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No questions for the governor at media event

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Governor Pritzker held an event on the South Side today…

During a visit to a mobile testing site at Coles Elementary School, Governor JB Pritzker announced the expansion of the state’s mobile testing operation with twelve COVID-19 mobile testing teams operating throughout Illinois. These twelve teams will offer mobile testing to residents in hard-hit communities and visit facilities like homeless services centers and nursing homes. The mobile testing sites offer drive-through and walk-up tests free of charge to any Illinois resident who wants to be tested. In addition to the site operating at Coles Elementary, the remaining testing sites are located in Rock Island, Cicero, Brighton Park, Springfield, and East St. Louis.

“We now have 12 mobile teams that can be moved anywhere on any given day to mitigate and suppress emerging outbreaks, including places like meatpacking plants, nursing homes, migrant worker housing and other communities less able to access traditional testing clinics. That puts us on the cutting edge nationally in flexible testing to meet the demands of a more open economy – and I’m thrilled that Illinois is leading the way,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “And to be clear, these mobile teams are in addition to our 11 free, state-run drive through and walk up testing sites across the state. Illinois has built one of the largest testing programs in the nation, and that’s partly the reason we have made so much progress fighting COVID-19 statewide. Performing nearly 30,000 tests per day allows us to monitor the progress of our mitigation strategies, target our testing toward vulnerable populations, and reduce the spread of this virus.”

* After a brief speech flanked by elected officials, the governor said he’d take questions from reporters

Again, I appreciate very much all of you joining us here today. I’m happy to take any questions that any members of the media may have. And of course the elected officials behind me are also used to taking your questions, I’m sure they would be happy to answer any.

[Long pause]

Or, we don’t need to. [Laughter.]

Thank you very much. [Applause]

No questions? That’s pretty rare, especially since he made news today with his testimony to a congressional committee.

  12 Comments      


980 new cases, 36 additional deaths, 2.6 percent positivity rate

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 980 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 36 additional confirmed deaths.

    Champaign County: 2 males 70s
    Cook County: 1 male 40s, 2 males 50s, 1 male 60s, 1 female 70s, 4 males 70s, 2 females 80s, 2 males 80s
    DuPage County: 1 female 60s, 1 female 80s 1 male 80s
    Kane County: 2 males 70s, 2 females 80s
    Lake County: 1 female 70s, 1 male 70s
    McHenry County: 2 females 70s
    McLean County: 1 female 70s
    St. Clair County: 1 female 30s, 1 female 60s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 female 90s
    Winnebago County: 2 males 60s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 90s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 149,432 cases, including 7,099 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 32,742 specimens for a total of 1,842,576. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from July 1 –July 7 is 2.6%. As of last night, 1,518 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 331 patients were in the ICU and 151 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

Following guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, IDPH is now reporting both confirmed and probable cases and deaths on its website. Reporting probable cases will help show the potential burden of COVID-19 illness and efficacy of population-based non-pharmaceutical interventions. IDPH will update these data once a week.

Lots of testing is finding lots of cases, but the positivity rate is holding steady overall.

* Press release…

The Lake County Health Department is reporting an upward trend in new Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) cases among teenagers and young adults in the past two weeks. Since June 25, 2020, cases reported in Lake County residents under age 30 have been rising while cases in the general population have remained steady.

“During our case investigations, we are finding that many young people who attended social gatherings with their friends have become infected with COVID-19,” said Dr. Sana Ahmed, Medical Epidemiologist for the Lake County Health Department. “Youth are just as likely as adults to get and spread this virus, and your risk is higher if you and those you spend time with are not following social distancing, handwashing, and masking guidelines. We ask that everyone continue to take these risks seriously and contact the Health Department if you think you have been exposed. We need your help to keep this virus under control.”

* Meanwhile

The Illinois Attorney General’s Office has filed a motion to dismiss Count I in a lawsuit brought by Rep. Darren Bailey against Gov. Pritzker.

Rep. Bailey, R-Xenia, filed a lawsuit in Clay County Circuit Court on April 23, claiming Pritzker had exceeded his authority and violated the civil rights of Illinoisans by issuing and extending the stay at home order. […]

In the motion filed Tuesday night, the Attorney General (AG) says the Clay County judge’s ruling on July 2 was a non-final and non-appealable ruling because one of the counts wasn’t resolved, Count I.

The AG is now asking for that count to be resolved.

* The Daily Herald editorialized on the Bailey cases

If you like what’s happening with COVID-19 numbers in early-opening states like Florida, Texas, Arizona and California, you’ll love Illinois state Rep. Darren Bailey and 4th Judicial Circuit Judge Michael D. McHaney. Be forewarned, though. They don’t much care about you or your safety. […]

But along the way, there are a couple of points that Illinoisans should consider regardless of where they live.

One is reflected in a McHaney statement from the bench that provides chilling insight into the legal mind that produced his ruling. The Chicago Daily Law Bulletin reports that during the two-hour hearing Thursday, the justice frequently questioned the credibility of public health experts and COVID-19 research and expressed doubts about both the number of positive COVID-19 cases and the virus-related death statistics in Illinois. His concern? “Illinois citizens cannot be mandated to cede their constitutional rights to some alleged experts,” he said,

“Some alleged experts.” Or, as other observers might put it, almost all of the leading infectious disease researchers in the world. Apparently Justice McHaney has his doubts about the validity of the scientific case underpinning the restrictions most states and all responsible Americans have undertaken to combat the spread of the deadly coronavirus pandemic.

* In other news

Ever since the coronavirus emerged in Europe, Sweden has captured international attention by conducting an unorthodox, open-air experiment. It has allowed the world to examine what happens in a pandemic when a government allows life to carry on largely unhindered.

This is what has happened: Not only have thousands more people died than in neighboring countries that imposed lockdowns, but Sweden’s economy has fared little better.

“They literally gained nothing,” said Jacob F. Kirkegaard, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “It’s a self-inflicted wound, and they have no economic gains.”

* Tribune live blog headlines

Despite Trump’s push for nation’s schools to reopen this fall, Lightfoot says the decision should be local

State extends deadline on expiring driver’s licenses, vehicle stickers to Nov. 1

Lightfoot marks kickoff of virtual Taste of Chicago amid coronavirus pandemic

For the 1st time since March, fans took in a live sporting event in Chicagoland with the Chicago Dogs home opener: ‘We just wanted to get on with our lives a little bit’

Chicago students earning stipends through online summer program

Demand escalates for pet food pantries during COVID-19 crisis: ‘We didn’t know how we were going to manage’

* Sun-Times live blog headlines

Lysol can kill coronavirus on surfaces, EPA says

White Sox introduce fan cutout initiative to fill empty stands

Suburban movie theaters to temporarily close again after 3 weeks of social distancing

Another PPE shortage? Protective gear for medical workers begins to run low again

Trump runs foreign students out of the country in a desperate move to return to ‘normal’

Miami Heat closes training facility after 2nd player tests positive for coronavirus

  9 Comments      


I cannot for the life of me understand why people do this

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Maxwell interviewed Richard Guebert of the Illinois Farm Bureau after yesterday’s simultaneous press conferences called to oppose the governor’s graduated income tax proposal. Watch starting at the :50 mark

* Transcript

Mark Maxwell, WCIA : Right now, Governor Pritzker and the House and Senate Democratic plan would start out by raising taxes only on the top 3 percent of income earners in Illinois. Those are people who earn more than $250,000 a year. It just so happens that some of the people speaking at these press conferences today fall into that category.

Richard Guebert, Illinois Farm Bureau: Those in that 3 percent tax bracket are gonna figure out a way not to pay the taxes and they have the resources to do that. And probably they may even leave the state.

Maxwell: Wouldn’t it raise your taxes?

Guebert: No. Not this, not under this proposal, it would not. But…

Maxwell: The 2018 990s for the Farm Bureau show that you make north of $300,000. [Image of the IFB’s 990 disclosure flashes on screen.]

Guebert: Um. Yes.

Maxwell: So wouldn’t this raise your taxes?

Guebert: Yes, it would.

Look, it’s no crime to make three hundo a year. Just cop to it. The extra tax he’d have to pay on income above $250K is pretty small anyway.

Follow-up questions have become a lost art with too many reporters. Maxwell would not be one of those reporters.

Also, farmers can’t just pick up their land and head to Indiana.

  49 Comments      


Pritzker urges national face-covering mandate, says states were “forced to play some sick Hunger Games game show to save the lives of people”

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Center Square

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker urged federal lawmakers on Wednesday to adopt a nationwide face-covering requirement as the number of cases of COVID-19 increases in some states.

During a virtual hearing of the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security Wednesday, Pritzker criticized the federal government for not implementing the Defense Production act early on in the COVID-19 pandemic.

He said states were bidding against each other to buy personal protective equipment.

“States were forced to play some sick hunger games game show to save the lives of people,” Pritzker said. “This is not a reality TV show. These are real things that are happening.” […]

“This might be the most important thing that we can do to save lives,” Pritzker said. “We need a national masking mandate. We instituted ours in Illinois on May 1, one of the first in the nation, and it aligns with our most significant downward shifts in our infection rate.”

* Tribune

Pritzker detailed the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic since March, a month when he issued sweeping measures that included closing down schools for in-person instruction and a statewide stay-at-home order.

The state’s coronavirus positivity rate at one point this spring stood at 23%, and is now 2.5%, Pritzker said.

”That isn’t to say that the cascade of decisions that got Illinois to this point were easy,” Pritzker said Wednesday. “In fact, every one of them has been a choice between bad and worse — muddled further by the White House’s broken promises on testing supplies and PPE deliveries.”

* WCIA

“It’s the federal government’s job to make sure that a nurse being properly equipped in Peoria, Illinois, doesn’t come at the cost of a doctor being ready for work in San Antonio, Texas. There was no national plan to acquire PPE or testing supplies, and as a result, people died.”

Pritzker also urged the Trump administration to take steps to bolster insurance for testing and federal funding for state and local governments.

“The federal administration also needs to provide clarity on insurance coverage or COVID-19 testing,” he said. “Testing is not a one-off tactic. We need regular testing across our population, and that means people need to know that their insurance will cover their testing, every time.”

Pritzker also described the impact COVID-19 could have on local governments after an economic recession resulted in severe losses in local and state tax revenues. He told members of Congress, “without help, there will be massive layoffs of public servants, teachers and firefighters.”

  36 Comments      


Special prosecutor appointed over Open Meetings Act violation

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the June 2nd edition of the Piatt County Journal-Republican

The Piatt County State’s Attorney’s office has filed misdemeanor charges against five of six county board members, alleging they violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act during an online meeting held May 13.

During the meeting, the Zoom conference was apparently disconnected when the board went into a closed session to discuss the salary of the Circuit Clerk position. Some members of the public said they were not reconnected when the board came back into open session to vote on the salary.

“There were several members of the public who contacted the state’s attorney’s office and reported that they had been either cut off from the conference call after waiting for the board to return from executive session, or been unable re-enter the meeting after the executive session,” said Piatt County Assistant State’s Attorney Elizabeth Dobson.

* But the state’s attorney overstepped her bounds, according to a local judge

Judge Karle Koritz last week found that State’s Attorney Dana Rhoades had a conflict of interest when her office filed misdemeanor criminal charges against five county board members alleging that they violated the Open Meetings Act on May 13 when a county board meeting held via Zoom conference was apparently disconnected for a closed session. Some members of the public were not able to reconnect after the board returned to open session. […]

“The authority to appoint a special prosecutor lies solely with the court,” said Kortiz, who chastised Rhoades for not going through that procedure.

“The court is bewildered as to why a state’s attorney’s office that recognizes its own conflict would choose to file charges before seeking the appointment of a special prosecutor,” he wrote in his July 1 ruling.

In response to Carroll’s request for an independent prosecutor, the state’s attorney’s office conceded that they are witnesses and “would not and could not, serve as prosecutors.”

With that admission, Koritz wrote “then it would follow that it should not make a charging decision. The decision whether to charge an individual and what charge to file are the two most fundamental and powerful exercises of prosecutorial discretion. Having recognized that ‘it would not and could not serve as prosecutors,’ the state’s attorney’s office has nevertheless filed no petition to recuse itself.”

Judge Koritz appointed the Illinois State’s Attorney’s Appellate Prosecutor to handle the case.

* I’m not saying, I’m just saying that what the Piatt County board did pales in comparison to what happened in the city

The Better Government Association filed a lawsuit on Friday [June 12th] against the Chicago City Council over a recent series of conference calls that violate the Open Meetings Act.

The calls were arranged by Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s staff and have been described as informational briefings between the administration and aldermen.

The meetings “violated nearly every meaningful OMA requirement, including the statutory obligation to provide notice of meetings, to allow public comment at meetings, and to make meetings ‘convenient’ and ‘open’ to the public,” according to the lawsuit.

“The Open Meetings Act ensures that the actions of our government are not conducted in improper secrecy,” said Josh Burday, an attorney with Loevy and Loevy, which represents the BGA. “Transparency in government is critical, and the right of the public to attend and speak at meetings ensures that transparency.”

Recordings of some of the meetings have been shared with reporters and circulated on social media. According to news accounts, the discussions focused on the city’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its handling of protests in Chicago following the death of George Floyd during an encounter with Minneapolis police.

* A refresher on the OMA

The Open Meetings Act says citizens have a right to attend “all meetings at which any business of a public body is discussed or acted upon in any way,” except under limited and specific circumstances. Even if those circumstances exist, a meeting can’t be closed to the public without a majority vote, taken in an open meeting.

Lightfoot has said she won’t do it again.

  8 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Orland Park bars, restaurants and other businesses could reopen to full capacity before the end of the month under a plan approved by village trustees. […]

Orland Park officials believe they have authority to offer their own guidelines for a local restoration of business activity after a southern Illinois judge last week voided the governor’s executive orders that restrict the activities of residents or businesses. […]

Trustees Kathy Fenton and Dan Calandriello said they were still concerned about the village sponsoring the concerts and Taste of Orland, which draws in the neighborhood of 40,000 people.

Calandriello said it would potentially increase the risk of transmission of the virus, and that maintaining social distancing would be virtually impossible.

“People are on top of each other” at Taste, he said.

* The Question: Got any suggestions for rebranding the 2020 Taste of Orland?

  106 Comments      


Coalition wants some nursing home residents moved to hotels

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

A coalition of advocacy groups is calling on Gov. J.B. Pritzker to move residents from nursing homes and other congregate care settings into community settings, like hotels, to allow for proper social distancing and to stop the spread of COVID-19.

“Gov. Pritzker and the state of Illinois have an opportunity to intervene and mandate people in nursing homes and other institutions are evacuated from dangerous living situations and transition into the community, where (they will) be safer and happier,” said Esther Sanders, a transition coordinator for the Progress Center for Independent Living and member of the Institutional Rescue and Recovery Coalition. […]

The coalition is not demanding nursing care facilities be completely emptied, according to Tobin.

“We want to reduce the population (of these facilities) so that two things happen: One is folks that are significantly at risk are removed from that more dangerous setting to (a community setting) like hotel rooms on an emergency basis and that reduces the population in a facility so it’s down to one person per room,” Tobin said. “So (residents) have the possibility of social distancing to stop the spread of the virus, (and) it makes residents who remain and those working in the facility safer.”

Misty Dion, CEO of Roads to Freedom Center for Independent Living, echoed that sentiment. “We are asking (the governor) to give people a choice, so they have the choice to self-isolate or social distance,” she said.

* Jordan Abudayyeh’s response…

The administration has always listened to advocates who come to us with serious input for discussion on how to protect our most vulnerable residents. But moving medically fragile people from their homes and placing them into hotels entirely unequipped to care for them, is not something public health experts endorse. Instead, the administration has worked to scale up testing at our congregate facilities, provide PPE to employees, and train them in infection control and best practices. Families are free to move their loved ones home if they see fit.

  11 Comments      


You now have until November 1 to renew your driver’s licenses and plate stickers

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White announced that expiration dates for driver’s licenses/ID cards and license plate stickers have been extended an additional month – from Oct. 1, 2020, to Nov. 1, 2020. This new Nov. 1 extension also includes those who have July, August and September expiration dates. As a result, expired documents will remain valid until Nov. 1 so customers do not need to rush into Driver Services facilities, especially during the current heat wave.

“Extending expiration dates until November 1 means people with an expired driver’s license, ID card or license plate sticker do not need to rush into a Driver Services facility immediately,” said White. “During this current heat wave, I would suggest residents consider delaying their visit to a facility. But if you must visit a facility, please come prepared to wait outside due to social distancing, which limits the number of people inside a facility at one time.”

White continues to urge the public to consider using online services when possible instead of visiting a facility due to heavy customer volume. Customers who can conduct business online may go to www.cyberdriveillinois.com to take advantage of online services – such as renewing license plate stickers – from the comfort of their own home. People who conduct online transactions will avoid waiting in line at a facility.

White noted that online transactions continue to flourish, with June 2020 seeing an increase of 110 percent in online license plate sticker renewals when compared to June 2019.

Through July 31, Driver Services facilities are serving ONLY new drivers, customers with expired driver’s licenses/ID cards and vehicle transactions. Face masks are required. Customers who must visit a facility are asked to be patient due to heavy volume and prepared to wait outside in various types of weather. This is due to social distancing, which limits the number of people inside a facility at one time.

In addition, customers who must visit a facility to renew their driver’s license or ID card are encouraged to first use the preregistration application at www.cyberdriveillinois.com, which will speed up their transaction while at the facility.

Governor JB Pritzker extended the Disaster Proclamation an additional month, which in turn extended the expirations for driver’s licenses/ID cards and vehicle registration stickers an additional month to Nov. 1.

  20 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** If you want to fix the economy, you gotta first deal with the virus

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Scott County had been the only county in the state without a confirmed COVID-19 case until last week. Neal Earley with the Sun-Times headed over there to have a look around. It’s a good piece, so you should read the whole thing, but here’s one excerpt

Like so many other parts of Illinois, the county is eager to return to normalcy, [Winchester mayor Rex McIntire] said.

But some restaurant owners say they’re not seeing a return to that normalcy. In Winchester, many townspeople are still wary of returning to indoor dining.

At the Pitt Stop, a restaurant along the main square in Winchester, business remains slow. Owner Jeff Pittman attributes it to coronavirus concerns and summer heat keeping customers away.

Pittman, who serves as an alderman in Winchester, said he mostly closed his restaurant to indoor seating. He was the only one working at this restaurant Monday night. […]

A few weeks ago, a visitor from the Chicago suburbs showed up at Winchester Bowl, a popular restaurant and bowling alley in town […]

But even back then, business was slow and has yet to pick-up, limited to carry-out food orders. Few are bowling. Around happy hour on Monday, Granger had just one customer.

It’s not the disaster proclamations, it’s the virus. People need to wear masks, keep their distance and use actual common sense until there’s an effective treatment and/or vaccination.

Throwing people to the zombies is not the answer here.

*** UPDATE *** Greg Hinz has some national poll results from Harris

Forty-three percent of those surveyed said mayors should make limiting the spread of COVID-19 the priority over reopening business, with 35 percent saying both should be equal priorities. Just 15 percent—about 1 in 6—said reopening should be the priority. […]

Asked specifically about reopening offices, 8 percent said workplaces should reopen immediately without restrictions, and another 56 percent said sometime this summer, with safety requirements in place. But 19 percent said offices should wait until “fall/winter” to reopen, and an additional 17 percent said offices should stay shut “indefinitely.” […]

Safety masks are popular, at least in theory. Seventy-seven percent of those surveyed say they wear masks every time/most of the time when they are out in public. But only 49 percent say all or almost all of those they see out are doing so.

  29 Comments      


ISBE wants to continue challenge of Pallmeyer’s third-party ruling

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Rebecca Anzel at Capitol News Illinois

Illinois’ chief election authority told a federal appeals court Monday it wants to continue its appeal of looser election rules for third-party candidates.

If an appeals court agrees, the matter is unlikely to be settled before the July 20 petition filing deadline granted by Rebecca Pallmeyer, chief judge of the Northern District of Illinois. She extended the cutoff established by statute in response to a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the state’s election rules during COVID-19.

While the appeals court’s decision is unlikely to affect ballot access for third parties in the current general election cycle, its decision could have implications on future elections as the state continues to grapple with the COVID-19 pandemic.

In its court filing, the Illinois State Board of Elections acknowledged that date is “quickly approaching,” but points out “it has not passed.” The issue presented in the case — “a District Court’s authority to rewrite Illinois’ statutory requirements that govern how the board conducts an orderly election during the COVID-19 global pandemic” — is one that might resurface.

  2 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I don’t know if the season will happen, or even if it should. But you gotta love this heart…


  8 Comments      


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Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Jul 8, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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