* Subscribers were tipped to this earlier tonight. Senate President Don Harmon…
We are approaching the hour of 11 pm. The Senate did file a budget earlier this evening. Our agreement with the House and the governor was to not act on that proposed budget until we had agreement with both the House and the governor.
The House is in caucus now as I understand it. We are eagerly awaiting their final input into the budget.
I think it is a mechanical impossibility for us to pass a budget tonight in time for the House to read it in on this calendar day, so I think the wisest course of action is to wrap up our business today, give more time for review of the introduced budget and consideration of proposed amendments.
We will ask our appropriation committee to meet at 9am tomorrow morning to take public testimony on the budget and to answer any questions that folks might have. We would plan to come in session shortly thereafter. I know the caucuses may want to meet, so we will leave ample time for that as well.
I appreciate everybody’s good humor today as we try to pass a responsible balanced budget. I appreciate the bipartisan way in which we addressed this issue and we’ll continue those bipartisan conversations through the day tomorrow. So, go home, get a little bit of rest, come back at 9am tomorrow for a committee hearing on the appropriation bill and related titles. And we’ll wrap up our business on the floor tomorrow. Thank you very much.
Please pardon all transcription errors.
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Budget deal coverage roundup
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* For your evening reading…
ADDED: Capitol News Illinois | Top Democrats announce budget ‘deal,’ but details are scant as last-minute negotiations continue: The trio was especially short on details when pressed on how the state would manage the biggest unforeseen cost facing lawmakers: a still-growing program that grants Medicaid-type health care coverage to noncitizens ages 42 and over. The governor’s office recently estimated the program would cost $1.1 billion in the upcoming fiscal year, or five times more than he had initially budgeted. “The Senate and the House have agreed to give us the tools to manage the program properly so that it doesn’t reach a ($1.1 billion) proportion … and instead allows us to provide health care for the people who are on the program now and make sure that we’re continuing the program going forward, but in a budget friendly way so that everybody gets the health care that they deserve,” Pritzker said. His office said those options include limiting future enrollment in the program, requiring copays, maximizing federal reimbursement and a possible move to managed care.
* Sun-Times | Pritzker, Democratic leaders reach budget deal, touting fiscal responsibility, unity — if not spending specifics: Five days after blowing a self-imposed deadline to pass a state budget, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Democratic leaders of the Illinois General Assembly on Wednesday announced they have reached a deal on a balanced budget featuring “mid-50-plus billion dollars” in spending.
* Tribune | Gov. J.B. Pritzker, Democratic legislative leaders reach deal on $50 billion budget: The cost of the Medicaid-style program that covers immigrants 42 and older who are in the country without legal permission or who have green cards but haven’t completed a five-year waiting period and therefore don’t qualify for the traditional insurance program for the poor will continue to put pressure on the state budget. […] The deal allocates about $550 million for the program, according to the governor’s office, and gives the administration “tools” to control the costs.
* WCIA | Pritzker announces agreed FY2024 Illinois budget: “I vowed to work with the General Assembly to bring fiscal sanity to Illinois while restoring a compassionate state government that invests in the things that build a stronger economy and future,” Pritzker said. “I’m pleased to say that’s exactly what this balanced budget does, for the fifth time in a row.”
* AP | Gov Pritzker, Illinois legislative leaders announce agreement on state budget: “Today’s agreement” Welch said, “proves once again that Democrats can produce a state budget that is both fiscally responsible and compassionate at the same time. We will pass a budget that is balanced, it’ll make smart investments in the services people need, and it will be a reflection of the values we share as Illinoisans.” Harmon called it “a responsible balanced budget that recognizes our shared goals and commitment to making progress on key issues for the people of Illinois.”
* Crain’s | Pritzker announces deal reached on state budget: Boasting about the state’s improved financial picture, Pritzker added that the budget achieves his goal of “restoring a compassionate state government that works to meet the needs of Illinois residents and invest in the things that build a stronger economy and a stronger future.”
* Chalkbeat | Illinois has a budget deal. Here’s what we know about proposed education funding for 2024.: Pritzker’s Smart Start Illinois would add $250 million to the Illinois State Board of Education’s early childhood block grant this year and the state’s Department of Human Services Early Intervention Program, Child Care Assistance Program, and Home Visiting Program.
* NBC Chicago | Pritzker, Democrats in General Assembly Reach FY 2024 Budget Deal: Illinois Republicans criticized the budget as a one-sided agreement that focuses too much on taxation. “Governor Pritzker and Illinois Democrats can twist words with the best of them, but the truth is that this budget constitutes a partisan wishlist, not a negotiation,” GOP Chairman Don Tracy said. “With complete control of government, Illinois Democrats continue to tax and spend, with Illinois ranking at the top of every metric of tax burden on residents and driving away families year over year.”
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It’s almost a law
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Debt Free Justice Illinois…
Debt Free Justice Illinois, a statewide network of bipartisan organizations, and youth and racial justice advocates, today celebrates the passage of legislation through the Illinois General Assembly aimed at eliminating the unjust assessment of juvenile court fees and fines against Illinois youth and their families.
Today’s Senate passage is the final legislative action for the bill and a momentous step in the direction of economic justice for the state. Senate Bill 1463, sponsored by Senator Robert Peters and Representative Justin Slaughter, is aimed at abolishing juvenile court fees and fines in delinquency proceedings. Twenty other states, both majority Democratic and Republican, have eliminated or reduced these fees and fines in recent years.
“Today’s vote in the Illinois Senate is further proof that Illinois intends to continue moving in the direction of economic justice for Illinois youth and their families,” said Sen. Peters. “The status quo of unjust fees and fines do not work for our state’s young people and families and do not keep our communities safe. We must work toward accountability and rehabilitation for Illinois’ young people in the juvenile court system, not punishing them with monetary fees and fines.”
“I’m proud to stand with the advocates across our state for economic justice and working families,” said Rep. Slaughter. “Our vision of a fairer and more just juvenile court system is one that many other states have embraced. I encourage Governor Pritzker to sign this bill into law as quickly as possible and continue our work of building up youth and families to dismantle system inequalities and protect Illinois’ most vulnerable communities.”
Juvenile court fees and fines can range from $25 to over $800 and can quickly add up to thousands of dollars for a single family, depending on where they live. This unjust disparity creates a patchwork of injustice across the state, landing hardest on youth and families of color living in underserved communities. […]
SB1463 would prohibit courts, state agencies, and local government entities from assessing fees and fines in juvenile court in delinquency proceedings and requires the automatic discharge of all outstanding debt. Enacting the bill is important in furthering the goals of strengthening Illinois’ vulnerable families, improving the way we approach youth rehabilitation, and increasing the credibility and effectiveness of our public systems.
* Rep. Harper…
A bill by state Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, aimed at addressing the theft of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, is headed to the governor’s desk after unanimously passing both houses of the General Assembly.
“That protecting the most vulnerable people and families in our state is critically important should go without saying,” Harper said. “Sadly, theft of SNAP benefits that can deprive needy families, including children, of their access to proper nutrition have been a persistent and increasing problem. It’s past time that something was done.”
SNAP benefits are also sometimes referred to as “food stamps”. In recent years, food stamps have been issued to recipients using a debit-card system where benefits are loaded onto the recipient’s card. Thieves have targeted food stamp recipients by using devices (called “skimmers”) that are covertly inserted into payment machines at food retailers to steal card information, or devices that can need only be held near a victim’s wallet in order to remotely copy the information necessary to make a “clone” of the victim’s benefit card which the thief can then use. This type of benefits theft has been on the rise, and authorities have struggled to address it.
Victims of SNAP theft generally do not have their benefits replaced, meaning that recipients whose benefits are stolen often end up struggling to buy food until their next installment.
Harper’s House Bill 2214 would require the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) to track and collect data as to the scope and frequency of SNAP benefits fraud, especially when it occurs by means of skimming or cloning. Beginning in 2024, IDHS would be required to report its findings to the General Assembly quarterly.
Harper’s original bill included a requirement that IDHS replace victims’ stolen benefits, but this measure was removed by a Senate amendment.
“This legislation represents a solid first step in addressing this pressing issue. Going forward, it will be necessary to do more to make victims of SNAP benefits theft whole again,” Harper said. “Nevertheless, IDHS as well as my fellow lawmakers and I can now look forward to having much more robust information about this problem and how and where it is occurring, which is sure to help us craft smart policies to address it.”
* Press release…
The Illinois Secure Communities Coalition and REFORM Alliance applaud the General Assembly for passing smart and sensible supervision reforms that will increase public safety, save taxpayer dollars, and promote stronger, more stable communities.
More than 100,000 people in Illinois are currently serving time on probation, parole, or mandatory supervised release. Instead of holding people accountable, contributing to public safety, and increasing stability in communities, Illinois’ supervision system too often operates as a revolving door back to prison. A Department of Corrections (DOC) report revealed that more than 1 in 4 - or 25% - of people released from prison in Illinois end up back behind bars for a non-criminal technical violation, (like missing a meeting with their probation officer) within three years of their release. This needless incarceration places a heavy burden on taxpayers, crime survivors, and Illinois’ communities.
With unanimous support in the House and Senate, the General Assembly passed Senate Bill 423, evidence-based legislation to create a more effective and transparent supervision system. Along with decreasing taxpayer costs and reducing the likelihood of recidivism, these reforms also significantly contribute to public safety by creating an incentive for people to pursue recidivism-reducing activities like education. These improvements would also safely reduce supervision officers’ caseloads, allowing officers to spend more time on those individuals with the greatest risks and needs.
SB423 was sponsored by Speaker Pro Tempore Jehan Gordon-Booth, Rep. Patrick Windhorst and Senate President Pro-Tempore Bill Cunningham. It now awaits Governor Pritzker’s signature. There are four evidence-based provisions that are expected to become law:
1. Education credits. People on mandatory supervised release will be eligible to earn 90 days off their supervision terms by completing a secondary education diploma or career/technical certificate. These activities help individuals form a positive self-image and gain marketable skills, increasing their ability to transform their lives and provide for their families.
2. Virtual check-ins. SB423 creates a statewide, permanent framework to enable people on probation, parole, and mandatory supervised release to report to their probation officers remotely. This mitigates one of the most common sources of technical violations while providing greater flexibility for officers to manage their caseloads and connect with people on supervision in a manner that better supports their rehabilitative goals. Many counties in Illinois embraced the greater use of technology for remote reporting during the pandemic, and successfully maintained accountability and protected community stability and safety.
3. Sensible supervision conditions and drug testing. The newly passed legislation requires that courts impose individualized supervision requirements on each defendant, ensuring that one-size-fits-all conditions do not unduly serve as barriers to success. This also includes ensuring that drug testing is utilized only when there is a reasonable suspicion of illicit drug use, which will conserve state resources and limit interruptions to employers.
4. Prisoner Review Board transparency. People on mandatory supervised release or parole have the opportunity to go in front of the Prisoner Review Board (PRB) to file for early discharge. But to date, the process lacked transparency. SB423 standardizes the case review process for early termination of supervision and creates clear guidelines and timelines. Those who are denied early discharge by the Department of Corrections (DOC) or PRB will have clear guidance on how they need to improve to be a good candidate in the future. This ensures that people are aware of the hurdles they must clear to be considered in the future and reduces the current frustration and confusion that comes from the lack of information and guidance accompanying present decisions.
…Adding… Maria Pappas…
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas spearheaded the passage of groundbreaking property tax reform legislation to help struggling homeowners.
The Illinois General Assembly passed the legislation today, Wednesday, May 24. It is expected to be signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker soon.
One of the key provisions of the legislation is that it will drop the interest rate homeowners and businesses in Cook County are charged for late property tax payments from 18% to 9% a year.
The interest rate reduction will save property owners between $25 million and $35 million a year with most of those savings benefiting Black and Latino communities.
It will also close loopholes that tax investors have exploited at the expense of local governments and allow the county to move away from the Scavenger Sale.
A news release is attached and also available here.
* Personal PAC…
Personal PAC, one of Illinois’ most prominent reproductive rights advocacy organizations, and Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, celebrated the passage of HB3326 by the full Illinois General Assembly on Wednesday. The bill ensures that Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPRs) cannot be used for tracking individuals seeking reproductive healthcare or individuals assisting them, and that restricts data sharing with other governments or law enforcement agencies related to healthcare needs or immigration status.
“Anyone seeking abortion care in Illinois should not be harassed in any fashion, and this first-in-the-nation legislation will prevent Automatic License Plate Readers from being used as a tool for tracking, harassing or criminalizing lawful behavior,” said Secretary Giannoulias. “I am committed to allowing individuals to pursue and obtain the lawful healthcare they need without government intrusion. This legislation sets common-sense standards and protocols to ensure that Automatic License Plate Reader data is used properly.”
“We are thrilled the passage of HB3326 and thank chief sponsors Rep. Ann Williams, Sen. Sara Feigenholtz, and Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias for their championing of this crucial civil liberties issue that will help ensure that Illinois remains an oasis for safe access to abortions and other reproductive healthcare. HB3326 ensures that those seeking healthcare in Illinois can trust that their license plate data will be secure and protected, and that Illinois law enforcement agencies and municipalities will never turn their information over to states seeking to persecute them. This legislation is a model for the nation, and we are proud to have been part of the coalition that led to its passage.”
* Chicago Community Trust…
A coalition of community developers, affordable housing advocates and tax policy experts led by The Chicago Community Trust today applauded the Illinois Senate for passing legislation to reform Illinois’ delinquent property tax sale system that will increase investment in historically disinvested communities across the state. The bill now goes to the Governor’s desk.
Senate Bill 1675 Amendment 1 reforms the Illinois Property Tax Sale system by closing loopholes that prevent blighted properties from redevelopment and allows local governments to intervene to save abandoned properties after only one failed delinquent tax sale rather than watching them to cycle through the tax sale system for years while the property deteriorates, requiring taxpayer-funded maintenance and eventually demolition. The measure, which was crafted in partnership with the Cook County Treasurer, is supported by cities with high concentrations of vacant properties across Illinois, including Chicago, Peoria, Rockford, Decatur and Kankakee.
These common-sense reforms would empower local governments to work with community developers and residents to restore vacant properties to return them to viable use. In Cook County alone, an estimated 50,000 vacant or abandoned properties are concentrated in its Black and Latinx neighborhoods on Chicago’s South and West sides and in the south suburbs.
The legislation is the result of three years of community engagement convened by the Trust and grounded in findings from intensive academic research, including a landmark 2021 study by the Center for Municipal Finance at the University of Chicago analyzing the Cook County Scavenger Sale. The bill aims to increase homeownership, build community wealth and make the tax sale system work for communities instead of private tax buyers and institutional investors.
“Introducing this legislation is a big step forward for the Trust to advocate for systemic solutions in some of our most vulnerable and disinvested communities,” said Andrea Sáenz, President & CEO of The Chicago Community Trust. “We’re hopeful that putting the Trust’s name and century-old reputation behind this measure will send a clear message that we fully believe in the transformative power of this bill. Reforming Illinois’ property tax code can create a ripple effect, spurring investment in neighborhoods with high rates of vacant property, which, in turn, will stabilize neighboring property values, preserve homeownership, and strengthen the county tax base. This legislation is the spark we need to revitalize communities that have borne the brunt of the discriminatory policies of the past.”
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2023 end of spring session cheat sheet
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This post will be updated as language is introduced and bill statuses change. I’ll also carry the content over from day to day. If you see a mistake, or believe something should be added, please speak up in comments or just text me. Thanks.
* Still waiting on language/numbers for the big ones…
* House Second Reading…
SB 1559 - Cannabis omnibus (Could be changed)
* House Third Reading…
* Senate Third Reading…
* House Concurrence…
HB 1199 - Italian-American Heritage Month (Insider joke)
HB 2878 - Tollway PPP program expansion
HB 3903 - Red light camera regulation/ethics
HB 3902 - Freedom from Drone Surveillance Act - Amendment would allow restricted drone surveillance of parades (background here)
* Senate…
HJR 23 - Local 150’s I-55 tolled lanes
* Passed both chambers…
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[The following is a paid advertisement.]
The Illinois Association of Rehabilitation Facilities, representing community providers of services for those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, today issued the following statement after a new state budget proposal emerged in the Legislature:
“We regretfully must oppose this and any other state budget proposal that includes a proposed wage structure for our frontline workers that will not meet their needs and leave our workforce crisis intact.
We have advocated all spring for a $4 an hour increase in wages for Direct Support Professionals (DSPs), the brave frontline staff who meet the basic needs for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. These are very difficult but rewarding jobs, and we need to pay them more to draw more people into these careers.
The $2 an hour increase proposed in this state budget is only slightly above the $1.50 proposed earlier this year in the Governor’s budget plan, and half of what we believe is needed for real progress in three areas:
• To make these jobs competitive with the minimum wage increases seen at restaurants, retailers, etc.
• To bring our state closer to compliance with a long-running Consent Decree mandating that persons with disabilities have opportunities to live in their communities. We have been out of compliance for six years in a row.
• To help reduce a waitlist of nearly 15,000 people seeking care today, including those in state developmental centers such as Choate where the Administration has plans to move residents into community settings
We are grateful for the dollars invested in recent state budgets to help our workers support those they serve. But we must speak up now and urge the Governor and Legislature to reconsider the wage increase in the latest budget proposal and move closer to the $4 an hour increase we and our legislator champions have advocated.”
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here it is…
* The Trace | Illinois Legislators Want to Expand Prison Alternatives for Gun Possession: The program’s goal was to show that rehabilitation is more effective than incarceration in reducing gun violence. While data on its success rate is limited — the program isn’t required to collect data, and Illinois courts are not subject to Freedom of Information Act requests — sentencing trends in Cook County show that a significant number of judges have used the program since its inception, lowering the rate of 18- to 20-year-olds being incarcerated by about two thirds. Last year, legislators extended the program by one year, moving its expiration date to January 2024. Now, Democratic legislators and advocates are pushing to make the diversion program permanent and include people of all ages.
* Tribune | DCFS day care manager charged with stealing millions meant for child care, blowing it at casino: The investigation showed some of the locations that Pridgeon had claimed were providing day care for foster children were either vacant buildings or other businesses. In other instances, Pridgeon overcharged DCFS for child care from legitimate providers who were supposed to be paid at a lower rate, the complaint alleged.
* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson opens first City Council meeting with a joke that he’s ‘live from Naperville,’ a dig at Fox News, then gets down to business: But the meeting quickly turned serious as the public comment period began ahead of an expected vote on designating $51 million in city budget surpluses to fund migrant services as the arrival of asylum seekers in Chicago continues unabated.
* Sun-Times | Johnson wins first test of City Council muscle: Presiding over his first City Council meeting, Johnson easily won passage of the compromise he forged, shrinking the number of committees from 28 to 20 and replacing Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack (32nd) with Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), whose decision to abandon Mayor Lori Lightfoot and endorse Johnson was a turning point in Johnson’s winning campaign.
* WTTW | Chicago City Council Votes 41-9 to Ratify Johnson’s Picks for Leadership Team: The Chicago City Council handed Mayor Brandon Johnson his first victory Wednesday, voting 41-9 to ratify his plan to create 20 committees and elevate his closest allies into positions of power.
* Sun-Times | Here’s some steps Mayor Brandon Johnson can take to fix public transit: And private security, with its high cost and a lack of oversight, and more police won’t solve the the root causes of violence or make for healthy, comfortable rider conditions. Both also create their own risk of violence. Instead, better reliability and reduced wait times encourage ridership, which can improve a collective sense of safety. And the Johnson administration could create a transit ambassador or social worker program to support those in need, while also enhancing the rider experience.
* Sun-Times | Migrant funding hits roadblock in City Council: The delay will require the Council to return to session sooner than late June, as originally planned. Chicago is literally out of money, space and time to solve the migrant crisis and the influx of over 8,000 migrants. refugees and asylum-seekers.
* NPR | Illinois Republican leader shares her concerns about the state budget: With the most recent legislative map redistricting, her constituency now includes part of DeKalb County, including the City of DeKalb. “Welcome to creative drawing,” said Rezin about her 38th District senate seat. “And just so you know, both parties are guilty of it.”
* Center Square | Bill heading to Pritzker’s desk requires ISBE to create new literacy plan: With Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford as the lead sponsor, Senate Bill 2243 passed by a 56-0 vote, paving the way for the bill to now advance to the desk of Gov. JB Pritzker.
* Center Square | Bill would prevent highway crews from doing contract work in other Illinois counties: Senate Bill 895 would amend the Illinois Highway Code and provide that a county cannot construct, improve or repair a road or transportation-related project that is outside the county’s borders.
* Tribune | Man steals backhoe for 10-mile drive to Illinois airport to catch flight: Security camera footage shows a Carbondale man arriving at Veterans Airport of Southern Illinois atop a backhoe and leaving it in the airport parking lot Thursday, the Williamson County Sheriffs Office said.
* Sun-Times | Move over, Sue. Make room for Spinosaurus, the world’s largest predatory dinosaur: The museum plans to unveil a cast of a Spinosaurus on June 3 in Stanley Field Hall. It is 46 feet long — 4 feet longer than Sue — with a crocodilelike snout and a paddlelike tail.
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* Sources have been saying for a while now that the governor and the Democratic leaders wanted to have a press conference to announce a budget deal. Well…
What: Governor Pritzker to join Speaker Welch and Senate President Harmon to brief media on FY24 budget negotiations.
Where: Governor’s Ceremonial Office, Illinois State Capitol, Springfield.
When: 2:30 pm
Watch: www.illinois.gov/livevideo
This post will be updated.
…Adding… They have two of these signs, one on each side of the lectern…
*** UPDATE 1 *** Pritzker…
I’m standing alongside Senate President Don Harmon and House Speaker Chris Welch to announce that we have an agreement on a balanced budget for the coming year.
…Adding… Senate President Harmon thanked all the staff for their hard work and said…
The Senate hopes, we hope to take action tonight to be able to deliver the legislation to the House so that the House can act as soon as Friday, and then send it straight to the governor. I applaud the trust and cooperation we’ve developed. I’m not sure either chamber in the past would have trusted the other chamber to adopt the budget without an amendment. I appreciate Speaker Welch’s commitment.
Please pardon all transcription errors.
…Adding… Speaker Welch…
For the second year in a row, we are increasing funding for the Local Government Distributive Fund to help communities across the state fund essential services and programs like public health, safety, and basic infrastructures. […]
We are looking forward to continuing to cross the t’s and dot the i’s here in the next couple of hours so that we can get this agreed budget on the board and over to the House.
…Adding… Pritzker on the exploding costs of the healthcare program for undocumented immigrants…
The Senate and the House have agreed to give us the tools to manage the program properly so that it doesn’t reach a proportion that you named and instead allows us to provide health care for the people who are on the program now and make sure that we’re continuing the program going forward, but in a budget friendly way so that everybody gets the healthcare that they need. […]
We had seven options that we presented that are ways in which the program could be managed. We did not have the tools in law for us to actually be able to do that. And so we asked for those tools, we’ve been given them and we’ll be using any number of those seven.
…Adding… Asked about Invest In Kids, the tax credit program for private school scholarships, Pritzker said…
This is not something that’s been covered by the budget agreement. It’s something that still has time, potentially, but it’s not something that’s in the budget agreement.
…Adding… Senate President Harmon was asked about any Republican support…
I’m very hopeful and my next stop is to chat with the Republican Leader.
*** UPDATE 2 *** The one-pager…
Fiscal Year 2024 Budget
The FY 24 budget is a balanced plan with conservative revenue estimates that builds on our fiscal progress while making transformative investments in early childhood and higher education, workforce development, and efforts to fight violence and poverty
Highlights
Fiscal Responsibility – 5th balanced budget
• This budget builds on four years of historic fiscal progress with balanced budgets, eight credit rating upgrades, a Rainy Day Fund set to surpass $2 billion, the elimination of the bill backlog, and $1 trillion in GDP
• $200 million additional pension payment beyond what’s required, bringing total pension stabilization investments to $700 million
• $450 million to pay off rail-splitter bond debt – saving the state $60 million in interest and virtually eliminating all short and medium-term debt
Education
• Early Childhood
o Smart Start IL — $250 million to fund the first year of the Governor’s early childhood plan with funding increases to eliminate preschool deserts, stabilize the childcare workforce, expand the Early Intervention Program and Home Visiting programs, plus funding to begin the overhaul of the childcare payment management system
o $50 million for early childhood capital improvements
• K-12
o $350 million for K-12 evidence-based funding formula
o $45 million for the first year of a three-year pilot to fill teacher vacancies
o $3 million to expand access to computer science coursework
o $1.6 million to launch Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library statewide
• Higher Education
o $100 million in additional MAP grant funding, ensuring everyone at or below the median income can go to community college for free
o $100 million increase for public universities ($80.5 million) and community colleges ($19.4 million) – the highest increases in more than two decades
Fighting Poverty
• HOME ILLINOIS — $85 million increase, bringing state funding to over $350 million, to support homelessness prevention, affordable housing, outreach, and other programs
• $20 million investment in a new Illinois Grocery Initiative to expand grocery access to underserved rural towns and urban neighborhoods
Health and Human Services
• Nearly $75 million increase for DCFS to hire 192 staff, expand training and protection, increase scholarships for youth in care, and improve facilities
• $22.8 million in funding to begin implementing the new Children’s Behavioral Health Transformation Initiative
• $18 million increase to support reproductive health initiatives
• $24 million for a rate increase for home workers who assist the elderly, increased outreach to the elderly, and an increase for Adult Day Service
• Continued funding for the $250 million Reimagine Public Safety Act to prevent gun violence and expanded funding for youth employment programs
• $53.5 million to overhaul IDPH disease monitoring IT and prepare for future public health emergencies
• Over $200 million increase to better serve Illinoisans with developmental disabilities
Economic Development
• $400 million to close major economic development deals and attract businesses and jobs to the state
• Expanded workforce development programs to build a pipeline in the industries of the future, like data center, EV, and clean energy
• Taking another step towards phasing out of the franchise tax
• $20 million to Rebuild Illinois Downtowns and Main Streets Capital Program
• $40 million for forgivable loans to launch more social equity cannabis businesses
• $10 million to fund a “one-stop business portal” to foster entrepreneurship
…Adding… ILGOP…
“Governor Pritzker and Illinois Democrats can twist words with the best of them, but the truth is that this budget constitutes a partisan wishlist, not a negotiation. With complete control of government, Illinois Democrats continue to tax and spend, with Illinois ranking at the top of every metric of tax burden on residents and driving away families year over year.
It’s time for Governor Pritzker to govern responsibly and stop dreaming about the White House” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy.
…Adding… Leader McCombie…
In response to Democratic leaders announcing a budget agreement, House Minority Leader Tony McCombie released the following statement:
“I have repeatedly said it, but will say it once more:
Republicans and Democrats have shared priorities and past promises that need to be kept. Extension of the Invest in Kids Scholarship & the R&D tax credit, fully phasing out the franchise tax, and making essential changes to the estate tax code - SHARED priorities that should be included in budget discussions. Today we learned from Governor Pritzker and Democratic leaders that our shared priorities are not included. I am incredibly disappointed for Illinois families.”
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AG Raoul’s Catholic clergy report coverage roundup
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* Sun-Times | Catholic church in Illinois vastly underreported clergy sex abuse, Kwame Raoul finds: In August 2018, shortly after then-Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced an investigation into whether the Catholic church in Illinois had fully disclosed the scope of child sex abuse by priests and other clergy members, Cardinal Blase Cupich said the church had nothing to hide. “Our record’s clean,” the top Catholic cleric in Chicago told a closed-door gathering of about 200 men studying at the Mundelein Seminary to be priests, according to sources who were there. “I’m confident that, when the attorney general looks in our files … that she will, in fact, find that we’re doing our job.”
* Tribune | Scope of clerical sex abuse against children in Illinois widens with release of new report: The investigation determined that Catholic leaders in Illinois have vastly underreported clergy sex abuse against children, finding that “decades of Catholic leadership decisions and policies have allowed known child sex abusers to hide, often in plain sight,” according to the report. The 700-page document revealed the names and detailed information of 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers who abused at least 1,997 children across all six dioceses in Illinois, between 1950 and 2019.
* Time | 4 Major Takeaways from Illinois’ Investigation Into Child Sex Abuse in the Catholic Church: The report includes detailed narrative accounts from survivors from all six dioceses and shows a pattern of the church failing to support survivors, covering up reports of abuse, and re-victimizing survivors who came forward to report being abused. The dioceses also publicly undercounted the number of child sex abusers in the clergy on their websites. […] The report detailed the long-term impacts the abuse had on survivors, reporting that nearly every survivor interviewed noted struggling with their mental health in the years and even decades after the abuse. Survivors struggled with challenges including insomnia, anxiety, suicidal ideation, addiction, depression, and PTSD.
* AP | Catholic clergy sexually abused Illinois kids far more often than church acknowledged, state finds: The lengthy report describes Illinois church leaders as woefully slow to acknowledge the extent of the abuse. It also accuses them of frequently dragging their feet to confront accused clergy and of failing to warn parishioners about possible abusers in their midst, sometimes even decades after allegations emerged. […] In a statement released Tuesday, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests called the report “stunning” but emphasized that the numbers of victims and abusers cited by Raoul are likely undercounted. The group also called on state and local officials to conduct similar reviews.
* NYT | Sex Abuse in Catholic Church: Over 1,900 Minors Abused in Illinois, State Says: Most of the abuse documented in the report happened decades ago. The report acknowledges that criminal prosecutions and civil lawsuits will be impossible for many victims, because of statutes of limitations and the fact that the majority of the perpetrators have died. Some states, including California and New York, have enacted a “look-back window” allowing victims of child sex abuse to bring civil claims that would otherwise be barred by statutes of limitations, but Illinois is not among them.
* USA Today | Nearly 2,000 children abused by more than 450 Catholic leaders in Illinois: The Archdiocese of Chicago, and the dioceses of Belleville, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford and Springfield issued a joint statement regarding the findings. […] “At this time, working with the Office of the Attorney General of Illinois, the leaders of all six Illinois dioceses endeavored to make clear and update our approach, mindful of our lived experience and best practices in this field. Our common goals in doing so are to ensure we offer pastoral support to those affected by this tragedy and to work diligently to prevent it from occurring again.”
* WCIA | State report shows Catholic Diocese underreported number of abusive Illinois clergy, advocacy group responds: The Attorney General noted that the Springfield diocese does not include nine of the abusive clergy members and eight listed for the Peoria diocese. “The Diocese of Springfield refuses to include [Father John] Beatty on its list of substantiated abusers, because “Beatty did not hold a parochial ministry in this diocese,” referring to a parish ministry, the report reads. “But Beatty taught for years in a Catholic high school in Springfield, with day-to-day access to children.”
* WAND | Raoul releases report naming 451 Illinois Catholic leaders who sexually abused nearly 2,000 children since 1950: In a statement Tuesday, Bishop Thomas Paprocki said he cannot undo damages of the past. However, the Springfield Diocese leaders stressed that he has been and will continue to be fully committed to ensuring the diocese does everything it can to prevent abuse from happening again. Paprocki also said he is not aware of a single incident of sexual abuse of a minor by clergy in the Springfield Diocese in nearly 20 years. Paprocki said the Diocese credits the Attorney General’s office for bringing about greater transparency and keeping the spotlight on this issue to guard against any future threat of abuse.
* ABC Chicago | Survivors of sex abuse by Catholic priests in Joliet diocese react to Illinois AG’s report: The Illinois attorney general’s scathing 700-page report on Catholic Church abuse was particularly critical of the Joliet diocese, especially under Bishop Imesch’s leadership. The report said, “The diocese covered up abuse committed by Joliet priests by shifting them off to new parishes without relaying their history of abuse.” […] The Joliet diocese’s new Bishop Ronald Hicks was not available for an interview, but did release a lengthy written statement expressing profound remorse over any failure to respond to an allegation of abuse with prompt and compassionate attention.
* Shaw Local | Illinois AG report documents 69 priest abuse cases in Diocese of Joliet: “The total number of priest and brother child sex abusers peaked in 1984 with a total of 211,” according to the report. “Most of the abusers were local diocesan priests, averaging about 77% of all priests and brothers that were abusers.”
* Daily Herald | Far more Catholic clergy sexually abused Illinois kids than dioceses acknowledged:According to the report, former Joliet Bishop Joseph Leopold Imesch failed to protect children from even convicted sex abusers on several occasions “by giving these abusers the green light to minister in the diocese.” Imesch — who served as the diocese’s bishop from 1979 to 2006 — covered up for abusers by sending them to new parishes without relaying their history, the report states. When that practice came to light, “Imesch caused further harm by casting blame on others and mistreating abuse survivors,” according to the report.
* Tribune | Search Catholic clergy named in Illinois attorney general abuse report for Archdiocese of Chicago: Illinois state investigators revealed on Tuesday the names and details of 451 Catholic priests and religious brothers who abused at least 1,997 children across all dioceses in Illinois.
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* January…
Commonwealth Edison today is filing with state regulators to hike its delivery rates by $1.5 billion over four years, beginning in 2024.
The multiyear rate plan, authorized under the landmark Climate & Equitable Jobs Act, would boost ComEd’s distribution revenue by nearly 50% over that period if approved as submitted, according to a Securities & Exchange Commission filing this morning by ComEd parent Exelon. […]
Much of the eye-popping increase can be explained by a spike in the return on equity ComEd is requesting—essentially its profit level. ComEd’s requested ROE for 2024 is 10.5%. Its returns on the most recent rate hike—nearly $200 million, the last such increase under the old formula law—were less than 8%.
* Yesterday…
Consumer advocates and staff of the Illinois Commerce Commission today urged the regulator to dramatically reduce Commonwealth Edison’s $1.5 billion rate hike over the next four years.
The Citizens Utility Board in testimony filed with the ICC recommended cutting that amount by 60% to $585 million.
Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office recommended a more modest reduction, to $1.1 billion. But CUB Executive Director David Kolata in a statement said he expected his group and the AG to combine forces to push to reduce that $1.5 billion request by more than $1 billion in coming months.
In addition, ICC staff — in the past typically less critical of utility rate recommendations than CUB or the AG — urged that commissioners sharply reduce ComEd’s equity return embedded in its rate proposal to 8.91% from a utility-proposed rate starting at 10.5% in 2024 and climbing 0.05% each year to end at 10.65% in 2027. […]
A host of other business and municipal parties filed testimony on ComEd’s proposal, showing how much is at stake for the region. They included the Chicago Transit Authority, Metra, the city of Chicago, the Building Owners & Managers Association of Chicago and Walmart.
* And…
The proposed rate hike is also projected to increase the profit rate for ComEd shareholders to 10.5% in 2024, growing to 10.65% in 2027. In its filing, CUB argued for “a more reasonable” 9.4% return on investment, which would reduce the rate hike by $570.4 million.
In addition, CUB challenged ComEd’s forecast for residential usage as “unrealistically low,” with the utility overstating its revenue requirements in the proposed rate increase by an additional $194.7 million.
“We’re still analyzing CUB’s testimony, but based on an early review, we disagree with CUB’s assessment of our multiyear plans,” ComEd spokesperson Paul Elsberg said in an email. “Our proposed investments provide meaningful benefits to our customers and communities and support the goals of the state’s Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, and we look forward to working with the Commission and all participants in the proceeding to prove that out.” […]
CUB also cited the bribery lobbying scandal that resulted in the conviction of the “ComEd Four” earlier this month as leading to $1 billion in rate hikes over the last decade.
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* In 2019, USA Today revealed that the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office did not keep a “Brady list” in accordance with a US Supreme Court ruling that prosecutors must tell anyone accused of a crime about all evidence that may help their defense. Instead, higher-ups merely advised Assistant State’s Attorneys whenever a police officer shouldn’t be allowed to testify…
Reporters for USA TODAY and its partners, including the Chicago-based Invisible Institute, spent more than a year gathering Brady lists from police and prosecutors in thousands of counties to measure compliance with the landmark 1963 ruling in Brady v. Maryland. […]
In Chicago, the Cook County State’s Attorney, the second biggest prosecutor’s office in the country, said it does not keep a Brady list.
Instead, the office sends individual memos to its prosecutors when it learns a police officer was convicted of a crime or was found by a judge to have lied under oath, telling them to avoid using the cops if possible or to notify defense attorneys. The system leaves individual prosecutors in the sprawling jurisdiction with America’s second-largest police force on their own to track officers with credibility issues.
The result: A USA TODAY analysis found that dozens of officers flagged by judges or convicted of crimes were summoned to testify at trial in recent years, with no assurance the defense was notified.
The memos are here.
* In March, WGN reported the Cook County State’s Attorney’s do-not-call list was mostly former police officers…
A WGN Investigates review found that the vast majority of those on the list are, in fact, no longer cops. Of the 66 names on the list, only 18 remain certified by the state to be law enforcement officers. Of those, 13 work for the Chicago Police Department. Three of those officers are detectives, according to the CPD.
WGN’s list is here.
* But the Triibe found lots more…
Hundreds of current and former Chicago police officers can never be called to testify by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (SAO) because they have histories of misconduct or untruthfulness that would undermine their credibility on the stand, according to documents obtained by The TRiiBE.
The SAO’s so-called Brady and Do Not Call lists, which include names of officers who can’t be relied on in court, are far more extensive than has been previously reported, and include officers who were not included in previous releases by the SAO. One such officer who was not on previously released lists, but is now, is January 6 Capitol rioter Karol Chwiesiuk, who was fired by the Chicago Police Department (CPD) in 2021 and has been charged with five misdemeanors for his part in the attack. Another is Nicholas Jovanovich, who was fired last year for knocking out an activist’s teeth during a 2020 protest in Grant Park.
John Catanzara, the current president of the Fraternal Order of Police, is also listed. Catanzara resigned from CPD in 2021 while facing termination for nearly a dozen rule violations, but was reelected president of the city‘s largest police union earlier this year.
Officers who are still active members of CPD are also on the lists. Marc Jarocki, a 43-year-old officer who is in his 21st year on the force and currently works in the 7th District, is one. He has cost the city more than $200,000 in civil lawsuits and racked up at least 31 civilian complaints, including allegations of excessive force, illegal searches, and false arrests, according to the Invisible Institute’s Civilian Police Data Project. […]
Via Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, The TRiiBE obtained the SAO’s most up-to-date Brady and “Do Not Call” lists in April. The lists include 275 names of officers, 200 of whom are or were CPD members. Sixty-four are still employed, meaning they may still be policing out in communities or overseeing active investigations, with annual salaries totaling nearly $7.5 million.
Here’s the full list.
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[The following is a paid advertisement.]
On average, the U.S. spends about $7,100 per individual covered by Medicaid with full benefits. Illinois, though, spends about $5,000 and is among the lowest-paying states—ranking 48th out of the 50 states and Washington D.C.—ahead of only Georgia, South Carolina and Nevada.
Illinois hospitals are asking state lawmakers to invest in Medicaid, which provides health coverage to one in three Illinoisans today compared with one in 10 in 1995. As hospitals are squeezed by rising labor, drug and supply costs, they are facing tough decisions to reduce costs while still serving patients with the highest quality care.
Increasing the General Revenue Fund (GRF) portion of Medicaid hospital rates can help preserve patient access to care. Consider the following:
• GRF funds less than 18% of hospital Medicaid spending.
• Hospitals fund over 22% of hospital Medicaid spending through an almost $2 billion assessment tax they pay.
Increasing the GRF Medicaid hospital rate—for the first time in 28 years—is urgently needed as hospital costs have increased 85% since 1995 and have jumped significantly due to inflation, supply chain disruptions and staffing shortages.
Illinois hospitals are urging legislators to move on a much-needed 10% across-the-board increase to hospital Medicaid base rates. Discover the facts to learn more.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From the Tribune’s story on a bill to ban campaign contributions from red-light and speed cam companies…
The legislation faces potential legal hurdles. Kent Redfield, an emeritus professor of political science at the University of Illinois at Springfield and an expert on state campaign finance law, questioned whether the proposed restrictions on campaign contributions would be effective — or constitutional.
“The broad constitutional framework is that contributing or spending money to influence politics is protected political speech under the First Amendment, and so, if you’re going to restrict it, then it has to be narrow,” Redfield said.
Although there’s a record of political corruption in the industry, it is by no means unique, he said, raising the issue of why red-light camera companies would be subjected to restrictions that don’t apply to other state-regulated industries.
* The Question: Do you support the idea of banning certain industries/entities from contributing to campaigns? If so, which would those be? Make sure to explain. Thanks.
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Fun with numbers
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Center Square…
Gov. J.B. Pritkzer in February proposed a nearly $50 billion plan, up from around $37 billion in fiscal year 2014.
After factoring in inflation, the FY24 budget will wind up being about 6 percent higher than it was in FY14.
* Today’s Tribune editorial features a cartoon from 2011 about the state’s pension horrors. Since then, the Tier 2 program has kicked in and annual state payments have stabilized. The General Assembly and the current governor have also boosted pension fund contributions above the minimum required by law. But the editorial skips over all that…
The state’s long-standing pension crisis poses an ever-present threat to Illinois’ long-term financial stability, bottoming out the state’s credit ratings and discouraging prospective employers from bringing jobs to this state. Who would want to invest heavily in a state with such an abysmal financial outlook?
Um, the state’s credit ratings have steadily improved since that paper’s endorsed (through thick and thin) governor was overwhelmingly voted out of office in 2018. And as far as outlooks go, two rating agencies say Illinois has a “stable” outlook, and one (Fitch) has given the state a “positive” outlook. The outlook of an editorial board perpetually stuck in the past doesn’t really mean much.
* Nadig Newspapers…
ANDRADE WATCH: You can’t be a senator if there’s still a senator. Cristina Pacione-Zayas was appointed to Martinez’s 20th District seat in 2020, elected in 2022 and was named Johnson’s first deputy chief-of-staff in mid-April, a policy-making job which pays over $150,000. According to Jaime Andrade Jr. (D-40), whose state rep district covers half of the 20th, Pacione-Zayas is still collecting her state pay, has not resigned, shows up for work since May 15 at City Hall but is NOT collecting her city paycheck.
“Can you imagine if I did that?” asked Andrade. “The media would be all over me.” Andrade is “interested” in the senate appointment, which will be made by the weighted-vote of the 20th’s ward committeepersons (D), who must meet within 30 days.
“I’m waiting for a vacancy” to decide, he said. Already in the mix is wealthy area pharmacist and sometime farmer Dave Nayak.
It’s OK for state Rep. Brad Stephens (R-20) to be the $265,000 mayor of Rosemont, but it’s dubious that 20th District voters want a senator who is MIA.
Sen. CPZ was in Springfield voting last week and will be here this week. Plenty of people have outside jobs, including Rep. Andrade. CPZ may be the first, however, to refuse the entire salary of a non-legislative job while still managing to stay on top of her legislative gig.
Also, if you click here and then click “Inquiry Reports,” load the CSV file into Excel and create a Pivot Table, you’ll see that Rep. Stephens has been recorded as either “Excused” or “Not Voting” on 18 percent of roll call votes this year (157 of 863), while Sen. Pacione-Zayas has been recorded as not voting on 6 percent (52 of 848).
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A quick look at the legislative week ahead
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WTTW…
Illinois lawmakers were supposed to be off for a summer break, instead they’re set to return to the capitol this week to take care of unfinished business.
Passing a budget is arguably the single must-happen task for lawmakers and it was supposed to have been done by Friday, but that self-imposed deadline came and went without any budget action. […]
They’re scheduled to be in the capitol for a few days starting Wednesday, but they could stretch things out through May 31.
Come June, it gets tougher to pass because it requires a supermajority versus a simple majority to pass, which needs to happen as the fiscal year ends in July.
* Inside Climate…
Introduced at the tail end of the Illinois legislative session, a pair of measures that promote private funding of road projects are moving through quickly as state lawmakers try to wrap up their session this week. One is a resolution that would allow state transportation officials to find private funding for the Stevenson expansion, which runs through Little Village and other communities, and it is in the Senate after moving quickly through the House Chamber. The other is an even more expansive rewriting of rules to encourage private dollars for state transportation projects, which was added as an amendment to a large spending bill on Friday.
“Expanding highway capacity will incentivize more driving and more harmful emissions in an area already burdened by high asthma rates and other chronic health problems,” said José Miguel Acosta Córdova of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization.
Community, environmental and health organizations oppose the 11th-hour moves to bring private highway funding to Illinois, proposals supported by labor and business groups. […]
Marc Poulos, executive director of the labor management group for Local 150 International Union of Operating Engineers, said private money is needed to make sure road projects get funded. Some labor and business advocates have wanted to see the state enter into its first private transportation partnership for a number of years, and the proposed changes are a “modernizing of the statute” that allows such projects.
The widening of the Stevenson has been envisioned since the expressway was built in the 1960s, he said.
* Capitol News Illinois…
As the General Assembly prepares to wrap up its spring legislative session this week, Democratic lawmakers are advancing bills that would mandate job postings to include a salary range and grant further protections to temporary workers in moves they say would promote equity within the workplace. […]
House Bill 3129 passed with a 35-19 vote. It went back to the House, which passed it 75-39 on Wednesday.
The bill would require expected pay disclosures from employers with 15 or more employees in the state and would apply to things such as job board listings, newspaper ads and postings made by a third-party on behalf of an employer. […]
Labor advocates had another victory with the passage of the Temp Worker Fairness and Safety Act on Friday, a bill requiring temporary workers be paid the equivalent rate of pay received by a permanent worker after 90 consecutive days of employment.
* Chicago Tribune…
Facing pressure to bolster state ethics laws following the recent federal bribery convictions of former top Commonwealth Edison executives and lobbyists, Illinois lawmakers have turned their attention to another branch of a sprawling corruption investigation: the red-light camera industry.
A measure introduced and approved in the Illinois Senate late Friday seeks to place new ethical guardrails around an industry that has been at the center of multiple federal probes that have ensnared a host of state, county and local officials, including two state senators. […]
Members of the General Assembly as well as county and local officials would be prohibited from going to work for or receiving compensation from red-light camera companies for two years after leaving office, under the legislation. That’s much stronger than a six-month prohibition on state lawmakers becoming lobbyists that just took effect this year.
The Illinois Department of Transportation would be able to revoke a county’s or municipality’s authorization for red-light cameras if a local official or employee is charged with bribery, official misconduct or similar crimes related to the placement of the cameras, and municipalities would no longer be allowed to outsource the issuance of citations to their camera system vendors.
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Open thread
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* We’re back in Springfield! What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* WTTW | Illinois Lawmakers Set to Return Wednesday In Push to Pass a Budget: They’re scheduled to be in the capitol for a few days starting Wednesday, but they could stretch things out through May 31. Come June, it gets tougher to pass because it requires a supermajority versus a simple majority to pass, which needs to happen as the fiscal year ends in July.
* Tribune | Under pressure on ethics, Illinois lawmakers consider tightened rules on red-light camera industry: A measure introduced and approved in the Illinois Senate late Friday seeks to place new ethical guardrails around an industry that has been at the center of multiple federal probes that have ensnared a host of state, county and local officials, including two state senators.
* Center Square | Illinois legislators return Wednesday to reveal, pass state budget: Gov. J.B. Pritkzer in February proposed a nearly $50 billion plan, up from around $37 billion in fiscal year 2014. Since the governor’s budget address earlier this year, revenues have come in below expectations. The Illinois Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability projected revenues for April 2023 were $1.8 billion less than the same month the year before.
* Tribune | State deploying 30 ‘peacekeepers’ in Chicago over Memorial Day weekend in effort to prevent violence through de-escalation: The workers are with the Illinois Department of Human Services’ Citywide Crisis Prevention & Response Unit, whose goal is to address street conflicts through mediation and de-escalation. According to the governor’s office, the unit will send out over 30 workers — whom the state is calling “peacekeepers” — to various neighborhoods. The unit will work with community groups and various city and state agencies on the violence prevention efforts.
* WSJ | Will Illinois Still ‘Invest in Kids’?: Started in 2017 under then-Gov. Bruce Rauner, the Invest in Kids program provides privately funded scholarships for low-income children so they can escape failing public schools. The program so far has funded more than 40,000 scholarships, with all recipients qualifying based on financial need. But the current program expires at the end of this year and needs to be renewed. The futures of some 9,000 children hang in the balance. The scholarships are in high demand every year with about five applicants for each place offered, according to Empower Illinois, the largest scholarship organization.
* Tribune | ComEd’s proposed $1.47 billion rate hike challenged by watchdog group: The filing Monday with the Illinois Commerce Commission seeks to reduce ComEd’s proposal by at least $914.5 million, with additional testimony by other watchdog groups and the Illinois attorney general’s office expected to bring the cumulative recommended cuts to over $1 billion.
* WBEZ | Cook County Health is bracing for a financial storm to pay for migrants’ health care: There’s the cost of running the clinic for migrants and the possibility more health services will be needed as this population continues to swell. The state stopped contributing money to the clinic in February. Add to that, Cook County Health is bracing for a deluge of low-income patients losing their public Medicaid health insurance and becoming uninsured, yet still needing treatment but with perhaps no way to pay. That’s because after a three-year pause during the pandemic, the state is back to requiring that people prove they qualify for Medicaid.
* WBEZ | A plan to spend $51 million to aid migrants rekindles a heated debate in a new Chicago City Council: Having received only a small fraction of the hundreds of millions of dollars in federal and state funding requests since last year, the City Council is expected to vote Wednesday on using $51 million set aside for “unanticipated emergencies.” If approved, the funding would go toward staffing for seven city shelters, three so-called “respite centers,” meals, legal services and transportation for migrants.
* Tribune | Plan to house migrants at Far Northwest Side college met with boos, support as total new arrivals reach 10,000: Before the meeting kicked off, the crowd’s polarization was already reflected in the presence of pro-law enforcement Blue Lives Matter flags as well as rainbow posters reading: “A better Chicago starts with US!” City officials then began their briefing on the temporary shelter but were often drowned out by alternating waves of boos and applause. Lastly, a question-and-answer portion saw residents verbally clash over purported safety and public health concerns and whether Chicago is living up to its ideal as a sanctuary city.
* Sun-Times | Lightfoot’s security detail dramatically reduced: Law enforcement sources acknowledged Lightfoot’s detail has been slashed. But a police spokesperson refused to reveal specifics, fearing it could invite more threats to a former mayor who has already had her share.
* Sun-Times | Head of search for Chicago top cop asks why no one called 911 after Officer Aréanah Preston was fatally shot, blames lack of trust: “The community has lost so much trust in the system that not a single person dialed 911,” Anthony Driver said during a forum on community policing hosted by the City Club of Chicago.
* Tribune | Amazon pulls back from planned Bridgeport warehouse previously opposed by community groups: Amazon signed a deal for the Bridgeport site in 2020, according to CoStar. Its lease on the 112,000-square-foot facility at 2420 S. Halsted St. began in August 2022. According to planning documents, Amazon had planned to operate the facility as a distribution center.
* Tribune | Suzanne Johnson, longtime U-46 administrator and EHS grad, to be the district’s new superintendent: The School Board announced Tuesday that Johnson, deputy superintendent of instruction and interim superintendent since February, would fill the job effective July 1 pending completion of contract negotiations and the board’s final approval in June.
* Glencoe News | Remembering the mark Newton Minow left on friends, family during his lifetime: That is just one of many local associations to Minow, who grew to national fame in the early 1960s as Federal Communications Commission Chairman. The noted attorney and 2016 United States Medal of Freedom recipient died May 6 at the age of 97.
* SJ-R | ‘The best in the world’: Vose Korndogs has a new stand in a familiar place: Ken Vose said the building, in its familiar placement on Grandstand Avenue, had long been planned and replaces a stand from around the mid-1970s. Vose bought the shells of both buildings and had been working on it “day and night” at his house since October.
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Live coverage
Wednesday, May 24, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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