* Paul Vallas busted the campaign contribution caps the other day and the money is now rolling in from the high-rollers, according to an A-1 filed late this afternoon.
The haul includes $500K from Craig Duchossois, $250K from DRW Holdings’ Donald Wilson and $200K from Madison Dearborn Partners’ James Perry.
Then he received $100K each from Citadel’s Gerald Beeson and Matthew Simon, plus the same from DRW Holdings’s Kenneth Brody. And Vallas got $50K each from Ken O’Reilly and Madison Dearborn Partners’ Thomas Souleles. Plus a whole bunch of smaller, 4- and 5-figure contributions.
Governor Pritzker today announced that Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) Director Rob Jeffreys is stepping down from his position, effective April 1, 2023. Jeffreys has led the Illinois correctional system since June of 2019, overseeing 29,000 individuals in 27 facilities across the state and supervising nearly 13,000 employees. IDOC Chief of Staff Latoya J. Hughes will serve as Acting Director in the interim.
“I’m grateful to Director Jeffreys for his years of service, ensuring the dignity and safety of the incarcerated people of Illinois,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “His work in reforming and redesigning services has given individuals in custody opportunities for advancement and improvement while also ensuring the highest level of security and care for the IDOC staff as they carry out their critical responsibilities.”
“Leading the Illinois Department of Corrections and our dedicated employees since 2019, through unprecedented departmental and societal challenges and tremendous successes, including re-introducing the accreditation process of our institutions through the American Correctional Association, has been a distinct honor,” said IDOC Director Rob Jeffreys. “Throughout my tenure, the Department and employees at all levels embraced reform as an opportunity and worked tirelessly to positively change the lives of those incarcerated while maintaining the safety and security of our facilities. It has been a privilege to collaborate with legislators, agencies, community partners, and advocacy groups, who all have the shared goal of the well-being of the Department, employees, and individuals in custody. I am grateful to Governor Pritzker for giving me this opportunity to serve as Director of the Illinois Department of Corrections.”
During his time at IDOC, Jeffreys led the development of the first ever Office of Reentry, dedicated to providing resources to help formerly incarcerated people reintegrate into society. This includes engaging 98% of individuals with Medicaid enrollment assistance and piloting a state ID card program for those leaving incarceration. He also oversaw a comprehensive redesign of vocational and educational services to include training for living-wage level jobs post-release. Jeffreys also aided in re-accrediting Illinois institutions through the American Correctional Association and led the Department through COVID-19, an unprecedented safety challenge for both staff and individuals in incarceration.
Prior to serving at IDOC, Jeffreys spent 24 years with the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, including as Chief of Staff and Regional Director. He has consulted and trained for the U.S. Department of Justice, the Crime and Justice Institute, and the Moss Group, where he provided recommendations and specialized training for improving services via data-driven decision making. Jeffreys holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in criminal justice with a concentration in correctional administration from Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.
…Adding… AFSCME Council 31…
Numerous problems in the state Department of Corrections need urgent attention. We hope the next director will work cooperatively with our union to hire adequate staff, reduce overtime, expand rehabilitative programming, and improve workplace safety for the department’s 10,000 dedicated employees
…Adding… Sen. Plummer…
State Senator Jason Plummer (Edwardsville) released the following statement regarding the announcement that Illinois Department of Corrections Director Rob Jeffreys is stepping down:
“This is an opportunity for the Pritzker administration to start fresh and chart a new course for our corrections system where transparency and accountability are priorities. The hard-working corrections officers and prison staffs deserve an administration that treats them with respect. The people of Illinois need an IDOC that focuses on public safety and the rehabilitation of offenders, instead of catering to the whims of out-of-touch special interest groups.
“I encourage the governor to take this opportunity to nominate a director who will operate with integrity and transparency for the people of Illinois, the employees of IDOC, and the members of the Illinois General Assembly. It’s time we prioritize public safety and work for our communities, not activists and special interests.”
…Adding… I asked Sen. Plummer which special interests he was referring to…
Anyone that has spent significant time with rank-and-file IDOC personnel, as I have, know that the demands and wishes of activists within the Governor’s office, and activists close to the Governor’s office, have been prioritized over the types of common-sense solutions that would better protect and serve IDOC personnel and the inmates in the facilities, as well as keep all Illinois communities safer. I think the fact the director is leaving is a real shame because I had high hopes for him. It became apparent to many people that his ability to reform the department was very much constricted by those above him.
So, again, this is an opportunity for the Pritzker administration to plot a new course where they work with subject-matter experts and their own staff on the ground instead of only listening to their own internal activists and the special interests who live in ivory towers.
* I’ll have more on this for subscribers tomorrow. But, wow…
ILL COGFA met this AM to present new rev estimates… raised GF to $51.9B which is $545M above Gov's FEB estimate….COGFA raised from $51.3 Nov guess by $575M ($5.5B above 2023 Enacted Budget)…Gov's office Nov estimate was $50.1B & they raised by $1.2B to $51.36B last month.
— yvette.shields@arizent.com (@Yvette_BB) March 7, 2023
* This Casten release was sent out Saturday and I told subscribers about his statement on Monday. A truncated version appeared in another publication today…
Today, U.S. Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) released the following statement regarding the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association event to support Illinois sheriffs who refuse to enforce the state’s assault weapons ban. The meeting featured former Arizona Sheriff Richard Mack, who served on the board of the Oath Keepers, a far-right organization whose leaders have been convicted of violently opposing the US government.
“Public safety is a two-way street,” said Rep. Sean Casten. “It depends on law enforcement to enforce the law, but also depends on public confidence that those laws will be enforced without prejudice, and not subject to the whims of a particular officer. When a sheriff refuses to implement the laws of Illinois in their community, they make future mass shootings more likely. They compromise the safety not only of civilians but also of the police officers who may end up in the line of fire.
“To invite a known Oath Keeper – an organization that took a leading role in attempting to overthrow the United States government during the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol – to discuss strategies for how to best ignore the laws of Illinois not only shows a complete disregard for American democracy, but also actively endangers the communities the sheriffs are sworn to protect.
“The Illinois General Assembly passed a law to ban the sale of the assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that made the Parkland, Dekalb, and Highland Park shootings so deadly. That is the law in the state of Illinois, and no one should have to guess whether that law will or will not be enforced based on the county they are in. The actions of any sheriff refusing to enforce the law are unacceptable and we must hold them accountable.”
The Illinois Legislative Latino Caucus will host a press conference responding to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services’ proposed rule change that would increase naturalization fees.
Caucus members will detail their response to the proposed rule change, as well as share state efforts to decrease barriers to naturalization, including legal services and naturalization scholarships.
What: Press Conference Responding to USCIS’ Proposed Naturalization Fee Increases
When: March 8 at 11 a.m.
Who: Illinois Legislative Latino Caucus
Where: State Capitol Blue Room (Room 010)
* Media advisory about an Awake Illinois counter-event…
When: Saturday, March 11, 2023, 2:45 p.m.
What: Press Conference
Who: Coalition of parents from multiple school districts, Illinois Families for Public Schools, Library Defense Collaborative, FLAG and other advocacy orgs
Where: In front of Fox Valley Kickers Club (1015 Harvey Road, Oswego, Illinois), scheduled location of a free champagne-and-dinner campaign event, “Toast the Vote,” sponsored by Awake Illinois to promote local extremist school board candidates and featuring speakers Mario Presents, the California-based Chapter Director for national anti-LGBTQ+ hate group Gays Against Groomers, and Stephanie Trussell; former Lieutenant Governor Candidate
Speakers: Jennifer Stamp, Parent, District 308 (Oswego) and Co-Founder of Parents for Progress.
Dan Hemmer, FLAG Parent - Chicagoland Area
Shannon Limjuco, Parent, District 200 (Wheaton)
Tara Donnelly, Member, Library Defense Collaborative
Cassie Creswell, Director, Illinois Families for Public Schools.
Jim McGrath, Community Leader, District 220 (Barrington)
Leslie Cummings, Parent, District 200 (Wheaton)
Leslie, Weyhrich, Parent Group Member, High School District 203 (New Trier)
Why: Local school board elections will be held throughout Illinois on April 4, 2023, and parents and community leaders from across Chicago suburbs are calling out the outside interference in local elections from multi-million dollar national far-right dark-money groups, including Americans for Prosperity, the Heritage Foundation, the Leadership Institute, Parents Defending Education and Moms for Liberty. Partnering with local astroturf parent group Awake Illinois, these national groups are providing resources for slates of extremist candidates in multiple districts to advance an anti-equality, anti-public education agenda–pushing book bans, dismantling programs for social-emotional learning and diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and opposing up-to-date, accurate curricula for US history and sex ed.
* Two very good ideas that I’d also like to see implemented…
I again respectfully renew my call for a change in state law requiring any candidate blowing contribution caps to show a deposited & cleared check proving it. Yeah he’s probably got it but I got great doubts that many self funding candidate “loans” ever happened. https://t.co/NR31DZtHfC
Maybe once a candidate “loans” themselves >$100k to blow the caps it should also all have to be reclassified as a donation instead of a loan.
— The People’s Fabric (@peoplesfabric) March 3, 2023
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Crain’s | NASCAR may force Taste of Chicago from its longtime Grant Park home: Ald. Brendan Reilly, 42nd, said he learned last night from officials associated with Navy Pier that Mayor Lori Lightfoot has proposed moving the Taste to Polk Bros Park near Navy Pier and holding the annual food event the weekend ahead of the Fourth of July — the same weekend as two NASCAR races in and around Grant Park on July 1 and July 2. Reilly said the dueling events would create a “traffic disaster.”
* Manufacturer News | John Deere to Open Parts Distribution Center in Illinois: “To help accommodate ongoing growth in our Aftermarket & Customer Support business, we are expanding our warehousing, packaging and logistics operations,” John Deere said in a statement to NWI Times. “The new distribution center in Mattoon will improve our ability to receive material directly from suppliers and enable us to ship outbound directly to dealers.”
* Crain’s | Chicago Women in Trades receives grant to expand representation in skilled trades: Chicago Women in Trades is one of seven recipients of grants from Carhartt’s “For the Love of Labor” initiative, a biannual program that awards grants to nonprofit organizations for skilled trades. The latest round of grants from the Michigan-based, family-owned worker brand, totaling $225,000, is dedicated to placing women in skilled positions to diversify representation in the trade industry.
* Illinois Newsroom | Illinois mayoral election series: Carbondale: To continue our series on mayoral races happening around Illinois, we dove into an election coming up in the southern Illinois city of Carbondale. A local business owner and a current city councilmember are both vying for the seat, and both candidates joined us to discuss their policies on issues ranging from gun violence to abortion to attracting younger residents to the city.
* 21st Show | Clashing over carbon capture pipelines in Illinois: While many experts say it is a useful method to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, many worry about the health risks associated with carbon dioxide if it were to leak from the pipeline.
* Rolling Stone | Twitter Bots Are Promising Cheap Guns to Anyone Using the N-Word: The bots themselves — which are constantly reported and suspended, only for new bots to take their place — appear to be activated by specific keywords. Any mention of firearms may summon them, but cursing and other strong language can too. When author Jim Wright offered somewhat profane advice to Michiganders during an ice storm, for example, a bot answered, “yooo i got cheap, clean poles 4 sale, click the link in my bio.” In rap lyrics, “pole” refers to a gun; other common euphemisms in these tweets are “heaters,” “straps,” and the water gun emoji. Twitter’s guidelines explicitly prohibit “the promotion of weapons and weapon accessories globally.”
The number of principals in Chicago Public Schools and across the state resigning from their jobs increased dramatically last year, records show, as the pressures of leading schools intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic, causing burnout among educators.
In 2021,103 principals throughout the state resigned, according to State Board of Education data. The following year, that number shot up to 198. Likewise in Chicago Public Schools, the number of resigning principals went from 15 to 27, according to CPS data. The state figures are lower than the actual number of resignations since schools are not required to report that data but do so voluntarily.
While some turnover is normal, the surging number of principals leaving — and the declining number of teachers interested in moving up — worry state education leaders about the disruption it can cause schools and communities.
The state saw 2.5% of its principals resign in 2018, while that number shot up to 5% in 2022, according to state data.
Many principals say they are leaving their jobs because they lack the support, time and resources to do their work effectively and avoid burnout. Those pressures only increased during the pandemic.
* Nationwide, educators are exiting the classroom. Chalkbeat…
The data is in: More teachers than usual exited the classroom after last school year, confirming longstanding fears that pandemic-era stresses would prompt an outflow of educators. That’s according to a Chalkbeat analysis of data from eight states — the most comprehensive accounting of recent teacher turnover to date. […]
The turnover increases were not massive. But they were meaningful, and the churn could affect schools’ ability to help students make up for learning loss in the wake of the pandemic. This data also suggests that spiking stress levels, student behavior challenges, and a harsh political spotlight have all taken their toll on many American teachers. […]
Chalkbeat was able to obtain the latest teacher turnover numbers from eight states: Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Washington. These figures encompassed turnover between the 2021-22 year and this school year.
In all cases, turnover was at its highest point in at least five years — typically around 2 percentage points greater than before the pandemic. That implies that in a school with 50 teachers, one more than usual left after last school year.
Teacher turnover increased 4 percentage points above prepandemic levels, reaching 10 percent nationally at the end of the 2021–2022 school year. Principal turnover increased too, reaching 16 percent nationally going into the 2022–2023 school year.
Teacher turnover in 2021–2022 was highest (around 12 to 14 percent) in urban districts, high-poverty districts, and districts serving predominately students of color. Meanwhile, principal turnover was highest (around 21 to 23 percent) in high-poverty districts and in rural districts.[…]
Researchers, philanthropies, professional associations of school principals, and the federal department of education should seek to understand how the school leader job is changing. These individuals and organizations should also develop policies to attract and retain high-quality principals. Both state-specific and national work is needed.
Democrats for the Illinois House and House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch kicked off Women’s History Month with a bang. Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi joined the group in Chicago for their first annual Women’s History Month event, Women in Power. […]
Pelosi took questions from the group and gave sound advice on how to balance it all.
“When you raise five children…you can do anything,” she said. “It takes management, it takes diplomacy, it takes quartermaster, it takes transportation, it takes homework. Oh my gosh. You get so much energy from that. So much management of time and all the rest. I think that was my best training.”
Pelosi was awarded the Democrats for the Illinois House 2023 Women In Power award alongside Illinois House Majority Leader Robyn Gabel, Speaker Pro Tempore Jehan Gordon Booth, Deputy Majority Leader Lisa Hernandez, Assistant Majority Leader Natalie Manley, Assistant Majority Leader Kelly Burke, Assistant Majority Leader Barbara Hernandez, and Majority Conference Chair Theresa Mah.
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle is set to place her self toward the front of the conga line of politicians now endorsing one of two mayoral candidates vying for the lead in the April 4 runoff election.
Preckwinkle, the county’s top elected official, on Tuesday morning will officially endorse Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson over rival Paul Vallas, according to a press release from Preckwinkle’s office.
Esmeralda Hernández is a lifelong resident of Little Village, but she chose to work at the polls in the Pilsen neighborhood on Election Day.
She campaigned for incumbent Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, and opted not to vote in her own ward’s aldermanic election.
Little Village residents say they feel invisible, and that translated to the polls where the 22nd Ward recorded a 23% voter turnout as of March 1, one of the lowest in the city.
Turnout was indeed down in the ward from four years ago. It dropped by 243 votes, or about 5 percent (with some mail-ins left to count), while citywide turnout is up ever so slightly to date. Historical 22nd Ward context, with total first round citywide votes cast in parentheses…
* The bad news for Johnson in this poll might not be just that the survey shows him behind. It may also be that the number of 18-29 year-olds polled was almost exactly the same number of 65+ polled. Older voters greatly outnumbered younger voters in the first round. Then again, the poll also skews more toward White people, which make up 49 percent of the sample. So, take from this what you will…
Paul Vallas leads Brandon Johnson 43.5 percent to 32.5 percent in the first independent mayoral poll heading into the runoff. More than 24 percent of voters polled were undecided. The 1983 Labs survey has a sample size of 583 registered, likely voters in Chicago. It was conducted digitally from March 2 to 6. Details here.
Also, no methodology is posted online.
* Ms. Jones ran against Sen. Rob Martwick (D-Chicago) in the primary last year and was clobbered 67-33…
FOP dropped $80k for her to lose a state senate race by 30 points, now finishes 44th in a “pick 17” race within FOP. https://t.co/szvUDWbv4k
— The People’s Fabric (@peoplesfabric) March 4, 2023
…Adding… Vallas campaign…
The longtime former Principal of Whitney Young Magnet High School and one of Chicago’s most respected public education leaders, Dr. Joyce Kenner, endorsed Paul Vallas for Mayor today. Dr. Kenner worked closely with Vallas during his time as CEO of Chicago Public Schools, which coincided with her first years leading the prestigious magnet school. Now, she is supporting Vallas for Mayor because she believes that his education platform will enhance student achievement and empower local school leaders.
“Paul Vallas is the right choice to be Mayor at the right time,” said Dr. Kenner. “His record of putting our kids first and improving the quality of our schools is exactly the kind of leadership we need to get our schools in order and our city back on track. Chicago’s kids deserve experienced leadership at the helm.”
* Isabel’s Chicago roundup…
* WaPo | Chicago mayoral candidates have starkly different strategies on crime: Paul Vallas, a former schools administrator who finished first in last week’s general election, campaigned on a tough law-and-order message, calling for more police officers and cracking down on misdemeanors like retail theft and public nuisance offenses. … “We’re putting police officers in a space where they are not qualified to address,” Johnson said in a recent appearance on public television station WTTW’s flagship program, “Chicago Tonight.” “We’re forcing police officers to behave as social workers. That’s irresponsible.” Johnson was the only candidate in the general election who did not explicitly pledge to boost the number of patrol police. He’s also made his pitch on crime prevention personal, often referencing challenges and concerns he and his wife face raising their children in the Austin neighborhood on the city’s West Side. In 2020, the area had 64 homicides, the fourth-highest by police district.
* Block Club | Who Are Chicago’s Alderpeople Endorsing For Mayor?: Some alderpeople had already thrown their hats behind Vallas or Johnson, while others are jumping on the bandwagon after backing one of the other seven candidates in round one of the election.
* Block Club | In The 43rd Ward, Knudsen And Comer Enter Runoff With New Endorsements, Sign Drama: Comer’s campaign has raised concerns over an incident that happened in the days before the Feb. 28 election involving a Knudsen campaign worker. Comer was driving down Armitage Avenue about 8:30 p.m. Feb. 26 when he saw someone carrying his green campaign signs under their arm. As Comer passed, he recognized the person as Alex Hanns from Knudsen’s campaign team, he said.
* Crain’s Editorial | These issues haven’t gotten their due in the mayor’s race — yet: Chicagoans can’t hope to solve the problems that ignited such sharp debate in the pre-runoff period if the city doesn’t maintain and even shore up its economic base. So it’s been disappointing to see spending priorities and jobs take a back seat — only lightly touched on during debates, if at all — but now there’s an opportunity to put economic policy front and center in the runoff.
* Block Club | Lincoln Square Ald. Andre Vasquez Now Supports Brandon Johnson In Mayoral Race: “In the runoff, it is a very clear choice as to what’s better for the city, right? You can decide to actually move backwards in ways that have failed us when it comes to public safety, when it comes to investing in education,” Vasquez said. “Or we can move forward and try things and find solutions to problems that have not been solved in Chicago’s history.
* Sun-Times | Don’t gloss over significance of Brandon Johnson’s trip to Selma: Brandon Johnson’s attendance commemorating the “Bloody Sunday” march in Selma, Alabama, as he bids to become Chicago’s next mayor, was more significant and symbolic than the Sun-Times coverage reflects. The newspaper mentioned the trip but did not do so in context of who Johnson actually is. The son of a pastor, Johnson grew up with the dual traditions of service and standing up for justice. He is a respected labor organizer, but he also serves as a Cook County commissioner, an educator and a consummate coalition-builder.
* WTTW | Advocates Hopes Chicago’s Next Mayor Puts Focus on Environmental Justice Issues: “I’d love to see not only Chicago’s Department of Environment return, but I want to see an Office of Environmental Justice. Chicago needs an environmental justice ordinance,” says Cheryl Johnson, executive director of People for Community Recovery, an environmental advocacy group based in the Altgeld Gardens Homes on the city’s far South Side. “
* Crain’s | Chicago lands $80 million to address opioid crisis: The funds, which will be managed by the Chicago Department of Public Health, come from the previously announced pool of $760 million being granted to the entire state over the next two decades. Like other states, Illinois was awarded a portion of the $26 billion opioid settlement agreement made early last year with drug manufacturers and distributors, including Johnson & Johnson, McKesson, AmerisourceBergen and Cardinal Health.
* For a lot of years, this “program” has been in the statute books basically so people can say it’s there. Tribune…
For the second year in a row, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is proposing the state spend tens of millions of dollars on a witness protection program that went unfunded for the first nine years of its existence.
Eight months since the long-neglected initiative secured its initial funding, however, no witnesses have been relocated, and only about $67,500 of the $30 million approved by the General Assembly last spring has been spent, primarily on employee-related expenses.
The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, which oversees the program, said it is still trying to come up with rules on how to dole out the money, ensure it has enough employees to administer the program and finalize how potential recipients will be informed about the fund.
Unless it’s a dire emergency (like during the pandemic, when rules didn’t apply), it’s pretty tough to set up a brand new state program and have it fully operational from scratch in 8 months. State hiring restrictions alone pretty much guarantee that. And then there are the other standard red tape hurdles.
While we are all eager to get Victim Witness Protection Funds to those in need, ICJIA must take several steps to ensure this new $30 million program is appropriately designed, fully established, and effectively administered.
First, sufficient staffing is needed to ramp up and administer the program. With staffing, ICJIA must then complete program rules development, program design, and notice of funding opportunity development, and then plan for oversight of actual grant administration, which includes application review, agreement negotiations, contract processing, and facilitating reimbursement requests in a timely manner.
Program rules, which must go through a multi-step, legislatively derived process, are being drafted based on the enabling legislation and state grant administration requirements. ICJIA project coordinators are designing the program based on stakeholder input, legislative and state grant funding requirements and ICJIA rules, and research to inform the most effective use of funds.
Once the program is designed, ICJIA will request approval from the ICJIA Board to release a notice of funding opportunity for an amount to be determined. ICJIA will develop the notice of funding opportunity, which will include a problem statement, program overview, eligibility requirements, budget guidelines, and other information. Upon notice of funding opportunity release, eligible agencies will have approximately 30 days to apply for a grant.
The ICJIA claims that a notice of funding opportunity “will be released later this year.”
Several law enforcement agencies contacted by the Tribune said they’d welcome large-scale state funding for witness protection efforts. But the degree of demand for it is unclear. In the 1990s, Illinois ran a witness protection program for two years and saw little participation.
And back to the ICJIA…
Despite the low participation cited in the 1997 program evaluation, ICJIA anticipates a greater demand for this funding once it is released. In addition, ICJIA employs an effective outreach strategy for notifying potential applicants of funding opportunities and will target messaging to the eligible entities. This is a new program and funding will be adjusted moving forward based on demand. […]
As mentioned, to address one possible cause of low demand in 1997 (lack of knowledge about the program), ICJIA will employ an effective outreach strategy for notifying eligible parties of this opportunity. In addition, local law enforcement agencies will be able to apply directly for reimbursement. This process is responsive to a critical need identified in the evaluation. ICJIA also is exploring a strategy to streamline the reimbursement process and expedite funding to participating agencies.
* As far as the $30 million goes, this is from the governor’s office…
This line is set up as an appropriated fund deposit from GRF to the Violent Crime Witness Protection Program Fund, with the idea that it would be seed money to cover the program until the State gets a better sense of what the demand will be. These deposits could potentially cover multiple years and they may not fully expend in the near-term unless the demand is there.
Back to the ICJIA…
The Fund will support emergency or temporary living expenses, moving expenses, rent, utilities, security deposits for rent and utilities, mental health treatment, and lost wage assistance. ICJIA did not provide a program cost estimate. This is a new program and funding will be adjusted moving forward based on demand.
— BUSINESS OF POLITICS: State Rep. [sic] Celina Villanueva, Cook County Commissioner Alma Anaya and Chicago Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez have registered domain names for congressional runs.
I was able to reach Sen. Villanueva, Commissioner Anaya and Ms. Garcia today. All of them flatly denied having registered their names and all said they didn’t know who did.
At least one pointed a finger at Ald. Sigcho-Lopez, but he hasn’t responded to my inquiry as of yet. Maybe he will now. Or not.
As I told someone earlier on Twitter, it’s kinda silly to think that, absent any credible Chuy Garcia retirement rumors, all these people are simultaneously and anonymously rushing to reserve website domains. More likely, somebody is playing a little game and then convinced someone else to fall for it.
“Chuy’s my congressman until Chuy doesn’t want to be in Congress,” said Sen. Villanueva, who claimed that the person doing the registering “was absolutely not me.”
…Adding… Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez just reached out to say he didn’t register any of those domain names “and I do not know who did it.”
Gov. JB Pritzker made hay in his State of the State address last month by pushing for universal access to preschool for 3 and 4-year-old Illinoisans. Now, a bill moved forward in committee looks at doing the same for kindergarteners.
The Child Care Access and Early Childhood House committee heard arguments last week for and against House Bill 2396, which would require all school boards to establish a full-day kindergarten program in their districts.
The bill from state Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington Heights, passed 14-1 Thursday but is expected to return to the committee with amendments.
Canty’s reason for pushing the bill, she said, is to strengthen reading comprehension and social skills of kindergarteners throughout the state. It comes as Republicans in recent weeks have railed against low test scores at public schools.
Local police and fire departments who may have trouble with recruitment may be in luck if a bill in the Illinois House of Representatives gets enough support from state lawmakers.
State Rep. Dave Vella (D-68) introduces a new bill that could add more police and fire personnel locally through a two-year program at community colleges like Rock Valley College. This is something Vella’s been working on for more than a year and a half.
“I realized from talking to a lot of police officers, I left friends who are police officers, that the numbers of people applying are down and then start talking to firefighters, it’s the same thing.”
Currently, high schoolers can take a fire safety and public safety course during their senior year. The goal behind this bill is to get incoming college freshmen who want to work in the police or fire department to obtain an associate’s degree through a two-year course at a community college. That way after graduation they can have the ability to become a police officer or firefighter.
The trade group that represents the state’s hospitality industry is launching a legislative offensive against two of its biggest irritants: obnoxious customers who, post-COVID lockdowns, feel empowered to say and do almost anything, and home-share competitors who don’t pay taxes like hotels and motels do. […]
One bill, sponsored by Rep. Lakeshia Collins and Sen. Omar Aquino, both Chicago Democrats, would allow hotels and other inns to evict customers who bad-mouth workers, threaten property, abuse illegal drugs, are clearly intoxicated or violate rules — providing the move is not prompted by racial or other forms of discrimination. […]
Under current law, abusive guests usually have to be arrested and often end up suing the hotel involved. Establishing clear standards of conduct should avoid those complications, he continued, saying the new measure is based on a “Be Kind Bill” that recently was adopted in Rhode Island. “We’re trying to show our employees that we’ve got their back,” Jacobson said. […]
Likely to be more controversial is a companion measure that is being amended onto SB 1442, sponsored by Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin.
According to Jacobson, it would require computer platforms that rent out space in homes or apartments for short periods of time to pay the state’s 6% lodging tax, register its clients with the state and make regular reports on income.
* Rep. Will Davis’ HB2793 was assigned to the Agriculture and Conservation committee on Feb. 28…
Amends the Animal Welfare Act. Defines “professional breeder”. Provides that an animal shelter shall not accept a dog or cat from an animal shelter licensed under the Act or an out-of-state animal control facility, rescue group, or animal shelter that is duly licensed in their state or is a not-for-profit organization unless it obtains documentation attesting that the dog or cat was not obtained through compensation or payment made to a cat breeder, dog breeder, dog dealer, or dog broker. Provides that an animal shelter shall not obtain a dog or cat by any means other than owner surrender, transfer from an animal control facility, an order by law enforcement, or an animal shelter in compliance with provisions concerning reporting of animals. Provides that a pet shop operator or dog dealer (rather than just a pet shop operator) may offer for sale a dog or cat only if the dog or cat is obtained from an animal control facility, animal shelter, or professional breeder (rather than just an animal control facility or an animal shelter) located in-state or out-of-state, that is in compliance with provisions concerning animal control facilities and animal shelters supplying to pet shop operators and requirements of professional dog breeders. Removes provisions concerning the requirement that a pet shop operator shall keep a record of each dog or cat offered for sale. Provides for requirements of professional dog breeders.
Rep. Davis’ bill would change a 2021 law that restricted the retail sale of dogs and cats to animal control and shelters only. Davis explained his legislation on Fox Chicago…
Q: Is there a law on the books? And this is just kind of adding to it, making it stronger, stricter?
A: Well, one of the previous laws that has impacted businesses, like Ana, was great. Because it worked and tried to shut down sourcing dogs from puppy mills here in the state of Illinois.
But it’s had an unintended consequence because businesses that want to be able to source puppies for those families that want purebred dogs is prevented them to be able to do so. So it’s having an unintended impact on small businesses in the state of Illinois. Which we always talk about supporting small businesses and unfortunately what we have on the books right now is not doing so.
So again, we’re hoping to at least reverse some of that so that businesses can source dogs from reputable sources, whether they be in state or out of state so they can be sold in stores.
State Sen. Tom Bennett, R-Gibson City, advanced legislation aimed to help the families of veterans with their property taxes.
Senate Bill 1534, filed by Bennett, fixes what he said is an issue with homestead exemptions for veterans. […]
Under Bennett’s legislation, if a veteran with a spouse dies while their veteran’s homestead exemption is under review, the review will continue, and if the exemption is granted for the veteran, then it will be granted to the surviving spouse.
“This change could offer vital assistance to the families of veterans, especially when they are dealing with the loss of a loved one,” Bennett said.
The Illinois Senate Revenue Committee recently approved the measure unanimously. It now awaits action by the full Senate.
* An amendment for HB2121 has been filed with the Clerk and referred to the Rules Committee. The Telegraph…
A bill in Springfield that would allow ground sparklers is facing opposition.
Fireworks are banned in Illinois, one of only three states to do so. Novelty items, like hand-held sparklers and smoke bombs, are allowed. But the transportation and use of any consumer fireworks — such as firecrackers or bottle rockets — is deemed a Class A misdemeanor punishable by fines up to $2,500.
State Rep. Robert Rita, D-Blue Island, has introduced a measure that would allow the sale of ground sparklers in Illinois to anyone over the age of 18. Ground sparklers typically emit sparks and can have noise effects, like crackles and whistles. […]
State Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, has been a champion in the effort to lift Illinois’ fireworks ban, saying the state is missing out on millions of dollars in sales tax revenue each year.
* Rep. Margaret Croke’s bill was assigned to Transportation: Regulations, Roads & Bridges on Feb. 23…
Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that the City of Chicago shall (instead of “may”) enact an ordinance providing for a noise monitoring system upon any portion of the roadway known as Jean-Baptiste Pointe DuSable Lake Shore Drive. Requires that the installation of the noise monitoring system shall be completed within 6 months after the effective date of the amendatory Act. Requires that, 12 months after the effective date of the amendatory Act, and any time after the first report as the City deems necessary, the City of Chicago shall prepare a noise monitoring report with the data collected from the system and, upon request, shall make the report available to the public. Limits home rule powers.
* SB1752 was assigned to Senate Appropriations on Feb. 21. Illinois Senate Democrats…
State Senator Paul Faraci has introduced Senate Bill 1752, which aims to reduce the number of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities on the Prioritization for Urgency of Need for Services database.
The PUNS list currently has 14,806 individuals who want or need Developmental Disability Waiver Services. As funding becomes available, individuals are selected from PUNS to apply for the waiver. However, the demand for these services far outweighs the available funding, leaving many individuals waiting for years to receive the assistance they need.
“The PUNS list has been a concern of mine for many years, and I am thrilled to introduce this bill that will help reduce the backlog of individuals waiting for developmental disability waiver services,” said Faraci (D-Champaign). “Every person on the list is someone who needs help, and it’s our duty to ensure that they receive the support they require to live a happy and fulfilling life.”
Senate Bill 1752 requires the Department of Human Services to reduce the number of individuals on the PUNS database by at least 800 persons by June 30, 2023, no fewer than 1,000 persons between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025, and no fewer than 1,200 persons beginning July 1, 2026 and every July 1 thereafter, until the list is exhausted.
* HB2784 was assigned to the Labor and Commerce Committee on Feb. 21….
Amends the Employment of Teachers Article of the School Code. Provides that in fixing the salaries of employees, a school board or the governing board of a joint agreement shall pay to employees an hourly rate of not less than (i) $20 for the 2024-2025 school year, (ii) $21 for the 2025-2026 school year, and (iii) $22 for the 2026-2027 school year. Provides that the minimum hourly rate for each school year thereafter shall equal the minimum salary rate for the previous school year increased by a percentage equal to the percentage increase, if any, in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for all items published by the United States Department of Labor for the previous school year. Provides that “employee” means any employee of a school district or joint agreement who provides educational support services to the district or joint agreement, including, but not limited to, custodial employees, transportation employees, food service providers, classroom assistants, administrative staff, or paraprofessional educators. Provides that an employee’s salary shall include any amount paid by the school district or joint agreement on behalf of the employee, as employee contributions, to the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund. Effective immediately.
* Some fun history about Casimir Pulaski Day…
Casimir Pulaski Day was first celebrated in Illinois in 1986. The bill was sponsored by the late Rep. Lemke, who campaigned for the bill for over a decade in an effort to recognize the contributions of Polish-Americans to the nation’s founding. pic.twitter.com/cgRFAUI0Xg
The Vallas for Mayor campaign is releasing its first new television ad of the runoff, featuring popular former Secretary of State Jesse White asking voters to join him in supporting Paul Vallas. In the ad, White says that “Paul Vallas Will Be a Mayor for All Chicagoans,” that he has the experience needed to lead the city, and that he will focus on reducing crime and making all communities safer.
The ad begins running today and is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPtSMMPz9DY
“I’ve known Jesse White for over 40 years and there is no one I would rather have speaking directly to the voters about our campaign and my pledge to be a Mayor for all Chicagoans,” said Vallas. “We’re building a broad, diverse coalition of people from all walks of life who want to see our city focus on reducing crime, improving public education and putting Chicago back on the right track.”
Announcer: An important Message from former Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White.
JW: I love Chicago, and like you, I’m concerned about our city’s future. That’s why I’m supporting Paul Vallas for mayor. I’ve known Paul Vallas for 40 years and I trust him. Paul has the know-how and experience to fix what’s broken. He’ll focus on crime and the safety of every neighborhood. Paul Vallas will be a mayor for all Chicagoans. Join me in supporting Paul Vallas for mayor.
That looks like it was thrown together in a hurry, but what do you think?
* Tribune | State witness protection program finally gets millions in funding, but has yet to get off the ground: For the second year in a row, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is proposing the state spend tens of millions of dollars on a witness protection program that went unfunded for the first nine years of its existence. Eight months since the long-neglected initiative secured its initial funding, however, no witnesses have been relocated, and only about $67,500 of the $30 million approved by the General Assembly last spring has been spent, primarily on employee-related expenses.
* Daily Herald | Resident calls Bears tax break a ’stinker,’ but Arlington Heights officials don’t weigh in yet: Donald Meersman, a resident who brought the topic up during the village board meeting Monday night, called the legislation “a stinker.” “I just received the biannual love note that I’ve been getting from the taxman for 42 years,” said Meersman, holding up a copy of his recent tax bill. “I respectfully request your leadership on this policy for the next 40 years, although I probably won’t be around for that long.”
* Herald & Review | Decatur’s 40-year legacy of license plate manufacturing gets Giannoulias blessing: “This is one of the most inspirational things I’ve ever seen in my time in politics,” Giannoulias said. “I wish everyone who lives in Illinois could come here and see the amazing work that MRI does. I think it’s a testament to others helping others, but also providing jobs and opportunity and hope.”
* Farm Week | Get to Know Senate Republican Leader John Curran: Senate Republicans have a bold, but doable agenda to help Illinois families and job creators rebuild and renew opportunities in our state with a specific emphasis on supporting small and medium-sized businesses. We kicked off this effort with Senate Resolution 27 that calls on the Illinois Senate to protect the will of Illinois voters and reject any progressive income tax measure that is introduced in the 103rd General Assembly.
* WTTW | Questions Loom as Lake County Considers Forest Preserve Land Sale to Waukegan Airport: “This is not for public use,” said Doug Ower, an area resident and chairman of the local Sierra Club chapter. “The only reason, in my opinion, that runway needs to be extended is to bring in larger jets. They’re promoting this as a safety issue, I think it’s more of a larger jet issue.”
* Tribune | Folk schools want to be more inclusive. Here’s how the 1st one in Illinois plans to make it happen.: A folk school is budding in the prairie west of Champaign. It’s a first for Illinois, and it comes at a time when folk schools are seeing an uptick in popularity — classes on watercolor and bread baking aligning with pandemic-launched hobbies — while also seeking to become more inclusive of craftwork from marginalized communities.