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*** UPDATED x1 *** Pritzker’s “Vote Yes For Fairness” TV ads begin tomorrow

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’ve been hearing all day that the governor’s “Fair Tax” TV ad blitz is finally starting soon. Well, Comcast’s latest political issue buy report is out and Vote Yes For Fairness has purchased $75K over five days starting tomorrow. Click here.

I gotta figure that broadcast TV will also be announced and that the $75K is a drop in the bucket. Pritzker deposited $51.5 million into the Vote Yes For Fairness account in June.

We’ll have to see what the other side does and when. There are those who believe that waiting to go up on the air has been a mistake. But, again, we’ll see.

*** UPDATE *** The Illinois Opportunity Project has contributed $300,000 to a committee called Say No to More Taxes, which the IOP appears to control. The IOP was co-founded by Dan Proft, who has since moved on to a full-time radio career.

  24 Comments      


Pritzker: Federal U of I test approval has “potentially game-changing implications for our statewide testing program”

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor held a press conference to announce this breakthrough today…

The University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign is now performing its new rapid, saliva-based COVID-19 test under the umbrella of an approved FDA Emergency Use Authorization. The CLIA-certified lab at the U. of I. performed a bridging study to a recently approved FDA EUA, showing that the Illinois test performs at least as well as the recently approved saliva-testing protocol.

“Direct saliva testing can address bottlenecks of time, cost and supplies. Our test also has unique features that enable fast and frequent testing on a large scale, and we are now working together with many partners to make our testing method broadly available as soon as possible,” said Dr. Martin Burke, a chemistry professor who helped to design the test. Burke also is the associate dean for research at the Carle Illinois College of Medicine and a medical doctor.

“Today’s news puts the University of Illinois and the entire state of Illinois on the cutting edge of testing innovation on a national level. And let me just say to President Killeen, the State of Illinois looks forward to being your biggest customer,” said Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker. “If ongoing research continues to yield positive results, this has potentially game-changing implications for our statewide testing program as well as for testing on a national level. I’m so proud — but not at all surprised — to see this type of groundbreaking work come out of our own University of Illinois and I want to applaud President Killeen and the entire research and development team at University of Illinois for this achievement.”

“This pioneering technology is a game-changer that will help safeguard lives and livelihoods across the country,” said Tim Killeen, the president of the University of Illinois System. “It is one of many breakthroughs that the U. of I. System’s world-class researchers have contributed to the battle against COVID-19, a battle that we are proud to help lead.”

Unlike most coronavirus tests, which involve a long, invasive nasopharyngeal swab, the Illinois-developed saliva test, called I-COVID, asks those tested to drool a small amount into a sterile test tube. The I-COVID test yields results in hours, even at high testing volumes: The U. of I. has performed more than 50,000 tests since making walk-up testing available to faculty members, staff and students in July, and expects to test up to 20,000 people a day when the fall semester begins Aug. 24.

“Once somebody is infected, the amount of virus in their system can rise very rapidly. Unless we have a test that can give them results very quickly, by the time somebody finds out they are infected, they will have spread the virus,” said Rebecca Lee Smith, a professor of pathobiology at Illinois. “The faster we can notify people, the faster we can stop the spread.”

The Illinois protocol has one key element that makes it uniquely suited for large-scale adoption, said Paul Hergenrother, a chemistry professor who helped to develop the test. “We inactivate the virus without opening any tubes. The samples are immediately inactivated at 95 C for 30 minutes. That makes it very safe for the workers in the diagnostic lab,” he said.

Testing is only one part of the strategy to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, the researchers note. The university has developed SHIELD, a three-pronged “target, test, tell” system that incorporates testing with data reporting, modeling and a smartphone app, working closely with the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District for contract tracing and isolation for individuals who test positive. The University of Illinois System recently announced the formation of SHIELD T3, aimed at making the testing and data technology broadly available.

Any other CLIA-certified labs that would like to use the I-COVID protocol can perform similar bridging studies to the FDA EUA granted to Yale School of Public Health.

“The bridge to FDA Emergency Use Authorization is extremely exciting and important news for all of us in this pandemic,” said Robert J. Jones, the chancellor of the Urbana campus. “This is a critical new tool that we believe will let communities scale up their COVID-19 testing capabilities more rapidly in ways that are more affordable. We’re proud to be the university that is home to a huge team of amazingly dedicated and talented researchers who came together so quickly to move this test from concept to use approval in just a matter of months.”

  30 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Your choice for Illinois’ official state appetizer?…


  83 Comments      


Capitol Architect board votes to remove Douglas, Menard statues and bring MLK statue on to capitol grounds

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Earlier

Board members of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol will take up a request from the Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan to replace imagery of political giant Stephen Douglas and Illinois pioneer Pierre Menard because of their racist pasts.

Madigan called for replacing statues and paintings of the two in July, inspired by the racially charged killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and a nationwide movement to remove Confederate symbols.

* Latest…


* Finke

Architect of the Capitol Andrea Aggertt said the statues will be removed to a secure storage area maintained by the state. The granite bases on which the statues are mounted will also be removed and saved for possible future use. The locations where the statues were placed will be sodded.

The cost of the work hasn’t been determined, nor has a company been selected to do it.

“Obviously we want to hire someone who is skilled in the removal and boxing the statue, safe transport to take those items to our off-site storage,” Aggertt said.

She said the goal is to have the statues removed by winter.

* Press release…

Senate President Don Harmon released the following statement after the board of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol voted to remove statues of Stephen Douglas and Pierre Menard from the Capitol grounds:

“The decision to remove these statues and give Dr. King’s statue a rightful place on the Capitol grounds is certainly a step in the right direction. It is also the beginning of what I hope to be a longer conversation about how we can do better to accurately represent our state’s past. I thank members of our caucus for bringing these concerns to light.”

Nothing from Madigan yet.

  22 Comments      


Simple solutions are usually neither

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is a common and habitual demand by grandstanders

Four Chicago aldermen have filed notice to force a special meeting of the City Council later this week to address looting and call for the National Guard to be deployed. […]

“Losing Chicago’s downtown and business districts should have never happened,” [Ald. Ray Lopez] said in a news release. “We need to suppress all looting and rioting the minute it begins but we cannot do so at the expense and safety of other districts and neighborhoods. The time to act is now.”

* Um, the city has 13,000 police officers

The city budgeted nearly $1.8 billion for the Chicago Police Department in 2020, according to Chicago’s budget overview. Chicago’s is the second-largest police department in the U.S. with more than 13,000 officers, according to its most recent annual report.

The city’s 2020 budget also set aside $153 million for legal settlements. In 2018, the city spent approximately $113 million to settle police misconduct cases.

That’s about 50 percent more police personnel per capita than the average for cities over 25,000 and twice as many per capita than Houston.

* And the Illinois National Guard doesn’t want these sorts of assignments

“We’re not law enforcement officers,” [Air Force Brig. Gen. Richard Neely, the Illinois adjutant general] told the Tribune after the Guard’s mission ended earlier this summer without incident. “As guardsmen, we’re military. We go to war and we do not need to go to war in our cities. … It was important to me (troops) were not putting their hands on civilians. So we didn’t do riot control and some of those other missions. We focused on supporting law enforcement, allowing them to do the things they’re best trained to do.”

The Guard is not a rapid-response crime-fighting outfit.

  31 Comments      


Drop boxes about to start popping up almost everywhere

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From earlier in the week…

Vernon Township today called on the Lake County Board to install a secure collection site at the early voting location in Vernon Township.

“It is the consensus of the Vernon Township Board that mobile drop-off locations for vote by mail and absentee ballots are an essential component of guaranteeing a free and fair election in November,” said Vernon Township Supervisor Jonathan Altenberg. “This is even more critical given the recent announcement by the U.S. Postal Service that it cannot guarantee ballots cast by mail for the November elections will arrive on time, possibly disqualifying votes.”

“The continuing COVID-19 crisis is creating fear among our citizens to be present at physical polling places both during early voting sessions and on election day,” continued Altenberg. “The Trump Administration’s continued attempts to undermine the basic operations of the U.S. Postal Service during the election has many in our community fearful their vote by mail ballots will not be counted if residents use the U.S. Postal Service which could have limited or non-existing capacity. The very integrity of our democracy hinges on the ability of our citizens to vote, and this ability is in question.”

Because of these concerns, the Vernon Township Board is kindly requesting that secure collection sites be installed at all early voting locations, including Vernon Township’s William E. Peterson Park building, with the following stipulations:

    • The secure collection sites are securely affixed to the ground or to a building to avoid pilferage.
    • The secure collection sites are securely locked to avoid tampering.
    • The site be monitored either electronically or physically during certain drop off times.
    • The secure collection site will allow for citizens to submit their ballots without having to leave their cars. (I.e., a system much like a postal mail box.)
    • The boxes be emptied and secured daily at the close of polling places during early voting and on election day.

* Daily Herald

Lake County will install 16 or 17 drop boxes for ballots at early voting sites, Chief Deputy Clerk Todd Govain said. The locations haven’t yet been finalized.

Here’s what they look like in McHenry County…


* Back to the Daily Herald

More than 50 drop boxes for mail-in ballots will be installed throughout suburban Cook County. Sites will include the village halls in Arlington Heights, Barrington Hills, Elk Grove Village, Glenview, Hoffman Estates, Mount Prospect, Northbrook and Streamwood, as well as libraries in Des Plaines and Wheeling.

Two drop boxes will be securely installed at the DuPage County complex in Wheaton — one in the parking lot and one inside, Chief Deputy Clerk Adam Johnson said. Additionally, nearly 300 drop boxes will be placed at all early voting locations and Election Day polling places in the county, Johnson said. […]

Although his office is installing drop boxes for ballots, Kane County’s Cunningham thinks the issue has become political and is overblown. He’s confident in the postal service’s ability to deliver ballots on time and said a postal worker told him the expected increase in mailed ballots will be no worse than the extra business the agency gets at Christmas.

“They think they’re going to be able to handle it,” Cunningham said.

The concerns may be overblown, but always remember that people will say they want cuts until cuts happen, and then they hate cuts.

And on a purely political level, if the public thinks you’re responsible for the cuts, then people are gonna blame you every time their mail delivery is messed up. And even prior to any announced and unannounced cuts, the prospects of something wrong happening with the mail were pretty darned good because literally every household receives mail.

This was the wrong fight to pick at the absolute worst possible time, which is why they’ve seemed to back off. Even so…


* Related…

* Election Officials Plan For Influx of Mail-In Ballots With New Ballot Return Options: Chicago’s election agency plans to allow voters to drop off their mail-in ballots at all early voting sites starting in mid-October. In Champaign County, the county clerk plans to have up to six drop boxes for voters to put their ballots in through Election Day. In Morgan County in central Illinois, voters can return their ballots in a drop box set up for property taxes and traffic ticket payments when the county building was all but shut down at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

* Is Illinois Prepared for Mail-In Voting Boom? We Ask County Clerks

* Glenview Installing Ballot Drop Box For November Election - The Cook County Clerk’s Office announced Tuesday there will be more than 50 drop boxes around Cook County

* Winnebago County voters will be able to use drop box for ballots

* Sangamon County Democrats demand, Gray considering, use of ballot drop-boxes

* Vote by mail could be a mess, but not for the reasons President Trump says

  22 Comments      


2,295 new cases, 25 additional deaths, 1,519 people in the hospital, more than 50K tests, 4.4 percent positivity rate

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 2,295 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 25 additional confirmed deaths.

- Cook County: 1 male 20s, 1 female 50s, 1 female 60s, 1 male 60s, 1 female 70s, 3 males 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 male 80s
- DeKalb County: 1 female 80s
- Jefferson County: 1 female 90s, 1 male 90s
- Knox County: 1 female 80s
- LaSalle County: 1 female 80s, 1 male 80s, 1 female 90s
- Madison County: 1 female 80s
- Morgan County: 1 male 70s, 2 females 80s
- St. Clair County: 1 male 30s, 1 male 70s
- Wabash County: 1 female 60s
- Will County: 1 male 60s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 211,889 cases, including 7,806 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 50,299 specimens for a total of 3,489,571. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from August 12 – August 18 is 4.4%. As of last night, 1,519 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 334 patients were in the ICU and 144 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.

*All data are provisional and will change. In order to rapidly report COVID-19 information to the public, data are being reported in real-time. Information is constantly being entered into an electronic system and the number of cases and deaths can change as additional information is gathered. Information for a death previously reported has changed, therefore, today’s numbers have been adjusted. For health questions about COVID-19, call the hotline at 1-800-889-3931 or email dph.sick@illinois.gov.

Also, the Metro East’s positivity rate is still rising.

  14 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Your daily Big Jim post

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a column I wrote a month after Bruce Rauner took office

Every governor over the past 25 years—Republican and Democrat—has learned a lesson from Gov. Jim Thompson.

Every governor except one.

Running for re-election in 1982, Thompson was in the fight of his political life, and the Republican speaker of the House was making things worse.

Illinois had plunged into recession under Republican President Ronald Reagan, and Thompson was running against a household name, former U.S. Sen. Adlai Stevenson III.

Then, House Speaker George Ryan of Kankakee allowed an anti-union “right to work” bill to move to the House floor. Organized labor was furious. Thousands of workers gathered on the Statehouse lawn in June to angrily denounce Ryan. Thompson was met with a resounding chorus of boos when he took the stage.

But those boos turned to cheers when Thompson vowed to veto the bill. He then invited the crowd to the governor’s mansion for free beer.

In the November election, the Illinois AFL-CIO endorsed Stevenson against Thompson. But the incumbent received crucial backing from several individual unions after Stevenson suggested things like replacing unionized highway workers with prison inmates.

Thompson defeated Stevenson by just 5,000 votes. His speech and a sharply divided labor movement were crucial to his success—even though Ryan, whom the unions despised, had become his running mate.

After the election, Thompson signed a bill to legalize collective bargaining for state employee unions. He interceded in contract negotiations to break an impasse, and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees endorsed his 1986 re-election bid, followed quickly by an AFL-CIO endorsement.

Every governor since then has learned the Thompson lesson: Keep state workers happy.

Well, every governor except the current one. We’ll get to him in a moment.

What ended up happening was that union contracts got better and better for the employees. Republican Govs. Jim Edgar and Ryan were kind to the unions. And AFSCME claimed that Gov. Rod Blagojevich negotiated the most generous contract in the nation. Union negotiations in 2010 were satisfactory enough that AFSCME immediately endorsed Pat Quinn after the talks ended and gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaign.

Gov. Bruce Rauner deems this history “corrupt.” Quite a few people agree with him. The gazillionaire governor also claims that the millions of dollars he contributed to his own campaign last year and the millions he raised from his billionaire buddies are exercises in “freedom of speech.”

But you can’t on the one hand claim that contributions from billionaires are a constitutional right and on the other hand claim that contributions from working people are corrupt.

Plus, despite all this alleged “corruption,” Rauner won the election. The balance of power has substantially shifted.

His recent attempt to withhold some dues from the unions via executive order probably won’t succeed any time soon. Attorney General Lisa Madigan says Rauner is up against established case law and intends to fight him. Based on Madigan’s legal opinion, Comptroller Leslie Munger, a Rauner appointee, has said she won’t follow the order, effectively nullifying it.

Governors aren’t the only folks who learned from Jim Thompson. Legislators did, too. So, it’s highly doubtful the Democratic-controlled General Assembly will join any fight to undermine public employees’ legal rights.

A more adversarial relationship would be good for taxpayers in the short and the long run. But being adversarial is far different from this comically futile vow to destroy the other side. This could easily backfire and hurt everything else Rauner wants to do.

I asked the former governor what he thought of the current governor’s attacks on the unions. Thompson refused to criticize a sitting governor but said I was free to use any of his past comments.

Here’s one from 2013: “You can disagree with AFSCME, you can disagree with the teachers, you can disagree with other public employee unions without demonizing unions.”

…Adding… Pretty sure I’ve told you this before, but I watched a film of that “right to work” speech in college and it was a masterful performance that has stayed with me ever since.

Thompson was greeted by thunderous booing, but quickly calmed things by saying “Where’s Local (whatever number) from (whatever town)?” The union local members hollered and clapped and the whole tone changed. And by the time he announced that he would veto the bill, he had them eating out of the palms of his hands. I’ve never seen anything like it. That took real guts and real skill.

*** UPDATE *** Gov. Pritzker just announced that the state has set up an electronic guestbook where you can sign your name and share your memories. Click here.

  28 Comments      


CDC survey: 22 percent of essential workers and 31 percent of unpaid caregivers seriously considered suicide in previous month

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US News

The most recent Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that 41% of respondents have faced mental health challenges related to COVID-19 and steps taken to combat the pandemic, including social distancing and stay-at-home orders.

Taken from June 24-30, about one-third of respondents, or 31%, said they were experiencing anxiety or depression symptoms. Thirteen percent said they had started or increased substance use and 26% said they were experiencing trauma or stress-related disorder symptoms.

Eleven percent of respondents said they had seriously considered suicide in 30 days prior to the survey. […]

Respondents 18 to 24 years old were most likely to suffer mentally from the pandemic, with 75% of the age group saying they had at least one adverse mental or behavioral health symptom. About half, or 52%, of people aged 25 to 44 years old said the same. […]

Suicidal thoughts were higher in minority racial and ethnic groups. Nearly 19% of Hispanic respondents reported suicidal ideations and 15% of non-Hispanic Black respondents said the same.

About 22% of essential workers and 31% of unpaid caregivers also reported seriously considering suicide in the 30 days prior to the survey.

The CDC report is here.

* Rosalynn Carter brought up the challenges facing unpaid caregivers during her and her husband’s DNC presentation last night

We’ve known and admired Joe and Jill for many years, and most recently have worked with them on tackling the demands faced by the more than 53 million unpaid caregivers in our country who are juggling work and other family responsibilities and putting their own physical and mental health and well-being at risk.

How are you and yours holding up?

  28 Comments      


Because… Madigan!

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Joe Cahill

To eradicate corruption once and for all, Illinois must prevent the rise of another Madigan.

Some of the ideas he proposes are pretty good, but that seems like just a wee bit of an over-promise.

* Chicago Tribune editorial board

Illinois lawmakers from both sides of the aisle recently announced support for ethics reforms — this, after Democrats who control both chambers left Springfield in May without passing any.

But there’s a major plank missing from the proposals: Removing House Speaker Michael Madigan now.

The Republicans and some Democrats would beg to differ.

* Um…


Maybe that’s what caused the delayed response, although the question was simply read aloud and not directed at any one person on the call

Although an all-virtual Democratic National Convention has led to a few awkward moments as party leaders adapt to a new web-based format, there weren’t any technical glitches behind an uncomfortable pause Tuesday afternoon as top Illinois Democrats were asked a pointed question about embattled Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. […]

That changed at the end of a virtual news conference previewing the second night of the convention for the Illinois delegation, when a spokeswoman for Madigan relayed a question from NBC-5 political editor Carol Marin to a panel that included U.S. Representatives Robin Kelly and Jan Schakowsky, Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Mary Morrissey, executive director of the state Democratic Party.

Beyond the ComEd case, Marin asked if Madigan should step down “given also his admitted failings” in a sexual harassment scandal that rocked Springfield two years ago.

A full 13 seconds passed before Kelly offered the conditional chiding of Madigan that most prominent Illinois Dems have stuck to since federal prosecutors announced the ComEd case a month ago.

Comptroller Mendoza also spoke up.

I watched on BlueRoomStream.com and there were no technical glitches.

Bottom line, if DPI wants to do these things, they ought to either allow reporters to name a pool reporter or just open it up to questions on Zoom.

* Related…

* Architect of the Capitol to take up issue of Douglas statue: Board members of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol will take up a request from the Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan to replace imagery of political giant Stephen Douglas and Illinois pioneer Pierre Menard because of their racist pasts.

* Illinois lawmakers call for ethics reform: In the wake of the ComEd scandal involving House Speaker Michael Madigan, there have been a number of legislators who are now talking about ethics reforms in Illinois. State Reps. Blaine Wilhour, John Cabello, Darren Bailey, and Brad Halbrook held a press conference Tuesday calling for reform.

  8 Comments      


Feds agree to delay collection of first installment of ComEd’s fine in face of lawsuit

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Here’s Dan Mihalopoulos

Commonwealth Edison got a temporary reprieve from its due date to pay the first installment of a $200 million fine in a federal corruption case Monday.

The delay came after a Chicago lawyer argued ComEd — which is supposed to pay the fine to the U.S. treasury — should instead pay back electricity-delivery customers who were victims of the power company’s long-running Springfield bribery scheme. […]

In a court hearing Monday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amar Bhachu defended prosecutors’ deal with the power company and opposed any effort to divert fine money from the federal treasury in order to pay ComEd’s customers.

“This motion is completely without merit,” Bhachu said in the hearing before U.S. District Judge John Kness.

But Bhachu said Monday the government would take action to “maintain the status quo,” suggesting that no money would go into the federal treasury before Kness rules on Stewart’s motion.

  6 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Here’s something to get you started…


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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Aug 19, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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* Reader comments closed for the holiday weekend
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Jack Conaty
* New state law to be tested by Will County case
* Why did ACLU Illinois staffers picket the organization this week?
* Hopefully, IDHS will figure this out soon
* Pete Townshend he ain't /s
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* Isabel’s morning briefing
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