* Vox…
Technology jobs and the economic prosperity they bring are being concentrated in fewer US cities, according to a new report from The Brookings Institution.
Since 2005, five metro areas — Boston, the San Francisco Bay Area, San Jose, Seattle, and San Diego — accounted for 90 percent of all US growth in “innovation sector” jobs, which Brookings defines as employment in the top science, technology, engineering, and math industries that include extensive research and development spending. Meanwhile, 343 metro areas lost a share of these jobs in that same period.
The result: Wealth and productivity are becoming even more concentrated in fewer, primarily coastal cities. One-third of the nation’s innovation jobs resides in just 16 counties; half are concentrated in 41 counties. These jobs are high-paying and contribute to overall faster wage growth in the areas they’re located, than in areas with fewer innovation jobs. They also result in a lot of secondary work — jobs created to help serve those workers.
These locations draw educated people and investment money from other places. Some 40 percent of adults have Bachelor’s degrees in the top 5 percent of metro areas with innovation job concentration, compared with 26 percent in the bottom three quartiles.
* These are the “innovation industries”…
• Basic chemical manufacturing
• Pesticide, fertilizer, and agricultural chemical
manufacturing
• Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing
• Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing
• Communications equipment manufacturing
• Semiconductor and other electronic components
manufacturing
• Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control
instruments manufacturing
• Aerospace product and parts manufacturing
• Software publishers
• Satellite telecommunications
• Data processing, hosting, and related services
• Other information services
• Scientific research and development services
* What Brookings calls “superstar metro areas“…
• New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA
• San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA
• Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA
• Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA
• Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH
• San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA
• Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX
• Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV
• San Diego-Carlsbad, CA
• Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI
• Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD
• Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ
• Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI
• Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX
• Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA
• Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA
• Austin-Round Rock, TX
• St. Louis, MO-IL
• Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO
• Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL
So, we’re 10th out of 20. Not bad.
* Now for the bad news…
(M)etro areas such Chicago and Wichita have both shed innovation jobs and national share
According to the study, the Chicago metro area lost 12,582 innovation industries jobs between 2015 and 2017. The most jobs lost of any metro area and the second-highest percentage of job loss.
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Our sorry state
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Greg Hinz…
According to a report last week from S&P Global Ratings, Illinois as of the end of fiscal 2018 had $41.3 billion in unfunded Other Post Employment Benefits (OPEBs), in our case, retiree health care.
A few other states owe more in unfunded OPEBs, with Texas at $99 billion and change, New Jersey at $90.5 billion and New York state at $65 billion. But they at least are doing a better job at catching up and putting some money aside for the future.
Pay-as-you-go Illinois currently is putting in just 11.1 percent of the total needed to meet annual costs and pay interest on deferred costs each year. And relative to paying those two and actually reducing the debt, it contributes just 7.5 percent of what would be needed to eventually reach full funding. Texas, New Jersey and New York at least are putting in 20 percent or more of what’s needed, twice what we do.
Discuss.
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* Marni Pyke at the Daily Herald…
It’s one thing for new CEOs to bring in their own teams. But recruiting five former co-workers for top positions at the Illinois tollway and paying them nearly $900,000 a year, collectively?
“It seems excessive,” said Republican state Rep. David McSweeney, a budget hawk.
Since the summer, tollway Executive Director José Alvarez, the former chief operating officer at the Chicago Housing Authority, has hired five former colleagues for two existing and three newly created positions. […]
“I, too, have noticed some interesting hiring practices,” said Democratic Sen. Laura Murphy of Des Plaines, who prompted a hearing on tollway procurement policies in 2018.
“We are in the process of coordinating a meeting so I can talk to the tollway. I look forward to hearing their explanation and reviewing the (hiring) process they use,” Murphy said.
According to Marni’s article, the three new positions Alvarez created are chief procurement and compliance officer, chief of contract services and chief of compliance.
* In other tollway-related news, the lede of this story doesn’t match the reality…
Autobon AI, a technology company based in Lisle, Illinois, has begun testing its self-driving semi truck on the Illinois Tollway.
After undergoing months of testing on the Chicagoland Speedway track in Joliet, the truck is now operating on the road as a result of the permission and cooperation of the Illinois Tollway. A driver will be behind the wheel at all times during testing.
“The driver still has full control,” according to Krystian Gebis, the co-founder and chief executive of Autobon AI, via The Register-Mail. […]
According to Gebis, the company’s autonomous technology is not designed to replace truck drivers. Instead, it is designed to help make truck driving less difficult and safer.
…Adding… The truck was tested at Chicagoland Speedway and a member of the Tollway board is president of the track…
Director [Scott] Paddock has more than 20 years of industry experience in sales, marketing and general management. Since 2011, he has served as the president of the Chicagoland Speedway and Route 66 Raceway, the largest sports facility in the state of Illinois.
* Related…
* Illinois Tollway approves $1.54 billion budget for 2020
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Hold on a second, bub
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* SJ-R…
News leaked last week that the Springfield-Sangamon Growth Alliance — with the support of various business and civic leaders — was pitching a preliminary plan to build a downtown university campus between Second and Fourth streets to the west and east and Washington and Monroe streets to the north and south.
While there are more questions than answers at this point, Sangamon County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter said it is crucial to get a proposal in front of Gov. J.B. Pritzker as soon as possible, or the capital city could lose out on the “opportunity of a generation.” […]
Many property owners and business owners were caught off guard by the proposal, which seemingly bypasses existing vacant space and empty lots in other parts of downtown in favor of a four-block stretch that currently includes several thriving businesses.
Van Meter said the four-block size was based on preliminary assessments from the universities “that the space requirements were several city blocks size.” He said they also indicated a desire to be in close proximity to the Capitol building and relatively close to the Medical District. The project area also overlaps with the Third Street rail corridor, which could be converted into a greenway or trail once Amtrak is moved to the Tenth Street corridor.
I generally tend to stay out of Springfield politics because I live there, but I gotta say I’m not loving this idea.
* First of all, SIU and UIS have yet to say how much space they’ll actually need. I’m hearing it’s more likely a lot smaller than this gigantic swath…
* Several groups are bouncing around ideas these days. The Springfield-Sangamon Growth Alliance does not have the final say.
Also, if they succeed in dragging this development into numerous eminent domain battles with viable businesses and property owners (several of whom have invested tons of money on improvements), this thing will take years and years to accomplish and will create needless division and likely involve the destruction of historic buildings.
The blighted, city-owned parking garage at Fourth and Washington is a pox on downtown and is there for the taking if the mayor’s hotel development project (sprung with great fanfare during his reelection campaign) dies. Start there if you want. Maybe use some of the adjoining parking lot spaces if need be. Then, work your way out.
Your thoughts?
48 Comments
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Caption contest!
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Thankfully, I missed the memo today. The Senate Republicans’ Jo Johnson and the Senate Democrats’ John Patterson sharing a bipartisan cat moment this morning at the Statehouse…
30 Comments
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Cullerton talks about his legacy
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Daniel Vock at the Center for Illinois Politics scored the first extensive interview with Senate President John Cullerton since he announced his retirement. The whole thing is worth a read, but here’s one excerpt..
How exactly did the Senate Democrats build such a sizable majority? Cullerton says it’s mostly a matter of changing demographics in Illinois and good candidate recruitment. The caucus has emphasized recruiting women to run as candidates, particularly in the suburbs. That’s one reason why women now make up nearly half (17 of 40 seats) of the caucus. The presidency of Donald Trump has helped drive suburban voters to Democratic candidates, even in former Republican strongholds like DuPage County. But, he notes, Trump makes it harder for Democrats to win downstate. Cullerton has also been willing to spend heavily on tight races, in some cases even going in debt.
But Radogno, the former Republican leader, says there’s more to it than that. For one, Republican primary voters have often nominated candidates who are too conservative for the district they’re running in, so those candidates have lost in the general election. Plus, she says, just being in the majority makes it easier for the Democrats to raise money from political donors. And, of course, the Democratic majority is cemented in place because Democrats drew the district lines following the 2010 Census, giving them a built-in advantage for a decade.
Cullerton chafes at what he calls the “myth of the map.” When Republican Bruce Rauner first ran for governor in 2014, Cullerton says, Rauner won majorities in 35 Senate districts and two-thirds of the state’s congressional districts. (Not all state Senate seats were up for election that year, though.) “We drew fair maps that are competitive, and that’s why we have the potential to have as many as we get,” he says. “We don’t just take care of safe districts for 35 incumbents. There’s been demographic changes, but the maps themselves were extremely fair.”
Voters tend to split their tickets if they like their own legislators, but Cullerton and Radogno do make valid points. Better campaigns and candidates could produce better outcomes for Republicans. The first problem for the GOP is getting moderates past their primaries. The next problem is raising sufficient funds and devising sound campaign strategies.
* Thank goodness this era is behind us now…
The [”Grand Bargain” between Cullerton and Radogno] broke down because Rauner intervened. “The governor’s office did not think it was enough,” Radogno says. “I think that was foolish in hindsight. And he literally threatened members.”
Rauner won that little battle and lost the war.
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The 2019 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Non-Political Illinois Senate Democratic Staffer goes to the voters’ clear favorite Giovanni Randazzo…
You got a problem? You go to Gio. If a Member has a problem, they go to Gio. He has his hands in everything. He’s partisan (as he should be), but very fair when he is on the podium. No one stays later or puts in more hours. The time he has spent on the political side gives him the full prospective - which is why most of the members seek his advice.
Seasoned, old school and professional. That’s Gio.
* The 2019 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Non-Political Illinois Senate Republican Staffer goes to Scott Hurrelbrink…
Unsung hero of Senate Republican staff. Long time appropriations Director who would absolutely hate being nominated. Its just his way. But if you need to know something as a lobbyist or as a member he always finds the answer. That’s saying something coming from the super minority and the smallest caucus under the dome. His staff love him, and because of his tutelage, they are all sharp and on their toes.
Affectionately known as Hurl, he’s an institution under the dome.
Congrats!
* OK, let’s move on to today’s categories…
* Best campaign staffer - Illinois House Democrats
* Best campaign staffer - Illinois House Republicans
Remember to explain your votes or they won’t count. Also, please do your best to nominate in both categories. Thanks and have fun!
19 Comments
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Because… Madigan!
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Jeanne Ives press release…
It’s the Chicago Machine Democrat Way. Have Mike Madigan pick your voters through gerrymandering. And then you pick the voters who you will allow to address you.
Rep. Sean Casten announced a series of town halls that are invite only. Tickets required.
“Sean Casten is a master illusionist,” said congressional challenger Jeanne Ives. “He doesn’t practice representative government; he and the selected voters he casts for only simulate it.”
She’s repeated that invite-only claim on other occasions.
* BGA…
Ives said Casten has held numerous “invite-only” town halls.
But her own press release on the subject makes clear she was referring to a public event page the congressman’s team created that allowed anyone interested in attending to reserve a seat for free. Those events, and the sign-up link, were advertised in advance online.
We rate her claim Pants on Fire!
…Adding… Good point in comments…
Kinda ironic that Ives brings up gerrymandering when Casten won a district drawn to be Republican
* Press release…
State Representative Mark Batinick challenged his opponent, Harry Benton, today to provide a simple “yes” or “no” on whether he supports Mike Madigan’s continuation as Speaker. Representative Batinick recently called for Speaker Madigan to resign in light of multiple federal investigations involving the Speaker’s inner circle of confidants.
“Our first vote as a state representative is to elect a Speaker of the House,” said Batinick. To reform Illinois, we must take that vote seriously and be honest with the voters. I have consistently voted no in allowing Speaker Madigan’s unchecked power to continue and call upon my opponent, Harry Benton, to provide a straightforward answer as well.”
Rep. Batinick has been a leading advocate for reform and to end the culture of corruption in Springfield. Batinick has supported legislation to bring substantive structural changes to how government operates, including term limits, fair maps, revolving-door bans, and other measures to increase government transparency – pieces of legislation that Speaker Madigan refuses to bring to a vote.
“Candidates cannot change Springfield by embracing the status quo and allow Speaker Madigan to continue as the House leader,” stated Batinick. “I am running to reform the culture of corruption in Springfield, and that starts by voting no on Madigan. Voters deserve to know if Harry Benton will continue to empower Michael Madigan. How Mr. Benton responds to the question will tell voters everything they need to know about his candidacy for state representative.”
* WGN Radio…
David Krupa is a DePaul University sophomore running for 13th Ward Committeeperson in an effort to lessen the power of House Speaker Mike Madigan in the ward. When David joined John in October, he explained what Madigan’s office did to harm his campaign for Alderman. And he talks about some of the issues he wished to address.
He didn’t, however, talk about the allegations of sexual assault and abuse against Krupa. Indeed, the program’s host John Williams referred to himself as a “champion” of Krupa’s.
* This, however, is intentionally funny. Rex Huppke titled this segment: “Federal investigators appear to be at least Madigan-adjacent”…
These might be sweaty holidays for Democratic Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.
Four people interviewed by federal investigators told the Tribune they have been “asked about connections between Commonwealth Edison lobbyists and Madigan, lobbyists giving contracts to people tied to the speaker, and city, state and suburban government jobs held by his associates.”
During the fall legislative session, Madigan was asked if the feds are targeting him.
He said: “I’m not a target of anything.”
Yeah. And I’ve got a sleigh and some real estate up at the North Pole to sell you, buddy.
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Jesse White’s tumbling team turns 60
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The Tribune’s Darcel Rockett has a very good story about Secretary of State Jesse White and his world famous tumbling team. Just a few excerpts…
The Jesse White Tumblers group turns 60 this month and will celebrate “60 years of doing right by kids and giving them a wholesome experience” at a gala Thursday evening at International Union of Operating Engineers Local 399, where White says guests will see how the tumblers “help our young people grow tall and straight.” […]
According to White, there are approximately 250 performers in eight teams who perform about 1,500 shows a year. Children can become members as young as 6 and as late as their early 20s. Minors must maintain a minimum C average in school to perform with the team. Since its creation, the group has traveled the world, performed with professional sports teams, and spawned other tumbling groups. […]
“Some places, we perform free of charge; most places, we charge a fee, and the kids share and share alike in the fee, whether it’s $500 or $3,000,” White said. He makes the call on how much money the group charges, but White comes free of charge “primarily because all my life, someone has raised their hands to help me, and I never forgot. You get it, you give it back and you do something good with someone every day.”
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Madigan and Garcia still teaming up
Monday, Dec 9, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
The oddest political couple in the state’s Democratic Party is teaming up again.
Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan is backing yet another young protégé of progressive U.S. Rep. Chuy Garcia (D-Chicago) for the Illinois House at a time when other people appear to be distancing themselves from or even challenging the powerful House Speaker.
Madigan will help put state Rep. Celina Villanueva (D-Chicago) into the Senate to replace soon-to-retire disgraced Sen. Martin Sandoval (D-Chicago). Madigan shares Sandoval’s Senate district with Rep. Villanueva, who worked for Garcia when he was a Cook County commissioner and was appointed to the House at Garcia’s request to replace now-Ald. Silvana Tabares (23).
Madigan and Garcia’s operations will gather petition signatures for Villanueva’s Senate bid during a “special” Dec. 3 to Dec. 9 filing period created by Sandoval’s Jan. 1 resignation.
In Villanueva’s place, Madigan will back Edgar Gonzales, a constituent services liaison for Congressman Garcia’s district office. Gonzales is a Harvard graduate, but is otherwise a lifelong resident of the area. He filed petitions last week to run for the seat in the spring primary after the Madigan and Garcia operations spent the weekend going door to door with him. If all goes well, he’ll also be appointed to the House seat after Sandoval officially retires and Villanueva moves to the Senate.
Both Madigan’s 13th Ward and his 22nd House District are majority Latinx. He has the “regular” vote already sewn up, of course, so his big favors for the progressive Latino pol Garcia prevent any significant challenge to his local power and influence, and even to some extent his statewide influence, from his left flank.
This alliance also helps Madigan deal with the anger from some Northwest Side Latinos allied with former Rep. Luis Arroyo (D-Chicago), who appointed Eva-Dina Delgado to Arroyo’s seat after Arroyo was arrested by the feds and resigned, despite local support for another candidate from the party’s left wing, Nidia Carranza. The appointment was against Madigan’s wishes. The pols have threatened a federal civil rights lawsuit if Madigan follows through on his threat to challenge Rep. Delgado’s qualifications and ejects her from his chamber.
One of those politicians, Sen. Iris Martinez (D-Chicago), has called on Madigan to resign his state party leadership unless he explains his involvement with his former consigliere Mike McClain’s secret bid to funnel money to Kevin Quinn after Quinn, the brother of Madigan’s alderman, was accused of sexual harassment.
Garcia, in turn, expands his influence over city and state politics without having to expend much effort. That’s a big plus for Garcia because he didn’t do well at all in City Council races earlier this year. Garcia’s candidates lost two races on the Southwest Side (Ald. Ed Burke’s 14th and Ald. Ray Lopez’s 15th), the Pilsen-centered 25th Ward and another on the Northwest Side against Ald. Ariel Reboyras, who took the lead in backing Eva-Dina Delgado’s appointment to the House.
Reboyras was the first to threaten a lawsuit if Delgado is drummed out of the House by Madigan. Reboyras voted Arroyo’s 36th Ward proxy at the meeting to appoint Delgado.
Ald. Ed Burke’s 14th Ward is majority Latinx, but he is going “old school” Chicago on his Latino challenger. Burke was indicted on a 14-count corruption charge last summer, but he’s stubbornly refusing to go away.
Freshman state Rep. Aaron Ortiz (D-Chicago) defeated Ald. Burke’s brother Rep. Dan Burke in the 2018 Democratic primary with Garcia’s help. Ortiz then decided to challenge Ald. Burke for 14th Ward Democratic committeeperson. But, on the last day of the petition filing period, Alicia Elena Martinez filed to run against Rep. Ortiz in the House district and also filed to run for committeeperson against Burke and Ortiz. What’s going on?
Martinez is an active member of Ald. Burke’s ward organization. This is a classic put-up job.
Martinez’s candidacy should help split the Latinx vote in the ward race between herself and Ortiz, which could help Burke get the most votes. She’s also likely an insurance policy should something bad happen to the indicted pol before primary day.
The Martinez challenge of Rep. Ortiz is also designed to force the incumbent House member to choose which race he wants to focus on, his re-election bid or the committeeperson job.
Burke is playing hardball to the end and Ortiz has very little money to fight. He had just $5K in his campaign bank account at the end of the third quarter and, as I write this, has reported raising $16K since then. Burke has over $9 million in his two campaign funds.
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