of thousands of dollars a year from state contracts, pays no taxes and has a federal waiver that allows it to pay less than the minimum wage to workers with disabilities.

But Johnson said not all Goodwills operate the same.

“That is not us. It’s not our territory,” Johnson said. “We pay our employees. Every year, they qualify for raises — in fact, we start them above the minimum wage line.”

* This morning…

State Senator Andy Manar is calling for a full review of state contracts and funding awarded to Land of Lincoln Goodwill following the nonprofit’s decision to pull paychecks from disabled workers.

The nonprofit recently told dozens of workers with disabilities that they would be laid off due to the state’s increase in the minimum wage even though the one dollar per hour increase doesn’t take effect for five months and it is exempt by the U.S. Department of Labor from paying these employees the minimum wage.

“An organization that eliminates opportunity for the most vulnerable people in the state while simultaneously driving up executive compensation should be ashamed of itself,” said Manar, a Bunker Hill Democrat. “Blaming a minimum wage increase that hasn’t even gone into effect and that does not apply to these workers after receiving an increase in taxpayer funding is unacceptable.”

According to a WCIA report, the executive director of the Land of Lincoln Goodwill is currently making $164,000. Further tax records show that Land of Lincoln Goodwill raised executive compensation for two positions during the height of the budget impasse by $86,155 over 3 years.

Land of Lincoln Goodwill currently receives nearly $400,000 in taxpayer funded contracts and was slated to receive a 3.5 percent funding increase under the state’s new budget.

Manar sent a letter to the Illinois Department of Human Services, the Department of Central Management Services and Governor JB Pritzker this morning asking for a review of all contracts with the nonprofit.

“When I work to craft and vote to support a state budget to increase funding for human services programs to benefit the well-being of the most vulnerable, it is not my intention to line the six figure pockets of executives at non-for-profit entities like Ms. Durbin. Goodwill’s mission statement explicitly states its intent to enhance people’s dignity by eliminating barriers to opportunity,” Manar said. “There seems to be an abundance of opportunity today for Ms. Durbin but not so much for Goodwill’s now unemployed disabled workers. Unfortunately, local Goodwill executives are on the wrong path and we must now take extra steps to ensure taxpayer dollars are being used properly and for their intended purposes.”

* Illinois Network of Centers for Independent Living…



* Finke

State records show that Land of Lincoln was paid nearly $585,000 in the 2018 fiscal year and $689,000 in the fiscal year that ended June 30. Most of the money came from the Department of Human Services, which pays Goodwill for pre-vocation skill building services.

“It’s like job readiness. It’s getting people with disabilities ready to be employed,” said DHS spokeswoman Meghan Powers.

When DHS learned of the situation, Powers said, the agency contacted Goodwill to see if there was anything the state could do to help.

“We’re planning to work with them as much as they need,” she said. “Obviously, we don’t want these individuals to be let go.”

* News-Gazette editorial

Durbin’s message is especially galling because she makes about $165,000 as the agency’s CEO and employs her son, Brian Durbin, as the vice president of retail operations at a salary of more than $95,000 annually.

* When people who work for their mom complain about patronage…

  48 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tried to get too many posts together at once and got nothing done. Oops. So, talk amongst yourselves while I try to get myself organized. Please be nice to each other and keep it Illinois-centric. Thanks.

  33 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller

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