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Alleged ringleader of smash and grab crew charged

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC 7

Charges were filed Tuesday against a man accused of heading a crew that pulled off at least nine smash-and-grab burglaries in recent months, targeting a range of stores and in one case leaving stolen cash registers strewn across Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s tony Gold Coast street.

Tacarre Harper, 27, from South Austin, was charged with nine felony counts of burglary, according to the Cook County state’s attorney’s office. He had several outstanding warrants at the time of his arrest.

An internal Chicago police memo says Harper was identified as a member of “an organized group” that carried out nine overnight burglaries between last November and last month.

Harper used “blunt objects to break windows or applied force on the entry” and removed merchandise or cash, according to a police report. The total estimated loss was $175,000, according to the memo.

Much of that - $150,000 - came from two burglaries at the high-end Burberry store on the Magnificent Mile on Jan. 4 and Jan. 6. The day of the second burglary at Burberry, the crew left cash registers and “burglary proceeds” near Pritzker’s doorstep after earlier hitting two markets in Lake View, the police documents show.

* Normally, I wouldn’t do a post on a local crime like this, but IRMA sent out a release…

In response to reports that the alleged ringleader of nine smash-and-grab retail crimes in recent months was arrested by law enforcement officials, the Illinois Retail Merchants Association released the following statement:

“On behalf of retailers across Illinois, we would like to thank law enforcement officials including the Chicago Police Department, U.S. Marshals Service and Great Lakes Fugitive Task Force for identifying and apprehending the alleged ringleader of nine smash-and-grab schemes across Chicago, which resulted in losses totaling $175,000. Organized retail crime has plagued neighborhoods throughout Chicago and communities across Illinois. We hope this is one of many actions demonstrating these crimes will not be tolerated and those who organize and carry them out will be pursued and aggressively prosecuted,” said Rob Karr, president & CEO, IRMA. “This case also underlines what is required to address these crimes. That’s why we have partnered with Attorney General Kwame Raoul to introduce one of the most comprehensive legislative proposals in the nation to address organized retail crime, providing additional resources to investigate and prosecute these criminal rings, prevent illicit trade and keep employees and customers safe. We look forward to working with legislators in a bipartisan manner to implement these safeguards and curb these malicious crimes.”

More information about this proposal is available at www.irma.org.

  16 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** The roots of the current chaos and the resulting fallout

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tom DeVore was on WMAY this morning with Greg Bishop

Q: So what does this mean, though, when it comes to those districts that are still going to have mask mandates in place, because we do have those districts including the Chicago school districts and several others, who’ve said that they’re going to still require masks? Are they violating the the judge’s order here?

DeVore: Technically, they are not. Again, this is an interlocutory order, it’s a temporary order. Her language is very strong. And I think that’s why a lot of them relied upon that language in making their decision. So they’re not violating her order as it exists today. But what they are doing, Greg, and what their lawyers have been telling them all weekend, which is why you’ve got 200 school districts give or take that have went fully mask optional, no vaccine, testing program. What they’re telling them is that Judge Grischow’s order, if it carries the day, and it remains the law through the appellate court, that what they’re doing right now, even though it doesn’t violate her order, it could end up being illegal and a violation of people’s civil rights because [they] are knowingly doing something that she says is a due process violation. And if they continue to do that, and that remains to be the law, they could be exposing themselves to pretty significant civil rights claims. And so that’s why a lot of these school districts are switching to mask optional and they probably think that’s the best policy for their district anyway.

In other words, the school districts named in the suit are the only ones truly bound by the judge’s order. But, if her decision is upheld down the road, then it could be considered persuasive authority that the school districts should’ve known that imposing mask/vax/test mandates could result in civil rights claims. I checked in with an experienced attorney and he said that, as much he hated to admit it, he agreed with the DeVore analysis, but stressed that it wasn’t a slam dunk and doubted DeVore will prevail on appeal.

The governor said firmly yesterday that schools not named as defendants “should continue to follow the prescribed public health protocols,” but every district has their own lawyers, and lawyers often disagree with each other because it’s the nature of the profession and nobody really knows how a judge, particularly a county judge, will rule on big cases like this one.

* Tribune

The Tribune spoke with Nancy Fredman Krent, who teaches education law as an adjunct professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law, about what the decision means for schools as the pandemic continues.

“The judge didn’t certify the class, so technically only the plaintiffs would be covered. But if you read the order, the judge enjoined the defendants (including both the state defendants and individual school boards) from requiring the school districts to mandate use of masks by students or staff,” Krent said. “So you can read the order as covering only the plaintiffs or read it as covering the defendants in their actions generally.”

She continued: “The judge refers in the footnotes to non-named plaintiffs without holding directly they are specifically covered, but she implies they are or, at a minimum, she believes that if they sue, they will get the same result as this decision.”

* Let’s go back to yesterday, via WCIA

“Judge Raylene Grischow’s ruling is out of step with the vast majority of legal analysis in Illinois and across the nation,” Pritzker said, claiming her ruling “cultivates chaos.” […]

“The judge has created a tremendous amount of confusion even in the way she wrote her decision,” Pritzker said.

Judge Grischow temporarily halted the statewide mask mandate and wrote in her ruling that local school districts were free to “govern themselves accordingly.”

* WGN

Widespread confusion in school districts across the state continues after a judge downstate ruled against the mask mandate.

Two school districts cover Hinsdale – and the two districts took two different approaches.

Elementary and middle schools switched to remote learning over concern the mask confusion would create disruptions in the classroom. But Hinsdale Central and South high schools were open, requiring students to wear masks. When some students didn’t comply, administrators moved them to a separate part of the building.

* WTTW

Meanwhile, Mateo Farzaneh sent his third-grader to school Monday morning in Lincolnwood, worried that she wouldn’t keep her mask on.

Farzaneh said his family has been particularly cautious about the coronavirus given that he has a concerning health condition; he’s likewise mindful of teachers’ safety, and believes that masks should be mandatory as long as health experts say there’s a need.

Lincolnwood District 74 is not a plaintiff in the suit, and Grischow did not certify the case as a class action, but the Lincolnwood district wrote parents that the “court order is in effect and Governor Pritzker’s Executive Orders regarding facial masking are not” so at this point masks are recommended, not required.

Farzaneh said he had a careful conversation with his daughter about the need to keep her nose and mouth covered with a mask, even if other kids take off their masks.

* Fox News

A group of high school students in the Chicago area walked out of class Monday after being told they had to wear masks to attend class.

The walkout came after Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge Raylene Grischow issued a temporary restraining order against Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s requirement that masks be worn in schools to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Video shared on Twitter by Jon J. Kerr, publisher of The Kerr Report on Substack, shows a throng of maskless Vernon Hills High School students trickling out of the school.

* Daily Herald

Wheaton Warrenville Unit School District 200, one of the defendants, opted for voluntary masking because of the ruling.

Some parents protested the decision outside the district’s offices Monday.

“I do think we’re in a period of confusion and disruption, and that’s why I think District 200’s decision was outrageous,” said Shannon Limjuco, a Wheaton parent who helped organize the demonstration. ” … Other school districts around us are staying the course with masking and other COVID mitigation, knowing that things are still in flux.”

* Sun-Times

“This chaos is the sole responsibility of failed Governor, J.B. Pritzker,” Bull Valley businessman Gary Rabine said in a statement. “Illinois kids are paying for J.B.’s failed leadership.”

Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin and running mate state Rep. Avery Bourne, tweeted, “It’s long past time for Governor Pritzker to stop ruling this state under the guise of emergency executive authority. We need to end these mandates and restore the rights of parents and local communities.”

Petersburg venture capitalist Jesse Sullivan tweeted, “Despite countless other governors — including many democrats — following logic and science, Pritzker refuses to give up control of your kids or your community schools.”

State Sen. Darren Bailey of downstate Xenia tweeted, “As your next Governor, I will repeal all of Pritzker’s mandates. You should make these decisions, not government.”

* Letter from House Republican Leader Jim Durkin…

February 8, 2022
Governor J.B. Pritzker
Office of the Governor
207 State House
Springfield, IL 62706

Governor Pritzker,

Two years ago, when this pandemic started, we all knew, including myself, that swift action was needed. As the months and years went on, you made the decision to continually go it alone. Your play was backed by the Democrat leaders in the General Assembly, who happily gave you free rein to impose restrictions and mandates across the state.

I disagreed with this approach and have often urged you to work collaboratively with the General Assembly, to no avail. You refused to listen to anyone who disagreed with your decisions. Parents, legislators, business owners and people across the state deserved a voice. You personally denied my request to have your Director of Public Health appear before my caucus to answer our questions about the science on which these decisions were based.

Now we are entering year three of this top-down strategy, and we see the chaos that it has caused. Today I am dealing with irate parents scrambling for childcare to make it to work, students being separated in school buildings, and no answers from your administration. Your lack of a plan has forced people to give up hope that they can ever have a normal life in Illinois.

Just this week, California Governor Gavin Newsome announced that his state would lift its indoor mask mandate. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, Delaware Governor John Carney, and Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont have also announced some rollback of indoor masking requirements.

Governor, it has been a long two years, and the people of this state deserve to know what you are doing. Will you follow the lead of your democratic colleagues across the nation, or will you continue to force your will on the people of Illinois, depriving them of any optimism for their future and the future of this state?

Sincerely,
Jim Durkin

*** UPDATE *** IEA…

The following is attributable to Illinois Education Association Vice President Al Llorens regarding the ruling by Sangamon County Judge Raylene Grischow on the temporary restraining order (TRO) that would prohibit enforcement of face masks, vaccination, and Covid testing mandates:

“Our students thrive on consistency and the last two years have been anything, but consistent. We do not want another disruption to our students’ learning while we are still working to bridge the learning gap created by the pandemic. That’s why we believe our school districts should not make any rash decisions changing COVID safety requirements until after this process plays out in our court system. Our educators should be focused on their students - not worrying about health and safety. We’ve been able to keep our schools open with these safety measures in place. We know that in person learning is the best way for our students to learn and we should be doing everything we can to continue to meet in person. While we wait for the appellate court’s decision, we think it’s important to focus on working with parents to provide our students the best education possible. The only way we got through the last two years was by working together, and we need to continue to do so. Our students deserve a team of parents, community members, educators and other stakeholders behind them.”

  85 Comments      


Campaign notebook

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Former Democratic state Rep. Mary Edly-Allen has been taking heat from the Legislative Black Caucus for missing votes on the Black Caucus’ “Pillars” during the January, 2021 session, particularly the SAFE-T Act. Members have been announcing support for Rep. Sam Yingling in his state Senate primary race against MEA. She wrote this and sent it to at least one BC member…

I was not able to attend the last few days of session in January 2021 because I immediately needed to go back to work teaching on January 4, 2021. Perhaps members aren’t aware, but while I was expected to serve until January 17, 2021 all of my benefits stopped December 31, 2020 including my medical insurance for myself as well as my sons. (I cover my under 26 year old children as a single mother) I was also not receiving a salary for January 2021. I wasn’t made aware of the cancellation of medical benefits and loss of income until the last week in December 2021.

Rep Slaughter called me around January 10, 2021 and asked if I could drive to Springfield to vote for the Black Caucus pillars. I explained the difficult position this put me in since I just started back to teaching, but I told him if he needed my vote I would arrange to come down. I requested the time off from my principal and attended session on January 12, 2021 with the sole intention of voting for the Black Caucus pillars. As I walked in, I was stopped by a reporter and asked why I was there. My response is recorded on Twitter saying, “It’s time for us white people to show up for our Black friends.” I stayed until 3am when Craig Willert came to me and said they had the votes and if I needed to, I could leave to go back to work. Only after I knew the bill would pass did I leave so I could get back to my new job.

* Irvin campaign…

As crime escalates throughout the state, Richard Irvin is reinforcing his commitment to both law enforcement and Illinois families by launching a petition to repeal JB Pritzker’s dangerous anti-police policies that have empowered criminals and crippled law enforcement.

Just yesterday, JB Pritzker was giving lip service at a press conference about making expressways safer as a shooting took place on the Dan Ryan at the very same time. It’s clear criminals are running rampant throughout Illinois knowing there will be no accountability for their actions. The threats to public safety will worsen as more parts of this law take effect.

“From this disastrous anti-police bill to letting child killers back into our communities, it’s clear that criminals know they will not be held accountable for their actions in JB Pritzker’s Illinois,” said Irvin. “We need to repeal cashless bail, stop anonymous complaints against officers, and make sure we are protecting law enforcement and victims of crime.”

Irvin has been a strong advocate for police, standing with them in Aurora to defeat the local Defund the Police movement and hiring more cops to effectively reduce crime. He brings a record of proven success compared to JB Pritzker’s record of high crime. Irvin is calling for residents to join him in supporting police and encourage repealing these dangerous policies.

* Sullivan…

Gubernatorial candidate Jesse Sullivan issued the following statement:

“Today we stand with families throughout the state who are letting their voices be known, demanding that J.B. Pritzker follows the science and lifts statewide mask mandates,” Republican candidate for governor Jesse Sullivan said.

“The images from schools across the state are deeply concerning: administrators locking kids in gyms and preventing entry for those exercising their right to come to school without a mask. The Pritzker administration and local districts must respect the TRO ruling, and Pritzker should be clear in ending his mask mandate once and for all.”

* “I’m a fiscal-social-constitutional conservative,” Jesse Sullivan told Brenden Moore. But he then clammed up when asked an insurrection question

Sullivan, however, was mum when asked about a resolution passed last week by the Republican National Committee that declared the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol “legitimate political discourse.”

That day, supporters of former President Donald Trump violently stormed the Capitol in an attempt to stop the certification of President Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. About 140 police officers were injured and one was killed in the attack. More than 750 have been charged in connection with the riot.

“I do not pay attention to national politics at all,” Sullivan said. “I genuinely have no interest right now in fixing D.C., I have every interest in fixing Illinois. And my entire attention and focus is on my neighbors here in Illinois…”

Sorry, but no sentient, involved American adult can possibly be that ignorant of national politics.

* Politico

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Attorney ShawnTe Raines-Welch, who’s married to Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, is throwing her hat in the ring for a Cook County judge seat. She’s so far self-funding, writing her campaign a check for $100,100, according to the State Board of Elections. Raines-Welch is a partner at the Ancel Glink law firm in Chicago. Her husband also is of counsel there, according to the company’s web site.

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Alexi Giannoulias picked up the endorsement of elected leaders from across Illinois. State Rep. LaToya Greenwood and state Sen. Chris Belt, both of whom represent East St. Louis. State Rep. Marcus Evans Jr., who chairs the labor committee in the State House, Chicago. Ald. Greg Mitchell (7th) and Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson.

— Rep. Marie Newman has won endorsements from state Sen. Emil Jones III, state Rep. Mike Zalewski, Bremen Township Supervisor Kathryn Straniero, and Cook County Commissioner Frank Aguilar, in her bid for the 6th Congressional District. Here’s the full list

— Sam Yingling, a state representative running for the state Senate’s 31st District, has been endorsed by state Sen. Robert Peters, Senate Chair of the Illinois Black Caucus.

I told subscribers on January 24th that Ms. Raines-Welch was running for a current judicial vacancy.

* The 53rd District is represented by Rep. Mark Walker (D-Arlington Heights). From the HGOPs…

Today, Jack Vrett launched his campaign for state representative in the 53rd District, encompassing portions of Elk Grove, Maine, Palatine, and Wheeling townships in Cook County.

“Illinois is on the wrong track, and I am running for state representative to restore sensible policies and push back against the extreme agenda that has led to rising crime, closed schools, and higher taxes,” said Vrett. “I support a balanced, common-sense approach that builds on core values we all share, whether it is fighting on behalf of victims and the police, parents and students, or the middle and working class families who have been left behind.”

From 2009-2014, he served in the U.S. Army J.A.G. Corps, including nearly four years with the storied 101st Airborne Division. In December of 2010, Jack deployed as a Captain to eastern Afghanistan where he contributed to U.S. counterinsurgency operations as an international and operational law attorney.

Following his return from Afghanistan in May of 2011, Jack served as adjunct faculty to the U.S. Defense Institute for International Legal Studies and was sent on missions to Ukraine and Slovenia where he helped train U.S. allies on the laws of war and international human rights law. He also served as an instructor at the Pentagon where he taught operational law to deploying J.A.G. officers. He was a contributing author to U.S. Military Operations: Law, Policy, and Practice, published by the Oxford University Press in 2015.

After his service in Afghanistan, Jack was assigned as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney prosecuting crimes committed by civilians in and around Fort Campbell, Kentucky, including domestic violence, shoplifting, and driving under the influence. He received additional training in criminal advocacy and counter-espionage prosecution.

Jack left the U.S. Army in 2014 and accepted a position as a civilian attorney with the U.S. Department of Defense. The following year, he accepted a position as Deputy General Counsel for the Illinois Department of Central Management Services. Jack left public service in 2017 and joined the Arlington Heights-based law firm, Hodges Loizzi. Jack is now a Partner at Honigman LLP.

Jack graduated from Northwestern University and earned his law degree at Marquette University Law School. He is admitted to practice in Illinois and Wisconsin and various federal courts, including the Trial Bar for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and has been recruited by the federal court to represent a prisoner’s civil rights case on a pro bono basis.

Jack resides in Arlington Heights with his wife Rose Marie and their rescue puppy Coco. He was born in nearby Woodstock and has two children from a previous marriage. Jack and Rose Marie are active members of the St. Alphonsus Catholic Church, where they first met, and serve on its Parish Council.

…Adding… Press release…

Today, community leader, small business owner and south side native, Jonathan T. Swain, launched his campaign for Illinois’ 1st Congressional District. Serving in leadership roles throughout the public, private, and non-profit sectors, including his most recent role as President and CEO of LINK Unlimited Scholars, Swain has sought to solve the unique problems facing Chicago’s underrepresented families and communities. He intends to bring that same ethic and commitment to Congress.

Swain launched his candidacy via a video that chronicles his life as a proven leader with unique experience across government, business and community sectors while lifting up Chicago’s Black youth through his non-profit work. Watch the video here.

“More is at stake for our community, our country and our democracy than perhaps ever before. I’m running for Congress to bring a nonprofit, business and civic lens to this position and provide the kind of proven leadership that our district needs today,” said Jonathan T. Swain. “As a lifelong Chicagoan and South Sider, I understand the life experiences and values of the 1st District – I grew up here, I lead a business here, I have served here and I am raising my children here. I hope to earn the opportunity to continue my life’s work of expanding opportunity and uplifting the community I call home as its Congressman.”

Since filing for his candidacy two weeks ago, Swain has raised just over $200,000, demonstrating confidence and hope that has inspired donors to support the first-time candidate for elected office.

  28 Comments      


Local governments again demand more state money ($1 billion), but Pritzker administration points to the big boosts they’ve already received

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Illinois Municipal League laid out its 2022 legislative agenda…

Restoration of Local Government Distributive Fund Revenues
HB 315 (Rep. DeLuca, D-Chicago Heights)
LGDF distributions play a role in funding critical municipal services and keeping the local tax burden low. Without LGDF, communities across Illinois would need to explore increases to other fees or taxes – including property taxes. When originally enacted, 10% of total income taxes in the state were dedicated to LGDF. Now, the state dedicates only 6.06% of individual income tax collections and 6.845% of corporate income tax collections to the fund. This proposal would incrementally increase amounts transferred from the State of Illinois’ General Revenue Fund to LGDF to 10% of net revenue realized from income taxes imposed on individuals, trusts, estates and corporations. IML is also supportive of SB 3010 (Sen. Murphy, D-Des Plaines) and HB 4169 (Rep. DeLuca, D-Chicago Heights), alternative proposals that would each increase LGDF to 8% beginning in SFY 2023.

Authority to Conduct Remote Meetings
SB 482 (Sen. Castro, D-Elgin)
This proposal would permit public officials to conduct a remote meeting without the issuance of a gubernatorial disaster declaration. Specifically, this proposal would allow the head of a public body to determine if an in-person meeting is not practical or prudent or if conducting an audio or video conference is in the best interest of the public or the public body.

Authority to Fulfill Public Notice Mandates Online
SB 3620 (Sen. Castro, D-Elgin)
Public notice requirements are an important and beneficial service provided to citizens. These requirements also add costs to local governments and their taxpayers, particularly for mandates to place notices in newspapers. This proposal would grant municipal governments the option to fulfill public notice mandates on a publicly available and searchable website. This is a shift to be more current with modern technology and to recognize how residents increasingly find and view public notices.

Reamortization of Downstate Public Safety Pension Funds
HB 308 (Rep. West, D-Rockford)/SB 3623 (Sen. DeWitte, R-St. Charles)
The current amortization schedule for downstate police and firefighter pension funds is significantly shorter than other statewide, state-administered and Chicago-based pension systems despite downstate public safety pension funds having better funding ratios (excluding the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund). These proposals would extend the amortization date for downstate public safety pension funds to the end of Municipal Fiscal Year (MFY) 2050 or later or decrease the required funding ratio to 80% of total actuarial liabilities in order to provide immediate financial relief to affected communities.

* The Pritzker administration pointed me to page 52 of the budget book

A critical part of the state financial infrastructure is the operations of local governments. When possible, the State has provided additional funding mechanisms to help local governments through a myriad of ways, including one-time and permanent revenue supports to minimize the need for local property taxes. Examples of on-going support, totaling over $1.1 billion annually, enacted since Governor Pritzker took office include:

    • An additional $200 million a year in sales taxes from the passage of internet sales tax language following the Wayfair decision, including the Leveling the Playing Field for Illinois Retail Act, to help ensure compliance with state tax laws on internet sales.
    • Over $600 million annually in additional motor fuel taxes directed to local governments and transit districts to support needed transportation projects through the passage of Rebuild Illinois.
    • Granting $1.5 billion in state transportation bond funds directly to local governments for road and highway project expenditures, saving local governments $110 million annually in debt service costs from not issuing local bonds.
    • Authorization of adult-use cannabis, generating an estimated $91 million in additional revenues for local governments.
    • Increased allocations through the Local Government Distributive Fund process totaling $46 million annually from business loophole closures included in Public Act 102-16.
    • Increased tax rates and positions for video gaming operations is expected to generate an additional $70 million a year for local governments.
    • Anticipated additional local revenues from the opening of new casinos authorized under the Rebuild Illinois plan.

Illinois allocated to smaller local governments $250 million from its Coronavirus Relief Fund allocation and established the infrastructure necessary to allocate and distribute the $740 million Local Fiscal Recovery Fund payment received pursuant to ARPA. These key sources of funding will help small local governments maintain services during uncertain fiscal times.

As noted above, Public Act 101-0610 consolidated the assets of local police and fire pension funds into two statewide funds to increase investment returns and lower management costs. Helping lower the pressure on local property taxes, the consolidation is estimated to produce additional returns worth billions of dollars over the next 20 years. The higher investment returns from consolidation will translate into fiscal relief for local taxpayers supporting these pension costs.

Finally, in the last few years, local governments have seen an increase in the percentage of income and sales taxes that state government shares with towns, counties and transit districts due to removal of the distribution proration that was put into place during the budget impasse. In fiscal year 2018, these allocations totaled $1.7 billion, but are expected to total $2.5 billion in the fiscal year 2023 budget proposal – an $800 million, or 47 percent increase - in state support in the last five years.

Also, local newspapers will mobilize against the loss of revenue from official public notices, and I kinda doubt the IML will get its kick the can wish on pension funds. But, hey, you can’t get something if you don’t ask.

…Adding… I adjusted the headline to reflect the projected $1 billion cost of the group’s LGDF ask.

  11 Comments      


Illinois ranked low in pet-friendliness

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I regularly consult the BringFido.com website whenever I want to take Oscar someplace. It’s especially handy in towns I’m unfamiliar with, but it’s also useful even when I think I know where I can take him. If this sounds like a blatant plug, well, it kinda is. The site has been invaluable for me. So, I paid attention when I received an email touting this story

The Most (and Least) Dog-Friendly States in the USA

Think your home state is great for the canine set? Wonder if there are greener pastures for your dogs to roam across America? Using the latest census data and our directory of pet-friendly places, the BringFido editorial team compiled per capita stats on the number of dog-friendly restaurants, outdoor activities, and pet-friendly hotels in all 50 states

That’s not a be-all, end-all sort of analysis, but, like I said, I swear by that site.

* And that’s why I was sad when I saw Illinois ranked a very unfriendly 42nd

42. Illinois

The Land of Lincoln welcomes all with its eclectic mix of big cities, quaint river towns, and natural beauty. Illinois may not have a national park, but the 270,000-acre Shawnee National Forest will have Fido hiking to his heart’s content. Picturesque Starved Rock State Park and Fox Ridge State Park are also must-visits for outbound hounds. If you prefer city living, spend a weekend in dog-friendly Chicago and bring your furry first mate on Mercury’s Canine Cruise to see Chi-Town’s sights from the water. Get a splash of culture in Monticello at Allerton Park & Retreat Center, and play together, whatever the weather, at one of the country’s best indoor dog parks - Wag ‘N Paddle in Naperville.

* Oscar and I slip away to Florida on occasion when it’s cold. Say what you want about that state, but it has very dog-friendly attitudes

9. Florida

Whether you’re driving down the A1A or along the Gulf Coast, “paws” to enjoy miles of pet-friendly beaches, tropical grills and dog-friendly vacation rentals in the Sunshine State. Your furry friend will enjoy splashing off leash at some of the best stretches of sand in the country, including Fort De Soto Dog Beach Park in St. Petersburg and Jupiter Beach in Jupiter. Bring the whole family to meet Goofy and Pluto at Disney World. For a tropical playground year-round, head to the Florida Keys and kayak through mangrove creeks with Lazy Dog Adventures. Before you jet off, spend an awesome weekend together in the “Magic City” of Miami. Check out our Ruff Guide to Florida for more travel advice.

* And here’s an Oscar pic to help you through the day…

Any ideas for making Illinois more pet-friendly?

  20 Comments      


New Jersey will lift its school mask mandate four weeks from yesterday, so when will Illinois do the same?

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Let’s go back to yesterday’s press conference when Gov. Pritzker was asked what metric was he using to gauge whether to lift the mask mandate: Hospitalizations, hospitalizations, hospitalizations,” he said. Pritzker also said this

We’ve already seen northeastern states where omicron hit first, like New Jersey see the signs that they need to lift these protocols, namely decreased hospitalizations.

* OK, this was published by a New Jersey newspaper on January 18

The latest and most precipitous spike of the COVID-19 pandemic clearly appears to be abating in New Jersey, as the number of people hospitalized dropped again overnight Monday, down to 5,251, the sixth consecutive day with declining numbers.

That’s a drop of 60 from Sunday and a 14% decline since the peak number of hospitalizations on Jan. 11.

Click here to see the hospitalization timeline for New Jersey.

Illinois’ hospitalization peak was a day later, on January 12. Seven days later, hospitalizations had dropped 12 percent. Not quite the pace of New Jersey, but close.

* New Jersey’s latest numbers show hospitalizations have fallen 67.9 percent since the state’s peak. Illinois’ latest numbers show hospitalizations have dropped 62.8 percent from our peak.
Yesterday

Gov. Philip D. Murphy of New Jersey, a Democrat who has imposed some of the nation’s most stringent pandemic-related mandates, will no longer require students and school employees to wear masks, signaling a deliberate shift toward treating the coronavirus as a part of daily life.

“This is not a declaration of victory as much as an acknowledgment that we can responsibly live with this thing,” Mr. Murphy, the vice chairman of the National Governors Association, said Monday in announcing the elimination of the mandate.

More

He said Monday that he’s waiting until March 7 to lift the mandate so local school districts have time to decide whether they want to keep the requirement or eliminate it. The March date will also likely provide some warmer temperatures, allowing schools to open more windows and provide better ventilation than in the heart of winter. […]

State government buildings are the only facilities now that still impose a Murphy-controlled mask mandate in New Jersey. Murphy said his health team has been discussing lifting those mandates but has not yet made a decision.

Masks must still be worn at transportation facilities such as airports and train stations as well as all health care facilities under a federal mandate.

* Big caveat: New Jersey’s vaccination rate is 17 percent higher than Illinois’, 73.3 percent vs. 62.6 percent.

Also, New Jersey’s vax rate for kids 5-11 is 29.4 percent vs. Illinois’ 36.8 percent. The vax rate for kids 12-17 in NJ is 68.6 percent vs. Illinois’ 61.2 percent.

There are other differences between the states. And I only used New Jersey because Gov. Pritzker mentioned it yesterday.

Thoughts?

  62 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** The insane absurdity over Rep. Conroy’s bill escalates to animals

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More illiterate and dangerous nonsense about Rep. Deb Conroy’s bill from a quasi news outlet

Illinois could indefinitely quarantine anyone who refuses vaccination, examination, or observation, under a bill pending in the House.

Cats and dogs would fare worse than people, as the bill would allow the public health department to kill any animal. The state would compensate animal owners, if they cooperate. […]

It would allow the department to examine, test, disinfect, seize, or destroy animals.

An owner would receive notice, and the department might agree with the owner on the value of an animal.

If they didn’t agree, each side would pick an appraiser and the appraisers would pick a third appraiser.

Destruction would follow appraisal immediately.

The Humane Euthanasia in Animal Shelters Act would apply to dogs and cats, and the Humane Care for Animals Act would apply to other animals.

As always, this language is already in state law. It is beyond ridiculous that such a report would ever be published. Also, you might wanna ask farmers and ranchers trying to protect their herds from hoof and mouth disease how valuable this state law is.

* Also too, there are also plenty of safeguards

When the Department determines that any animal or related property is infected with or has been exposed to a dangerously contagious or infectious disease, it may agree with the owner upon the value of the animal or of any related property that it may be found necessary to destroy, and in case such an agreement cannot be made, the animals or related property shall be appraised by 3 competent and disinterested appraisers, one to be selected by the Department, one by the claimant, and one by the 2 appraisers thus selected. The appraisers shall subscribe to an oath made in writing to fairly value the animals or related property in accordance with the requirements of this Act. The oath, together with the valuation fixed by the appraisers, shall be filed with the Department and preserved by it.

* As we’ve discussed, DuPage County Board member and GOP candidate for board chair Greg Hart has slammed the Conroy bill. He now refuses to withdraw his unfounded criticism

A spokesman told Playbook last night that Hart stands by his statement.

You really gotta wonder if these stories are part of a campaign of harassment to push Rep. Conroy out of the DuPage chair’s race. And if it didn’t start that way, it sure is morphing into it now. Conroy thinks it’s deliberate

Conroy told Playbook she has closed down her office and is being escorted by police while investigators try to track down the origin of the threats, including a phone message that said, “I’ll take you by gunpoint.”

She sees the threats as an organized effort to scare her out of the race for the DuPage County Board chair seat she’s seeking. “I’ve taken on a lot of fights in my career, and I’m proud of them. I’m struggling with the realization that people will actually stoop that low for political gain.”

*** UPDATE *** Another politician who doesn’t have the first clue of how to read a bill and yet feels comfortable asserting that an Illinois legislator wants to round people up

Northfield Township Committeeman TJ Brown is on high alert after a Democrat-sponsored bill would grant state and local government extraordinary powers during times of public health crises.

The bill – HB 4640 – is sponsored by State Rep. Deb Conroy (D-Villa Park). It has been roundly criticized for its authoritarian tone.

Conroy’s bill would allow the state to “isolate or quarantine persons who are unable or unwilling to receive vaccines, medications, or other treatments.”

“When I first heard about this bill from a member of our organization in Northfield Township, I initially thought that it was an overwrought exaggeration. But then I read the text of the bill. If anything, my concerned member understated the extent of this bill. I don’t know how it could pass Constitutional muster, compelling people to either submit to a physical examination (including but not limited to a COVID test) or be forced to isolate from their family, friends and associates,” Brown told North Cook News. […]

“This bill would not pass a General Assembly comprised of serious people who eschew a dystopian police state,” Brown said. “However, I expect it to pass the Illinois General Assembly, and I expect yes votes from the lawmakers who represent Northfield Township: Bob Morgan (who is sponsoring a vaccine registry bill), Jonathan Carroll (who proposed a heinous bill depriving unvaccinated people of health care), Laura Fine, Julie Morrison, Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, and Robyn Gabel (who gutted the health care right of conscience act). I also expect yes votes from Marty Moylan and Laura Murphy, who will represent a small corner of our township starting next year. I beg each of them to surprise me, to show some respect for individual rights.”

What a crock.

  40 Comments      


Caption contest!

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Anti-mitigation attorney and Republican appellate court justice candidate Tom DeVore

  102 Comments      


Pritzker highlights expressway shooting arrests and license plate readers at same time as expressway shooting

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Hoping to curb rising crime on Chicago expressways, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the director of Illinois State Police held a news conference Monday to spotlight arrests that have occurred since patrols were increased and more surveillance cameras were installed.

But as they spoke, a person was shot on the Dan Ryan Expressway at Canalport near downtown — the 14th person shot on an expressway in Cook County this year. No arrests were reported.

The governor and State Police Director Brendan Kelly insisted their efforts since last fall have made expressways less attractive for committing crime. They said 20 people were charged with violent crimes after more troopers were deployed in October and nearly 100 cameras were placed on the Dan Ryan.

“Anyone even thinking of committing violent crimes on our expressways ought to be on notice that they are more likely today than ever before to get caught,” Pritzker said. “If we want to reduce crime, we have to solve crime.”

Neither he nor State Police Director Brendan Kelly provided examples of crimes being solved by the 99 new license plate reading cameras on the Dan Ryan. State police said they installed them last year, and have plans to install 200 more on other expressways with $12.5 million in state funding.

So, are the license plate readers helping or no?

…Adding… Director Kelly at the press conference…

The installation of these ALPRs has already begun to aid the ISP with intelligence and evidence leading to arrests related to these expressway shootings and aggravated fleeing and eluding violations tied to aggravated vehicular hijackings and other violent crimes in nearby communities.

* Tribune

As Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker tries to fend off Republican rivals who accuse him of being soft on crime, his office is announcing the arrests of about a dozen people in the last several months for crimes on Chicago-area expressways.

The rise in violent crime afflicting parts of the state has not spared the city’s expressways, which are patrolled by Illinois State Police. There were roughly 260 shootings on Chicago-area expressways in 2021, about double the number on those roadways the previous year, according to the state police. […]

“The crime scene itself is moving at 70, 80, 90 miles an hour down the expressway,” said Kelly, who was tapped by Pritzker in 2019 to lead the state police. “The evidence is more like a debris field than it is at a typical crime scene on a street corner or in a parking lot, wherever the case may be, within a home or within a business, it is spread out all over the place.”

“And then you have people literally driving through the crime scene repeatedly until law enforcement is able to get there and secure the scene,” Kelly said. “People that are the victims of these cases may not be able to identify what they saw. So, all that is moving very quickly.”

* Patch

Monday’s announcement came after the Illinois State Police reported 273 expressway shootings in 2021. State Police officials recently released data on an interactive map that tracks expressway shootings back to 2019. Kelly said Monday that 24 homicides took place on the state’s expressways in 2021.

Pritzker has announced he will deploy more state troopers on local expressways and that more state police helicopters will monitor expressway activity from the air. Pritzker said that the charges against the 20 people are proof that the extra measures by police are working as officials look to crack down on “heinous shootings that spill over from neighborhoods and onto the expressway,” the governor said in a news release on Monday.

Kelly said in a news release that 99 license plate readers were recently installed on the Dan Ryan and said that police officials are working with the Illinois Department of Transportation to install another 200 license plate readers within the next year.

* ILGOP…

Illinois Republican Party Spokesman Joe Hackler released the following statement in response to Pritzker’s failed attempt to mislead Illinois voters on crime:

“JB Pritzker must accept responsibility for skyrocketing crime in this state. He signed the most pro-criminal, anti-police legislation in Illinois history. He sided with Kim Foxx. His Prisoner Review Board let out violent criminals early, including cop-killers. There’s simply no media stunt or campaign ad that can change the reality of crime in Illinois.”

* From the Richard Irvin campaign…

From the disastrous crime bill to letting child killers back into our communities, it’s clear that criminals know they will not be held accountable for their actions in JB Pritzker’s Illinois. Our families need and deserve a governor who will back our police and stand up to the criminals that are terrorizing our streets.

…Adding… DPI…

One week after Richard Irvin finally made himself available to reporters, Illinois voters are left with far more questions than answers. A closer look at Irvin’s background reveals he enjoyed a 15-year career as a criminal defense attorney where he made big money off keeping violent abusers, sex offenders, and gang members out of prison. As reported by multiple outlets, Irvin’s first law firm, the Law Office of Richard C. Irvin and Associates, brazenly advertised its services defending clients accused of domestic violence, violent felonies, and more. Irvin even advertised his five years as a prosecutor as the reason he can construct “effective defense strategies.”

“No wonder Richard Irvin would rather avoid tough questions and instead communicate through consultant-crafted videos: he’s not being honest about his record,” said Democratic Party of Illinois Deputy Director Jake Lewis. “Irvin would rather dodge reporters and hide from voters than explain why he ‘zealously defended’ the very criminals he purported to prosecute. Actions speak louder than words, and Richard Irvin’s 15-year career making big money off defending criminals says more than any tough-talking TV ad ever could.”

  49 Comments      


Penalty Enhancements Like SB3070 Won’t Make DCFS Workers Safer

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What up?

  22 Comments      


** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, Feb 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  1 Comment      


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