Afternoon roundup
Thursday, Mar 2, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* If you go to Tom DeVore’s law firm website and sign up to be a client in a new assault weapons ban case, you’ll eventually get to this information…
ATTORNEY’S FEES. The amount Attorney will receive for attorney’s fees for the legal services to be provided under this agreement will be:
(a) Non-refundable flat fee of $200.00.
Well, the Illinois Supreme Court issued some new rules this week. They take effect on July 1st and include this bit…
Nonrefundable fees and nonrefundable retainers are prohibited.
There is some debate over whether that rule would apply to DeVore. The court’s spokesperson referred me to the ARDC instead of answering my question.
* According to the Center for American Women and Politics, 2,414 women serve in state legislatures, which is 32.7 percent of 7,383 total seats. Of those, 1,583 are Democrats, 805 are Republicans, 20 are non-partisan and 6 are independents. Illinois’ General Assembly is 41.2 percent female (62 Democrats, 11 Republicans), but it’s not even in the top ten…
Nevada (60.3%)
Colorado (50.0%)
Arizona (47.8%)
Washington (46.3%)
Vermont (45.0%)
New Mexico (44.6%)
Rhode Island (44.2%)
Maine (44.1%)
Oregon (42.2%)
Maryland (42.0%)
Bottom ten…
West Virginia (11.9%)
Mississippi (14.4%)
Tennessee (14.4%)
South Carolina (14.7%)
Alabama (17.1%)
Louisiana (19.4%)
Oklahoma (19.5%)
Wyoming (22.2%)
Arkansas (23.7%)
North Dakota (24.1%)
Illinois is ranked 13th. And the House Republican Leader is a woman.
* Speaking of women, this is from the House Democrats…
On Thursday, the Illinois House of Representatives elected Nicole Hill to become the chamber’s first female chief doorkeeper. Hill, a Springfield resident, was selected from a pool of more than 80 applicants and comes to the House with an impressive resume. Prior to this role, Hill led security efforts at Springfield Public Schools for more than a decade, she’s currently a certified nursing assistant, and holds an associate degree in criminal justice.
“I’m honored to have been selected as the new doorkeeper for the Illinois House,” said Hill. “As someone who was responsible for keeping children safe in schools for 12 years, I understand the importance of maintaining security and I do not take this responsibility lightly. I look forward to getting to know members and staff and welcoming their friends and loved ones into the House chamber.”
As doorkeeper, Hill will oversee the enforcement of House Rules and decorum, ensure order in the chamber, work with the Secretary of State Police and other law enforcement agencies to ensure the safety of members and guests, and more. In addition to her background in security, Ms. Hill is also certified in CPR/AED and Stop the Bleed FIRST AID, and she began her work as a CNA back in 2006.
“One year ago, I had a medical emergency on the House floor. Quick intervention made a serious situation more treatable. So, I’m very grateful to know Ms. Hill has the nursing training that could potentially save a life,” said state Rep. Barbara Hernandez. “We count on our doorkeepers to keep us safe, and Ms. Hill is extremely qualified to step into this role.”
This is the first new doorkeeper elected in more than two decades, after Lee Crawford retired from the position at the conclusion of the 2022 legislative session. After being elected by the chamber on Thursday, Hill will begin her official duties as doorkeeper next week.
“As the leader of this chamber, safety of all members, staff, and guests is my top priority,” said House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch. “I frequently bring my young children and loved ones to the Capitol and many of our members do as well. This isn’t just a ‘job’ to Ms. Hill; protecting and caring for people truly is her calling. After a very thorough application and interview process, I can say with certainty she is the perfect fit to be our House doorkeeper.”
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Sun-Times | Chicago police officer was killed in front of kids playing at school. ‘I’m glad they were there to keep my sister safe and her friends.’: “I feel sorry for the loss of the police officer’s family and his colleagues and friends,” the woman said. “But I’m glad they were there to keep my sister safe and her friends.”
* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn protest shuts down Fire & Police Commission meeting; village claims no communication from state’s attorney’s office: The crowded Village Hall was filled with people who accuse three Oak Lawn officers of brutality and discrimination in the July 27 arrest of a 17-year-old who fled police during a traffic stop and with people who support the officers’ actions.
* Crain’s | ‘Days of fat margins and easy money’ for cannabis industry are over, says GTI chief: “Concerns around price compression in our industry are very real. The days of fat margins and easy money and cannabis are waning,” Kovler warned shareholders during the call on Tuesday, after his company posted a $51 million loss for the final quarter of 2022.
* Center Square | Madigan asks judge to toss out 14 of 23 corruption counts: “After years of investigation, thousands of hours of wiretaps and consensual recordings, wide-ranging searches of homes and offices, and countless witness interviews, the government’s case against Michael J. Madigan comes down principally to this: He recommended people for jobs with ComEd and AT&T while legislation of interest to those utilities was pending before the Illinois House of Representatives,” according to a motion to dismiss filed by his attorneys.
* Crain’s | New U of I NIL collective seeks big-money donors: “The collectives that are most effective are the ones that have some pretty narrow focuses, versus the ones who are there to sort of be all things to all people,” Knight said. “We are here to be excellent at what we do and compliment the other collective, which I think will benefit all student athletes.”
* KFVS | License plate reader technology coming to Sikeston, Carbondale: License plate reader (LPR) technology is coming to two more Heartland communities. The Sikeston Department of Public Safety and Carbondale Police Department will adding the technology in an effort to combat criminal activity.
* Tribune | Lake County Board Republicans say ‘patronage’ behind former state Sen. Melinda Bush’s Metra board appointment: Lake County Board Chair and District 13 member Sandy Hart, D-Lake Bluff, countered that Hunter’s statements were “extremely disappointing and offensive,” noting that he claimed incorrectly on the board floor that Bush still chairs the committee. … Hart said outgoing Metra board representative Norm Carlson, whose retirement created the vacancy, District 6 County Board member John Wasik, D-Grayslake, and herself agreed Bush was the right fit after interviewing all three applicants. “I don’t even understand the (criticism),” Hart said. “I don’t get it.”
* Crain’s | Walgreens cuts its stake in Option Care Health: The Deerfield-based pharmacy giant said it sold about 15.5 million Option Care shares for $30.75 per share. With the sale, Walgreens’ ownership stake in Bannockburn-based Option Care falls from 14% to 6%.
* WQAD | John Deere to open parts distribution center in Mattoon, Illinois: The facility will serve as a secondary parts distribution center for the U.S. network, with Milan remaining its primary parts distribution center.
* Tribune | Mi Tocaya throwing birthday taco party with all-star lineup of top women chefs in Logan Square: “Each all-star chef will have a station serving two different tacos they’ve created based on their personal style of food or preferred cuisine,” according to a release. “Guests will also enjoy birthday sweets and an array of beverages provided by Casa Humilde Cerveceria, Madre Mezcal and San Pellegrino and Aqua Panna. DJ Tess, known for her vibrant energy on stage mixing old school into contemporary music, will create the ultimate dance party for in between bites.”
* The Southern | Southern Illinois wineries react to rollback of license fees: “This really won’t just benefit wineries,” explained Bonnie Cissell, co-owner of Lincoln Heritage Winery near Cobden. “It benefits our whole region because of the impact on tourism.”
* Tribune | Winter weather is not over, as officials issue a storm watch in effect until Friday evening: The watch is for portions of central, east central, north central and northeast Illinois, as well as northwest Indiana. Officials said rain was expected to change into heavy wet snow with accumulations of up to 5 to 8 inches possible.
2 Comments
|
* Fox News and its fellow travelers have been pushing this falsehood…
Ousted Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot explained away her Tuesday election loss as a result of her being a “Black woman in America.” […]
“I’m a Black woman in America. Of course,” she responded, according to reports.
NY Post headline…
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot blames election loss on racism, gender
Wall St. Journal…
Mayor Lightfoot blamed race and gender bias for her loss
It’s all over Twitter, but the story is false.
* The quote was lifted from an AP story…
Lightfoot touted her record of investing in neighborhoods and supporting workers, such as by increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour. She also noted that the city had navigated unprecedented challenges such as the pandemic and its economic and public safety fallout to protests over policing.
Asked if she was treated unfairly because of her race and gender, Lightfoot said: “I’m a black woman in America. Of course.”
Feeling like she’d been treated unfairly because of her race and gender and directly attributing her election loss to race and gender are two very different things. So, the AP did not report that she blamed her loss on race and gender.
More importantly, Sarah Burnett of the Associated Press told me that the Lightfoot quote was from “a few days before the election.” And two people at the Lightfoot campaign told me the mayor did not say that on election night.
* Let’s move on to a NY Times columnist writing about Lightfoot’s loss…
It was a stunning rebuke.
Lightfoot’s job approval rating has been a nuclear dumpster fire for months and months.
* Speaking of which…
* Willie Wilson’s electoral history in Chicago…
2015 Chicago mayoral campaign: 10.66%
2019 Chicago mayoral campaign: 10.61%
2020 U.S. Senate campaign (Chicago results): 9.37%
2023 Chicago mayoral campaign: 9.6%
It’s probably time to find a different vanity project.
* State Senator and a staunch Brandon Johnson supporter…
* Isabel’s Chicago roundup…
* NBC Chicago | ‘He’s Got a Lot of Things to Answer’: Paul Vallas Questions Johnson For His Previous Remarks: What started out as a hotly contested race between nine candidates to unseat Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is now down to two, as former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas and Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson will battle it out in a head-to-head race on April 4.
* Block Club | Ald. Jim Gardiner Inches Toward Victory But May Still Face A Runoff In 45th As Mail-In Ballots Are Counted: Gardiner has 49.97 percent of the vote as of Thursday morning after he received 462 votes from his home precinct, which had a tech issue and delayed the vote count, according to the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.
* WBEZ | Three things to know about Chicago’s City Council races: Unlike incumbent Mayor Lori Lightfoot, nearly two-thirds of the City Council will remain unchanged as voters reelected their current incumbent aldermen — allowing them to avoid a runoff election and hold onto their seats.
* Triibe | Lightfoot won majority-Black wards, but it wasn’t enough to make the runoff: In all of the city’s Black wards, which are on the South and West sides, Lightfoot performed better than the seven other Black mayoral candidates. For example, Lightfoot won the 20th Ward with 1,832 votes, Johnson came in second with 1,386 votes, and Wilson in third place with 1,266 votes. And in the 37th Ward, Lightfoot received 2,977 votes over Johnson’s 1,134 votes and Wilson’s 1,573 votes.
* Politico | Chicago’s messy election will only get nasty in the runoff: “It’s going to be nasty,” Democratic state Rep. Kam Buckner, who also ran for mayor, said in an interview. “People will pick sides — people with a history when it comes to racial sensitivity. There will be a lot of talk about race and class and schools and crime.”
* WTTW | Incumbent Chicago City Council Members Hang On, as 14 Races Likely Headed to Runoffs : In fact, none of the City Council members appointed by Lightfoot, who lost her bid for a second term as mayor on Tuesday, won their seats outright. Instead, Ald. Nicole Lee will face Anthony Ciaravino to hang on to the 11th Ward seat; 24th Ward Ald. Monique Scott will face Creative Scott in a runoff to represent North Lawndale; and 43rd Ward Ald. Timmy Knudsen will face Brian Comer for the right to represent Lincoln Park on the City Council.
* Block Club | Will Ald. Daniel La Spata Face A Runoff In 1st Ward? It’s Too Close To Call With Mail-In Ballots Out: With all precincts reporting, La Spata had 49.1 percent of the vote Thursday to closest challenger Sam Royko’s 24.1 percent.
* Crain’s | How Johnson, Vallas answered 10 important education questions: Whoever wins will take office in late May and will get to appoint a school district CEO and seven school board members to oversee the nation’s fourth largest school district, its $9.5 billion budget, 635 schools, and the education of 322,000 children. They will also be the last mayor to have control of Chicago Public Schools before the district transitions to being governed by an elected school board.
* WGN | Chicago area law enforcement sees rise in machine gun conversion device recoveries: In early February, the ATF released a 700-page report, its first in 20 years, on gun crimes in the United States. In it, the agency said the number of illegal machine gun conversion devices recovered by law enforcement agencies jumped 570% during a period of 2017 to 2021, compared to the previous five years.
* Crain’s | Fritz Kaegi picks another assessment fight with Chicago landlords: After trying unsuccessfully to push through big commercial assessment hikes in Chicago last year, the Cook County assessor is trying again with more than 200 major downtown buildings, including the Aon Center, Prudential Plaza and the Old Post Office. If Kaegi succeeds, many downtown office landlords could face steep property tax hikes at an especially bad time, as they grapple with the worst office market in decades.
34 Comments
|
* The original post was accidentally deleted. Sorry about that. Not sure what the heck happened. Here’s Fran Spielman…
Newly-retired Jesse White, the first African-American elected as Illinois Secretary of State, is endorsing Paul Vallas, giving Vallas a leg up in his quest to claim the 20% share of the Black vote he needs to win the April 4 mayoral runoff against Brandon Johnson. […]
An African American elected official, who asked to remain anonymous, predicted White’s endorsement would have a domino effect on other establishment Black elected officials and, more importantly, on older, more conservative Black voters.
“It’s a huge first step toward Paul galvanizing support he needs desperately in the Black community,” the politician said.
“Jesse White is loved throughout the entire state. Senior citizens listen to him. The seniors who stuck with Lori Lightfoot or went with Willie Wilson are gonna start gravitating toward Paul because of his message on public safety, his expertise on budgeting and their fear that Brandon Johnson would defund the police and impose a head tax, a hotel tax a commuter tax — whatever tax. The city can’t take it.”
The hope is that White’s endorsement will lead to endorsements from Alds. Burnett, Harris, Dowell, Ervin and maybe even US Rep. Danny Davis.
*** UPDATE *** Here we go…
…Adding… An aide confirms that Jesse White is a CTU member. That’s gotta sting.
70 Comments
|
It’s just a bill
Thursday, Mar 2, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WCBU interview of Secretary of State Giannoulius…
Q: I was curious about your stance on House Bill 0867. It’s a “one license plate” bill, it’s something that’s been suggested a few times in the past. Would you support a single license plate bill in Illinois or not?
Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulius: I’m going to have to take a look at it. But right now, we do not support it.
* Sen. Bill Cunningham’s SB1504…
Amends the Criminal Code of 2012. Changes the definition of “gambling device” to include any vending or other electronic machine or device, including, without limitation, a machine or device that awards credits and contains a circuit, meter, or switch capable of removing and recording the removal of credits that offers a person entry into any contest, competition, sweepstakes, scheme, plan, or other selection process that involves or is dependent upon an element of chance for which the person may receive a gift, award, or other item or service of value if that offer is incidental to or results from: (A) the purchase of an item or service of value; or (B) the purchase or gratuitous receipt of a coupon, voucher, certificate, or other similar credit that can be redeemed for or applied towards an item or service of value from such machine or device or elsewhere. Provides that participants in a game of skill or chance where money or other things of value can be won but no payment or purchase is required to participate shall not be convicted of gambling except where participation in such game of skill or chance is accomplished using a gambling device prohibited by these changes to the definition. Provides that a gambling offense involving such a gambling device is a Class 4 felony. Amends the Video Gaming Act. Removes a provision allowing for the use of a game device without a license if the game device is used in an activity that is not gambling under the Criminal Code of 2012. Effective immediately.
This bill would essentially criminalize “sweepstakes” machines, which have been operating in a gray area of the law for years. Sen. Cunningham told Rich today that the Senate has passed his bill before, but it stalled in the House. Some background from 2018…
Thanks to these machines — often referred to as “sweepstakes” — [Chicago] has become studded with what effectively are mini-casinos in gas stations, convenience stores and even a laundromat.
Unlike the video poker machines that the state has regulated and taxed since 2012, these other machines don’t pay state or local government taxes. And the state does not conduct background checks of sweepstakes machine operators or the businesses that install them, as is required for video poker licenses.
A WBEZ investigation found that some bars that were deemed unfit for video gambling have simply installed sweepstakes machines instead.
From 2020…
The owner of a video sweepstakes company has been indicted as part of a federal bribery case filed last year against former Illinois State Rep. Luis Arroyo, accusing the pair of bribing an Illinois state senator for his support on legislation beneficial to the video gambling industry.
James Weiss, 41, was added as a co-defendant in a superseding indictment unveiled against Arroyo on Friday. The indictment charges Weiss with bribery, wire fraud, mail fraud, and lying to the FBI. Arroyo is charged with bribery, wire fraud, and mail fraud.
* Illinois PIRG…
Bloomington-based State Farm finalized a $182 million Illinois car insurance rate hike on Friday, adding $58 to the average customers’ annual bill. The rate hike will impact more than 3 million Illinois drivers. Combined with $388 million in State Farm rate hikes in 2022, car insurance rates for Illinois State Farm customers have gone up by more than half a billion dollars in less than one year.
The rate hike follows a $63 million rate hike by Northbrook-based Allstate in January. Combined with $229 million in Allstate rate hikes in 2022, car insurance rates for Illinois Allstate customers have gone up by $292 million since the start of 2022. Earlier analysis by Illinois PIRG Education Fund and Consumer Federation of America found that combined, top car insurance companies raised Illinois drivers’ rates by more than $1.1 billion in 2022.
State Rep. Will Guzzardi, with the support of State Sen. Javier Cervantes and the Illinois Coalition for Fair Car Insurance Rates, recently introduced legislation to address unfair and excessive car insurance rates in February. Even though Illinois requires every car owner to buy insurance, it is one of only two states that doesn’t protect insurance customers from excessive or unfair rates. The legislation, HB2203, would empower the Illinois Department of Insurance to reject or modify excessive rate hikes, and end the use of non-driving factors, such as credit scores, to set rates.
* WAND…
State lawmakers want to require a personal finance course for high school students to help tackle this issue. Rep. Curtis Tarver II (D-Chicago) told the House School Curriculum & Policies Committee that all high school students should complete a course on financial literacy before they graduate. His proposal includes instruction of behavioral economics, banking, bills, investing, managing credit, and paying for college. Tarver would also like to see students learn about insurance, taxes, budgeting, home ownership, and financing for personal transportation.
“I think we’d have a lot less of the bills talking about predatory loans, payday loans, and things along those lines if children, or students I should say, knew earlier on about financial resources and had more financial literacy,” Tarver said Wednesday morning.
The Illinois State Board of Education would be in charge of approving the personal finance education standards for the course. House Bill 1375 also states the curriculum could be updated every five years. ISBE is currently concerned that the legislation would be an unfunded mandate for school districts. Government Relations Director Hector Rodriguez said the board is also trying to negotiate with Tarver to change the proposed semester course to lessons spread out from 9th-12th grade.
“Currently, statute gives districts the flexibility to incorporate the consumer education requirement into their course work,” Rodriguez said. “And, as drafted, House Bill 1375 would’ve created or would create a stand-alone course.”
* Sun-Times letter to the editor…
Last month, state Rep. La Shawn K. Ford introduced House Bill 00001, the Compassionate Use and Research of Entheogenic (CURE) Act. The Illinois CURE Act would allow for regulated and supervised therapeutic use of entheogens, a class of psychoactive substances that produce an altered state of consciousness like psilocybin and LSD. The CURE Act would also decriminalize psilocybin in Illinois to protect providers and clients.
Research from respected institutions like John Hopkins Medicine and UCLA has demonstrated that psilocybin can be effective in treating mental disorders such as depression, end-of-life anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and addictions. […]
The Illinois CURE Act would allow individuals to try a new, alternative form of treatment that is safer and potentially more effective in treating their symptoms. For people with treatment-resistant mental health conditions, entheogenic care gives them hope that something will work for alleviating their condition.
Misconceptions and the lack of education surrounding entheogenic substances like psilocybin is what motivates the push-back on this kind of legislation. Education is imperative, especially when discussing the therapeutic effects of controlled substances. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has already labeled psilocybin therapy a “breakthrough therapy,” which recognizes the therapeutic potential of this drug.
* Press release…
On Tuesday, House Bill 2963 was assigned to the Energy & Environment Committee. In response, Representative Bradley Fritts (R-Dixon) released the following statement:
“As a lifelong resident of Dixon, Illinois, I am dedicated to ensuring that the people of my hometown are given a voice. Years ago, Dixon Park District and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources made a deal regarding a plot of land in Dixon. The IDNR would give them the land, contingent on the fact that the land could not be developed.
“After numerous conversations with local elected officials and constituents, I learned that the people of my district want to add solar panels to this land but are restricted from doing so by this old agreement.
“All parties involved, including both of the departments who made this deal, are in favor of adding solar panels. The panels will also add a guaranteed revenue stream to the park district without raising property tax assessments.
“The only remaining obstacle is amending the previous law, which is why I introduced HB 2963. This committee assignment is a step forward for making this bi-partisan bill law.”
* HB1609…
99th District State Representative Randy Frese is sponsoring legislation in the Illinois General Assembly this Spring that will appropriate $67.6 million to demolish and remediate buildings on the Jacksonville Developmental Center grounds.
Former Governor Pat Quinn announced the closure of the facility in September 2011 with the last of the facility’s residents moved out in late November 2012. The buildings have been sitting dormant since then.
The State of Illinois’ Central Management Services placed barriers up around the property in April 2020 after fires, vagrants, and vandalism plagued the property. Later in 2020, the buildings on the property were boarded up to prevent further issues with squatters. The City of Jacksonville had problems with CMS’ mowing schedule on the grounds last year after they became overgrown. Eventually CMS contracted with balers and heavy mowers for upkeep on the property.
Frese says the property is a health, life, and safety issue to Jacksonville: “For the City of Jacksonville, they’ve got these buildings that already are and have been for a number of years now, a threat to the safety of the people around there. You don’t want abandoned buildings. You don’t want half fallen-in buildings, especially in an area of Jacksonville where, if those were gone, some development could be done. I think it’s time for the state to take action. I know there is several other of my colleagues that are looking at some buildings that Illinois has kind of abandoned and should be doing something with. I’d say, let’s at least eliminate the possibility of someone getting hurt in these buildings by doing something to get them down.”
* Black Energy Justice…
A coalition of Chicago, statewide and national organizations focused on consumer rights, environmental justice, energy and the environment are joining forces to push for legislation to improve affordability of utility service in response to decades of Illinois utility rate increases with no end in sight. The People’s Utility Rate Relief Act (PURR Act, HB 2172) will protect the interests of Illinois consumers and keep families safe by minimizing disconnections of essential utility services and requiring the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) to specifically assess affordability in all of its decisions. Its chief sponsor is State Rep. Will Davis, D-Hazel Crest. The Bill is the product of the Campaign to End Energy Poverty sponsored by Blacks in Green (BIG™) which held an inaugural campaign retreat at BIG’s Woodlawn headquarters in July 2022.
* Energy News…
Opponents have worked with state legislators to introduce bills this month limiting carbon dioxide pipelines, which if passed could apply to Navigator’s proposal.
One, SB 1916/HB 3803, would create a moratorium on carbon dioxide pipeline construction for two years or until the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has adopted revised federal safety standards for the transportation of carbon dioxide. The safety administration announced new rulemaking around carbon dioxide pipelines in the wake of a 2020 pipeline rupture in Sartartia, Mississippi, that sickened many.
The other Illinois state bill, HB 3119/ SB2421, includes multiple curbs and safeguards including a ban on the use of eminent domain and the creation of a fund — paid into by companies — for problems with pipelines and sequestration and for training first responders.
That bill also holds pipeline companies fully liable for any carbon dioxide leaks from pipelines or sequestration sites, and it requires pipelines to be approved by 100% of surface landowners along the route. It also requires a life-cycle carbon emissions analysis of proposed pipelines, and requires that the Illinois Commerce Commission consider alternative project proposals that would result in similar greenhouse gas emissions reductions to what the pipeline companies promise.
9 Comments
|
* February 6, 2014 press release…
Governor Pat Quinn today was joined by J.B. Pritzker and key civic and business leaders to announce MATTER - a new startup center for next-generation healthcare technology companies. A priority in the Governor’s 2014 State of the State address, the not-for-profit BioHub will drive entrepreneurship in the rapidly expanding medical and biotechnology fields. Supported by a $4 million state investment, MATTER is part of Governor Quinn’s agenda to create jobs and drive Illinois’ economy forward.
“We are committed to taking our medical technology industry to the next level,” Governor Quinn said. “MATTER will serve as a central location to empower entrepreneurs and spur economic growth, while advancing Illinois’ role as a national leader in life sciences and health innovation.”
As a not-for-profit organization, MATTER will be located in Chicago’s Merchandise Mart. Its collaborative workspace will allow interaction among entrepreneurs, academics and investors in order to create and grow new companies in healthcare information technology, medical devices, medical diagnostics and biopharmaceuticals. 1871, the digital startup hub what will be MATTER’s neighbor in the Merchandise Mart, has followed that same recipe for success, resulting in more than 200 start-ups and creating more than 1,000 jobs since its launch in 2012.
That organization is still alive and kicking today.
* But a very different biohub concept is now on the way…
A group founded by Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg and his wife will spend $250 million to create a new biomedical research hub in Chicago where scientists from Northwestern University, University of Chicago and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign will study human disease.
The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, named for Zuckerberg and his wife, Dr. Priscilla Chan, plans to invest $250 million in the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Chicago over a decade. Gov. J.B. Pritzker has also committed $25 million in state dollars to support the project. […]
The biohub will also have its own dedicated staff of scientists and researchers. Leaders hope to start operations in April.
Northwestern, UChicago and UIUC beat out proposals from about 60 other teams across the country to win the funding. The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative spent about a year narrowing down the applicants, until the Chicago universities emerged as the winner, said Steve Quake, head of science at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Pritzker committed the $25 million in state capital funds during that selection process.
* More from Forbes…
To lead the Chicago Biohub, Chan and Zuckerberg selected Shana O. Kelley, a professor of chemistry and biomedical engineering at Northwestern who has focused on sensors and sensor technology, and has cofounded four companies based on technologies that have come out of her research. (One, Geneohm Sciences, was acquired by medical technology firm Becton Dickinson in 2006 for a reported $230 million.) Her expertise on sensors is tied to the groundbreaking work that the Chicago Biohub aims to tackle.
“The idea is to take human tissues and embed thousands of sensors into them, to make a completely new kind of measurement,” Kelley says via Zoom from Chicago. The experiments will use small samples of human tissue collected with consent during surgical procedures. Next, says Kelley, they will “watch what’s happening with cells and tissues–watch them communicating with one another to understand what happens when a tissue goes from being normal to being inflamed,” with the goal of comprehending how inflammation works and how it drives disease. More than 50% of deaths are attributed to diseases with some form of inflammation, she points out. The first experiments will start with skin tissue.
The three universities each contribute an area of expertise to the Biohub, says Kelley: Northwestern is strong in sensing, University of Chicago excels in inflammation and in quantum sensing, and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researchers have developed microfabrication systems and the ability to make miniaturized devices, which will be needed for making the ultra-tiny sensors.
9 Comments
|
* Oy…
* From the story…
Longtime Chicago-area political operative Patrick Doherty didn’t mince words a few years ago when an associate brought up the prospect of doing business in the notoriously corrupt suburb of McCook.
“It’s all contingent on what you can give,” Doherty told the associate, Omar Maani, about the obligatory campaign donations to Doherty’s boss, then-McCook Mayor Jeffrey Tobolski, according to court records.
Maani, who was secretly recording the September 2019 conversation for the FBI, said, “It’s like you’re paying a little tax.”
“Right. Juice,” Doherty replied, according to court records. “Street juice….I hope we can get it before (Tobolski) goes to jail. I hope we can retire.”
Sheesh, these people.
* Sun-Times…
Tobolski last year pleaded guilty to charges and agreed to cooperate with investigators, and is awaiting sentencing.
Across a half-dozen schemes between 2015 until his indictment in 2020, Doherty paid or coordinated a total of at least $148,000 in bribes. Payouts included $2,000 monthly payments routed to state Sen. Martin Sandoval, who sat on the Transportation Committee, as well as making payments on Sandoval’s mortgage.
Doherty also brokered a $25,000 payout to Sandoval from a trucking business owner to arrange the purchase of a parcel of state-owned land in McCook. Doherty also tried to arrange a no-show job for the son of a trustee in another village where he was seeking a camera deal, and paid dozens of people to do campaign work for suburban officials in exchange for village business.
In an emailed statement, a SafeSpeed spokesman said the bribes were paid out without the company’s knowledge, blaming them on a rogue shareholder.
* Fox32…
“I feel sorry for what I’ve put my family through, what I’ve put the system through,” [Doherty] said. “We will lose our home, we will lose everything we had. I hope you’ll consider my family and what I’ve done to my family and my friends.”
Handing down his sentence, U.S. District Judge Ronald Guzman noted that Doherty’s schemes spanned years, and that often he was the one driving the outreach to public officials.
“This was not just a way of doing business, this was a way of life,” Guzman said.
“The defendant’s conduct in this case was not out of character, it was not a mistake, a bad judgment, a spontaneous event.”
24 Comments
|
Comments Off
|
Open thread
Thursday, Mar 2, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* What’s on your Illinois-centric mind today?…
40 Comments
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Mar 2, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* Crain’s | Pritzker’s not endorsing anyone for mayor. For now.: Gov. J.B. Pritzker is keeping his options open — wide open — about whether he’ll endorse someone for mayor of Chicago and, if so, whom. Asked at a press conference today if he’s finally ready to tip his hand now that voters have made former Chicago Public Schools chief Paul Vallas and Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson the mayoral finalists, Pritzker, who enjoys high popularity in the city, said it’s too early to make up his mind. But he didn’t close the door on anything.
* Sun-Times | Chicago police officer dies after exchanging gunfire ‘at close range’ with suspect in Gage Park: Officer Andres Vasquez-Lasso, 32, was hit several times but was able to return fire, hitting the suspect in the head, Police Supt. David Brown told reporters outside Mount Sinai Hospital, where the officer was taken.
* WBEZ | Illinoisans applied in droves for student debt forgiveness. Now, they’re waiting on SCOTUS.: The Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a case that could derail hopes of canceled student debt for 1.5 million Illinois residents.
* Center Square | Lawmakers criticize DCFS hirings: State Rep. Mary Flowers, D-Chicago, said DCFS is losing good people because of the complicated hiring process. “Rethink whatever it is that you’re doing here, because this reminds me of a clogged sink, and when the stuff backs up, it stinks,” Flowers said.
* WGLT | Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulius says ‘modernization’ is key: Well, I think more broadly, we have to modernize the Secretary of State’s office. That’s why I’ve been traveling across the state visiting our facilities. We have to bring new technology and modernization into every element of the Secretary of State’s office. We want to eliminate the time tax that people are paying just to access government services. So one of the components of that, eventually will be digital IDs, digital driver’s license.
* Tribune | Political operative sentenced to more than 5 years in prison for array of corruption, including red-light camera scheme: Longtime Democratic operative Patrick Doherty was sentenced Wednesday to more than five years in federal prison for a wide range of corruption schemes stemming from a sprawling federal bribery investigation involving red-light cameras.
* Sun-Times | Former Cook County official Patrick Doherty sentenced to more than five years for bribery, tax evasion: Doherty considered bribes a cost of doing business, Ardam said, quoting from a wiretapped conversation where he Doherty counseled an unnamed confederate about paying off a public official to get work from the village of McCook, where Tobolski also served as mayor.
* WTTW | New Era of Police Oversight Dawns with Election of District Council Members: Starting in May, each of Chicago’s 22 police districts will be overseen by a three-person council as part of an effort to rebuild trust in the Police Department, which is governed by a court order requiring city leaders to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers.
* Tribune | US Attorney John Lausch formally announces resignation, plans to step down March 11: Lausch’s last day in office will be March 11. His departure, which was first revealed by U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland during an unrelated news conference in Washington in January, will officially kick off a search for a replacement that will be led by Illinois’ two Democratic senators, Dick Dubin and Tammy Duckworth.
* Patrick Joyce | We are better when we work together: There are many quotes from Mr. Lincoln that have resonated throughout history. But I think this one rings true in Springfield: “If you would win a man to your cause, first convince him that you are his sincere friend.” As we begin the earnest work of the 103rd General Assembly in 2023, I am co-chairing one of two Senate committees where my fellow co-chair is a Republican.
* Vox | The Chicago mayor’s race shows Democrats still have a crime problem: The city has also seen high-profile shootings, increasing crime in downtown, constant media coverage about the violence, and heated rhetoric about how bad crime has become by the police union and Lightfoot herself. Those conditions have meant Chicago’s mayoral race has echoed local races in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC over the last two years.
* NBC Chicago | ‘He’s Got a Lot of Things to Answer’: Paul Vallas Questions Johnson For His Previous Remarks: What started out as a hotly contested race between nine candidates to unseat Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is now down to two, as former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas and Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson will battle it out in a head-to-head race on April 4.
* Sun-Times | Rejected before, Vallas aims to win over a city ‘in crisis’ — promising to get it ‘back on track’: After three unsuccessful previous runs for public office, the former Chicago Public Schools chief takes his tough-on-crime message to the city’s mayoral runoff.
* Sun-Times | 14 runoffs — maybe more — likely in City Council races: Things were only marginally better for the four City Council members Lightfoot appointed over the last year. Three apparently were unable to tally more than 50% of the vote and are likely headed for two-person runoff elections in April.
* Tribune | 34th Ward race: Billionaire’s son emerges as winner, set on addressing crime and development: Bill Conway — a former Cook County assistant state’s attorney, Navy veteran and son of the billionaire co-founder of the private equity firm The Carlyle Group — rebounded from his unsuccessful run for state’s attorney in 2020. According to unofficial returns, he won a commanding 67% over his opponent, Ascot Realty CEO James Ascot.
* Crain’s | What will happen to Invest South/West, LaSalle Street revival without Lightfoot?: Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s impending exit from City Hall raises big questions about the future of economic development and real estate-focused initiatives she championed over the past four years. Lightfoot’s wide-ranging Invest South/West program, her recent push to incentivize a LaSalle Street revival with affordable housing, the planned Bally’s riverfront casino she has pushed forward and even future city support for an annual NASCAR race around Grant Park that Lightfoot has touted are among the high-profile efforts that hang in the balance for the next mayor, with little clarity about what will continue, what won’t and who will be making those decisions.
* Illinois Times | City council to reconsider TIF funding to Horace Mann to demolish historic buildings: The Springfield City Council may reconsider its Feb. 21 vote granting Horace Mann Educators Corp. $600,000 in tax-increment financing revenues to demolish two downtown buildings and create a parking lot and green space in the 600 block of East Washington Street.
* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn officer pleads not guilty in violent arrest captured on video, allegedly struck teen more than 10 times: Officer Patrick O’Donnell was released on an individual recognizance bond, according to the Cook County state’s attorney’s office. He has been with the department since December 2014. He was indicted by a grand jury Feb. 14.
* WBEZ | United Center food and beverage workers on brink of strike: Workers in the Unite Here Local 1 chapter authorized a strike in a 98% “yes” vote last month. Last Friday members signed up for the $300-per-week strike benefit from the union just before a Bulls game that night.
* AP | Legal fight over student debt a prelude to political battle: “The president still has the responsibility to ensure that we see this become a reality,” said Wisdom Cole, national director of the NAACP Youth and College Division. “There are folks that are still suffering, and we want to ensure that they have the opportunity to see relief.”
* Tribune | What’s the book on Justin Fields around the NFL? The Chicago Bears QB has to ‘figure out the simple’ to get to the next level.: “No one wants to play against that kid. I can tell you that much,” one league executive said. “And if you have him, I can only imagine how much it would stimulate your own imagination for what’s possible. He’s pretty damn talented.”
* Sun-Times | Oscar Lawton Wilkerson Jr., last known surviving member of the Tuskegee Airmen in Chicago area, dead at 96: As a kid growing up in Chicago Heights, Mr. Wilkerson dreamed of flying as he tossed toy airplanes. He later became a bomber pilot with the Tuskegee Airmen, whose competence and bravery helped pave the way for desegregation in the military.
11 Comments
|
Live coverage
Thursday, Mar 2, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
Comments Off
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax
Advertise Here
Mobile Version
Contact Rich Miller
|