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Arroyo indictment delayed until February 20th after request by prosecutors

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm…


  12 Comments      


Mystery solved!

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember that mystery fax I received yesterday about the new McPier CEO? Well, I received this from Emily Bittner at the governor’s office last night (it got buried in my in-box)…

Normally we wouldn’t be talking about this process, but because someone decided to launch an oppo hit…

The administration is proud to ask the MPEA board to consider a highly qualified African American woman with years of experience in convention and hospitality management. Ms. Larita Reed-Clark is a Chicago native who was raised in West Garfield Park and attended Austin High School before graduating from Loyola and Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management.

She, her husband and their young family moved to Indiana when he accepted a job there. After he passed away in 1999, she raised their children there to keep them in their existing support network. Ms. Reed-Clark would move to Illinois if the board selects her for this role.

For the past 35 years, she has provided leadership and financial management at the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, rising from assistant controller to Chief Financial Officer.

* I went looking for that email after Greg Hinz published this

The statement [from Bittner] did not discuss who launched the “oppo hit.” But the mayor and governor have been jostling for months over who to pick to succeed Healey, with McPier board Chairman Brett Hart also expected to leave soon. […]

Lightfoot wants DePaul University CFO Jeff Bethke, but Pritzker’s allies say he has little experience running or attracting the trade shows and conventions that constitute McCormick Place’s business. In turn, the mayor has frowned on some other names pushed by Pritzker, such as Chicago Public Schools COO Arnie Rivera.

Knowledgeable sources say a four- or five-member McPier board subcommittee is about to start interviewing candidates in hopes of reaching a decision. But a final selection will depend on the mayor and governor reaching some sort of agreement, since they split control over the agency.

  10 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

Senators plan to return to Springfield on Sunday to pick the chamber’s next leader. Whoever is picked will only be allowed to serve in that capacity for a decade.

After the Senate adjourned on the final day of the fall legislative session, Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, announced his retirement. Senators will pick his successor over the weekend.

* The Question: Which candidate do you support, Don Harmon or Kim Lightford? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please…


bike tracks

…Adding… This is, by the way, our 3,000th Question of the Day.

…Adding… Argh! I forgot about this Maxwell post. They both defend the current district map…


  47 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A long campaign update

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Madigan gonna Madigan

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dude always does well with this stuff. Greg Hinz

Which leads to a story about how, thanks to a hidden earmark within an earmark, Madigan’s home ward, the 13th on the Southwest Side, is receiving a special $10 million appropriation for street resurfacing, new street lights and other improvements—a gift far larger than most and maybe all of the city’s other 49 wards are receiving.

The money was tucked into Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s huge new $45 billion capital program, the one that passed the Legislature last year with Madigan’s help. And though neither state officials nor especially Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration seem thrilled about it, both are going along with the move. […]

The $50 million originally was supposed to be only $40 million, according to an Oct. 10 letter from Acting Illinois Department of Transportation Secretary Omer Osman to then city Transportation Commissioner Tom Carney that an anonymous source passed on to me. But it somehow that total got bumped up to $10 million.

What to do with that $10 million windfall? The letter, which you can see for yourself below, makes it clear: “This correspondence confirms the understanding between IDOT and the city that this additional $10 million dollars of SOCC funds is designated for use in the 22nd Legislative District, located in southwest Chicago.”

Go read the rest.

  28 Comments      


Third Darwish mailer attacks Lipinski, Newman on healthcare

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Democratic congressional candidate Rush Darwish’s first two mailers were introductory pieces as was his first cable TV spot. This one is half-and-half. Here’s the half that features an attack, but click the pic for the full mailer

Thoughts?

  19 Comments      


Rate the governor’s first anniversary booklet

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* To commemorate the one-year anniversary of his inauguration, Gov. JB Pritkzer’s campaign committee is mailing out a booklet today.

Its not a traditional campaign mailer. It’s not “poll-tested” and it’s not being widely distributed. According to Pritkzer’s top campaign person Quentin Fulks, the booklet is being mailed to “key stakeholders” and party leaders to make them aware of the governor’s accomplishments.

* Click the booklet’s front cover to read it yourself

The thing is packed with info like this

Progress Towards Improving Health Outcomes

    Expanded healthcare to 120,000 more Illinoisans with bipartisan reforms to eliminate the Medicaid backlog
    Capped the price of insulin to help reduce the cost of a life-saving medicine
    Raised the age to buy tobacco and nicotine products to 21
    Improved the quality of care for seniors through better funding for nursing homes and in-home care
    Protected an individual’s right to make decisions about their own reproductive health
    Strengthened critical access to hospitals in rural downstate communities
    Put in place the Getting to Zero plan to end the HIV epidemic in a decade
    Implemented a managed care organization assessment that will bring in $500 million of new federal funding to Medicaid
    Fully funded the reconstruction of Quincy Veterans’ Home and restarted work on the long-delayed 200-bed Chicago

Most people, even politically involved people either didn’t know about some of that stuff or maybe forgot about it. So, it’ll probably be helpful.

Anyway, rate it.

  11 Comments      


Pat Quinn is still Pat Qunning

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Evanston’s local electoral board Wednesday ruled that a ballot measure backed by former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn that would have given voters some legislative control through referendums will not appear on the March ballot.

The three-member board sustained two objections to the referendum measure, thereby removing it from the March 17 ballot. Objectors argued that the measure was not allowed under state law and the way it was written was difficult for voters to understand. The group Evanston Voter Initiative was asking voters to support a legislative method that would allow residents to create potentially binding legislation at the ballot box. […]

The board’s decision came after members pressed Quinn to identify another Illinois voter referendum that was binding without prior approval of a city council. He cited one example in Arlington Heights decades ago that gave voters permission to create binding referendums, but said residents have never chosen to use it.

“There’s a reason why it hasn’t been used,” commented [Ald. Ann Rainey].

* Here’s what it would do

At the request of at least 25 Evanston electors, the City Clerk shall promptly cause a proposal to be drafted into ordinance form, including an official summary of the proposed ordinance. The official summary of the proposed ordinance may be introduced by a petition filed with the City Clerk and signed by a number of electors equal to at least eight percent of the total votes cast in Evanston for candidates for Governor in the preceding gubernatorial election. The procedure for filing the petition and determining its validity and sufficiency shall be established by the City Clerk, who shall make the determination of validity and sufficiency within 21 days of a petition filing.

Upon the determination of a valid and sufficient petition, the City Clerk shall within one business day submit the ordinance proposed by the official petition summary on the agenda of the next City Council meeting for its consideration. The City Council shall take a record roll call vote on the proposed ordinance within 70 days of submission by the City Clerk. If the City Council does not pass the proposed ordinance within the 70 day period, the official summary of the proposed ordinance shall be submitted by the City Clerk to the electors for their approval by referendum at the next regularly scheduled election held in all precincts of the city and held at least 70 days after referendum submission by the City Clerk. If the official summary is approved by a majority of those voting on the question, the proposed ordinance shall have the force and effect of passage by the corporate authorities of the City of Evanston unless it is disapproved by a resolution of the City Council not more than 30 days after the election

Thoughts?

  37 Comments      


More of this, please

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gabriel Neely-Streit at the Southern

Two years ago, the state of Illinois asked Southern Illinois University Carbondale to help it study the escalating statewide teacher shortage.

The university surveyed superintendents across the state and found some types of teachers were much scarcer than others — especially in special education. The survey also confirmed the disproportionate need in high poverty areas, from rural Southern Illinois to urban Chicago. […]

Last year, the state asked SIUC to provide a solution. The university got about $345,000 to recruit a cohort of 20 paraprofessionals (also known as teacher’s aides) from across Southern Illinois and convert them into full-fledged, certified special ed teachers.

A year later, 18 of the 20 remain in the rigorous program, taking classes at night, on the weekends, and over the summer to earn their bachelor’s degrees and teaching certifications, all while continuing to work full-time in their special education classrooms.

The state funding covers 100% of their tuition, fees and books, and some travel from as far as 1.5 hours away to participate.

  21 Comments      


Do better

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Speaker Madigan wants YOU!…


I was going to have great fun with that flier until I noticed something.

* Zoom in…

That’s Rep. Sara Feigenholtz (D-Chicago) on the left. Feigenholtz was pushed out of House Democratic leadership last year. She was first elected in 1994, making her one of the most senior members in the House, but she’s abandoning all that seniority for a freshman role in the Senate.

And yet they put her in their recruitment poster.

…Adding… Rep. Chris Welch…

Hey Rich! I just saw your blog post. As you know, I’m constantly fighting for equality and diversity in the workforce, and I think we have to lead by example. A couple of weeks ago I asked House Dem Staff to create that flyer for me. I specifically wanted to use it to promote within various diverse groups of college graduates. In my time in the House, I think our staff has been diverse with people from all backgrounds culturally, ethnically, socio-economic status, etc. Our staff, just like the Democratic Party, looks like our Illinois. However, I’m always looking for ways to do even better because you should never rest. Thanks for sharing it on your widely read platform.

  37 Comments      


Testimony on lobbyist reform demonstrates this is not an easy-peasy task

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dan Petrella at the Tribune

With federal investigators scrutinizing the activities of lobbyists at City Hall and the state Capitol, Gov. J.B. Pritzker wants the General Assembly to pass legislation banning public officials from working as lobbyists at other levels of government.

But to do that, lawmakers will have to decide what, exactly, counts as lobbying and who would be required to register as a lobbyist. The difficulty lawmakers face in answering those questions became apparent Wednesday at the second meeting of a state ethics commission created late last year in response to the issues raised during the ongoing federal investigation.

* Neal Earley at the Sun-Times

“Too often, a lawmaker’s retirement and resignation is immediately followed by that lawmaker’s registration as a lobbyist,” said Ryan Tolley, policy director for CHANGE Illinois.

Tolley was just one of the government reform advocates who came out Wednesday to address a newly formed state panel charged with trying to help clean up Illinois politics.

While they didn’t always agree on specific solutions, most of those who spoke agreed that the Joint Commission on Ethics and Lobbying Reform has its work cut out for it. […]

Tolley and others would like to see a “cooling-off” period” that regulates the time in which a former lawmaker can become a lobbyist.

The practice of legislators jockeying for bigtime lobbying gigs during session months needs to be stopped. If they won’t do a “cooling-off” period, then at least ban that. It’s stomach-turning.

* Peter Hancock at Capitol News Illinois

The advocates also called for barring lawmakers from working as lobbyists at other levels of government.

While a sitting state representative, Arroyo was a registered lobbyist in Chicago. In the wake of his indictment, however, the City Council passed an ordinance prohibiting elected officials from other levels of government from lobbying the city and prohibiting city officials from lobbying other units of government.

House Majority Leader Gregory Harris, a Chicago Democrat, questioned how far that limit should extend, saying it could interfere with a lawmaker’s ability to talk to local governments on behalf of a constituent. But members of the panel said that shouldn’t be a problem and that a ban should extend only to working for pay on behalf of a private client.

Other recommendations from the panel included requiring lobbyists to disclose how much their clients pay them, something Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker has proposed but which lawmakers have not yet endorsed.

* Back to the Tribune

Aside from state government, only a handful of Illinois’ nearly 7,000 units of government have any kind of disclosure requirements for those seeking to influence decision-making by public officials. Both the city of Chicago and Cook County require lobbyists to register and have active online databases making that information public.

In DuPage County, lobbyists have been required to register for decades, but the county government’s online database shows only seven registered lobbyists, the last of whom registered in 2017.

* Greg Bishop at The Center Square

Of the thousands of units of government in Illinois, House Majority Leader Greg Harris said not many have a uniform standard for reporting lobbyist activities.

“And it sounds like among all of them we might be able to count on two hands how many of those entities have any regime [to register and track lobbying activities],” he said.

Rather than putting this burden on locals and creating a giant hodgepodge, the state should have a uniform registration system for all levels of government.

* Final word

But Marie Dillon with the Better Government Association said she wasn’t “especially worked up about the deficiencies in the Lobbyist Registration Act.” She said, “the challenge facing the state should not be framed as a lobbyist problem.”

“The lobbyists who are players in this scandal, by and large, are not rank and file lobbyists. They’re elected officials moonlighting as lobbyists, they’re do-nothing lobbyists hired by people who expect something from the General Assembly in return, but I don’t think the problem is lobbyists,” Dillon said. “I think the problem is the transactional relationships between special interests and the people who write our laws and set our government policies. That’s what’s poisoning the people’s trust in Illinois and I think that’s what our work here is about.”

* Related…

* Rep. David McSweeney: End the cover-ups in the Illinois General Assembly

* How Embattled Alderman Solis’ Top Aide Landed Three Jobs

  15 Comments      


Madigan’s total campaign cash stash: $21,060,481.39

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fourth quarter D-2 reports…

* Friends of Michael J Madigan: $5,311,802.27 (raised) $11,461,542.39 (cash on hand)

* Democratic Party of Illinois: $1,587,029.21 (raised) $2,168,795.55 (cash on hand)

* 13th Ward Democratic Org: $656,385.00 (raised) $2,429,574.30 (cash on hand)

* Democratic Majority: $983,936.71 (raised) $5,000,569.15 (cash on hand)

That’s more than 10 times what House Republican Leader Jim Durkin has at his disposal.

* Meanwhile, here’s the Tribune

Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan spent more than $445,000 in legal fees from his political war chest during the closing months of 2019, according to a filing with the state board of elections.

The spending is to cover the cost of a $275,000 settlement with a former campaign worker, ongoing civil cases and routine staff training, according to a Madigan spokeswoman. […]

The bulk of the rest of the money, including $139,209 to the Chicago office of Hinshaw & Culbertson and $6,500 to attorney Michael Kasper, cover costs tied to four civil cases, Boyce said. Those include the Hampton case, a case brought by Jason Gonzales, who challenged Madigan’s 2016 campaign tactics, and two cases arising from David Krupa’s 2019 challenge to Madigan’s hand-picked Ald. Marty Quinn (13th), Boyce said.

  32 Comments      


Oberweis has loaned his campaign $1 million

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lynn Sweet

House GOP hopeful Jim Oberweis loaned his campaign $1 million, according to a Federal Election Commission report posted Wednesday, while former Army 1st Lt. Clint Lorance — pardoned by President Donald Trump for the murder of two civilians in Afghanistan — headlined a series of fundraisers this week for the state senator. […]

Others in the March 17 Illinois GOP primary are state Sen. Sue Rezin, from Morris; investor Ted Gradel, from Naperville; Catalina Lauf, from Woodstock, who worked for Uber and the Trump Commerce Department; Jerry Evans, from Warrenville, who owns a music school; James Marter, from Oswego, a former Kendall County Republican Party chairman; and Anthony Catella of St. Charles.

Oberweis has a history of pumping his fortune into his campaigns. FEC records show that Oberweis loaned his campaign $600,000 in the last quarter of 2019 on top of the $400,000 he put in earlier. […]

Oberweis is a wealthy investor and ice cream magnate whose stores in the Chicago area, now run by his son, bear the family name. He loaned or gave his campaign $1.6 million for a 2014 Senate bid and loaned or gave $3.8 million for two House contests in 2008.

The problem I have long had with people loaning money to their campaigns is that when they raise money from special interests to pay off the debt all the money is going right back into their own pockets. And contributors know it.

  35 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Thursday, Jan 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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