Question of the day
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Press release…
Attorney General Kwame Raoul today filed a lawsuit, alongside 48 attorneys general, against Avid Telecom, its owner Michael Lansky and vice-president Stacey S. Reeves, for alleged violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, the Telemarketing Sales Rule and other federal and state telemarketing and consumer laws. Avid Telecom allegedly initiated, facilitated, and transmitted more than 7.5 billion illegal robocalls to millions of people on the National Do Not Call Registry. Between December 2018 and January 2023, more than 290 million of those calls were to Illinois residents.
Avid Telecom is a Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service provider that sells data, phone numbers and dialing software to help its customers make mass robocalls. It also serves as an intermediate provider and allegedly facilitated or helped route illegal robocalls across the country.
“Robocalls violate consumers’ privacy and unnecessarily cost them time and money. Companies responsible for this illegal practice must be held accountable,” Raoul said. “I am happy to work with fellow attorneys general addressing this problem in Illinois and will continue to protect consumers’ rights by fighting against these unlawful actions.”
Between December 2018 and January 2023, Avid sent or attempted to transmit more than 24.5 billion calls. More than 90 percent of those calls lasted less than just 15 seconds, which indicates they were likely robocalls. Further, Avid helped make hundreds of millions of calls using spoofed or invalid caller ID numbers, including more than 8.4 million calls that appeared to be coming from government and law enforcement agencies and private companies.
Avid Telecom allegedly sent or transmitted scam calls about Social Security Administration scams, Medicare scams, auto warranty scams, Amazon scams, DirecTV scams, credit card interest rate reduction scams and employment scams.
The USTelecom-led Industry Traceback Group, which notifies providers about known and suspected illegal robocalls sent across their networks, sent at least 329 notifications to Avid Telecom that it was transmitting these calls. Avid Telecom allegedly continued the calls.
The legal action arises from the nationwide Anti-Robocall Multistate Litigation Task Force Raoul joined in August 2022 along with 50 bipartisan attorneys general. The task force is investigating and taking legal action against those responsible for routing significant volumes of illegal robocall traffic into and across the United States. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Social Security Administration’s Office of the Inspector General provided investigative assistance in this matter.
Attorney General Raoul has been a consistent advocate for protections against illegal robocalls. In 2022, Raoul joined a coalition of 33 attorneys general in filing a brief in the U.S. Supreme Court defending the anti-robocall provisions of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. In August 2019, Raoul joined a bipartisan coalition of attorneys general from all 50 states and Washington D.C. in partnering with 12 phone companies to create a set of principles for telecom companies to fight robocalls. In June 2019, Raoul, in cooperation with the FTC, announced a major crackdown on robocalls that included 94 actions targeting operations around the country that were responsible for more than 1 billion calls. Raoul has also submitted comments to the Federal Communications Commission urging the adoption of its proposed rules on enforcement against caller ID spoofing.
Joining Raoul in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
* The Question: How do you deal with these robocalls?
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* NYT | Sex Abuse in Catholic Church: Over 1,900 Minors Abused in Illinois, State Says: The report adds 149 names to lists of child sex abusers whom the dioceses themselves had publicly identified before or during the investigation. That brings the total number of identified abusers to 451, the report says. The additional names were supplied by victims who came forward and shared their accounts with investigators, who then followed up on their accounts. Investigators also reviewed more than 100,000 pages of files held by the dioceses, and interviewed church leaders and their representatives. The 149 new names are religious brothers, who are accountable primarily to independent religious orders rather than to local dioceses and bishops.
* Sun-Times | Yellow-vested Peacekeepers, funded by the state, will patrol Chicago streets Memorial Day weekend: More than 500 people have been hired as Peacekeepers, trained to de-escalate conflicts in 102 “hotspots” in 14 Chicago communities. They’re on duty from Tuesday through Saturday.
* WJOL | Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias Awards $221,000 to Joliet Public Library: Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced that his office is awarding nearly $18 million to 639 public libraries statewide – including more than $221,000 to the Joliet Public Library. These grants, awarded once every fiscal year, will help provide library services to nearly 12 million patrons statewide and approximately 150,000 Joliet residents.
* Sun-Times | Convicted ComEd CEO’s attorney warns ‘we may be trying this case again,’ but judge won’t allow contact with jurors: It’s another signal that, despite the resounding guilty verdicts early this month against Pramaggiore, Hooker, former ComEd lobbyist Michael McClain and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty, the case isn’t over.
* Center Square | Illinois seeks to bar out-of-state police access to data of those seeking abortions in state: The measure also would prohibit the use of such camera data by out-of-state law enforcement for tracking down undocumented migrants in Illinois. It now goes back to the House for concurrence.
* Center Square | Proposal to consolidate lawmaker pensions with other funds to be discussed this summer: Reick said the goal of the proposals is to bring the state to conformity with the nation’s Employee Retirement Income Security Act. “What we are trying to do with this bill is basically bring Tier 2 into conformity with safe harbor provisions of ERISA,” Reick said. “Which we have been out of compliance with since 2012.”
* Sun-Times | Brandon Johnson’s first City Council meeting certain to be tamer than Lightfoot’s: Ald. Ray Lopez (15th), whom Lightfoot accused that first day of “carrying the water for Burke,” also expects zero fireworks. He noted that Lightfoot and Johnson are “two different personality types.” “She came in with much more animosity towards certain individuals than Brandon has. He’s actually been pretty pro-active in reaching out to make human connections with members. So, I would be surprised if he got off on that foot,” Lopez said.
* Crain’s | Top Lightfoot aide rips move to dump him from the McPier board — but he says he might quit if Johnson asks: In his first comments on the matter, the former deputy mayor, who served as Lightfoot’s top aide for relations with the business community, said a pending bill to rescind Lightfoot’s last-second move appointing him to the board of the Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority may be illegal and is “terrible for democratic values.” The authority, generally known as McPier, operates the McCormick Place convention center and plays a major role in the city’s economy. It also owns Navy Pier but does not run the facility.
* Center Square | Some criticize proposed grants for groceries to eliminate ‘food deserts’ in Illinois: State Rep. Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, said a grocery store is the lifeblood of a small community. “When you lose a grocery store, you lose the identity of your community, and you lose the ability to retain population and keep families in your community,” Spain said.
* Bloomberg | Walgreens settles consumer claims it knew Theranos was a fraud: US District Judge David Campbell in Phoenix this month ordered the case to go to trial after concluding there are factual issues that only a jury can resolve over whether Walgreens entered into an ill-fated partnership with Theranos to offer tests at its drugstores even while it had good reason to suspect the startup’s technology didn’t really work.
* Bloomberg | How mega-retailers like Walgreens became health care’s biggest disruptors: In 2021, Walgreens invested $5.2 billion to take a majority stake in primary care provider VillageMD, accelerating plans to open 1,000 co-branded “Village Medical at Walgreens” practices by 2027. CVS says primary care complements its value-based care efforts. It acquired Oak Street Health in a $10.6 billion transaction earlier this year and plans to expand to 300 Oak Street sites by 2026. The company has also built a national network of roughly 1,200 MinuteClinic walk-in medical clinics.
* Crain’s | After $1.5 billion PE deal, Rosemont medical-data firm buys AI startup: Intelligent Medical Objects, a Rosemont medical data firm that took a $1.5 billion private-equity deal last year, is buying a Texas-based artificial intelligence startup, a move it says will help it expand to more health care segments.
* WGLT | Lincoln brought Guy Fraker to Illinois; preserving the landscape came later: A lawyer by profession, Fraker’s two avocations are studying Abraham Lincoln and land conservation — so it is serendipitous that he chose to settle in the Twin Cities. His commitment to both topics is what prompted McLean County Museum of History to select Fraker as a 2023 History Maker.
* WCIA | Grammy-winning Alanis Morissette to headline Illinois State Fair in August: “We are excited to welcome Alanis Morissette to the Illinois State Fair for the first time,” said state fair manager Rebecca Clark. “Her album ‘Jagged Little Pill’ was a defining music achievement for my generation and over 25 years later, you still hear ‘You Oughta Know’ or ‘Ironic’ on the radio.”
* AP | UPS strike looms in a world grown reliant on everything delivered everywhere all the time: Annual profits at UPS in the past two years are close to three times what they were before the pandemic. The Atlanta company returned about $8.6 billion to shareholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks in 2022, and forecasts another $8.4 billion for shareholders this year. The Teamsters say frontline UPS workers deserve some of that windfall.
* Crain’s | The fine print of the Big Ten’s blockbuster TV deal is turning into quagmire for new chief: report: When new Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti took the reins of the conference last month, finalizing the $7 billion-plus broadcasting deal his predecessor [New Bears president/CEO] Kevin Warren struck last year seemed a formality.
* KFVS | More than 16K turkey harvested during Illinois’ spring season; Jefferson Co. in top 5 for harvest totals: They say the record harvest total for the spring season was set in 2006 when 16,569 turkeys were taken.
* NBC Chicago | ‘What Do You Know About Benton, Illinois?’ Southern Illinois Town at Center of New Show With ‘Real Housewives’: According to a press release from Bravo, Sonja Morgan and Luann de Lesseps, of the New York Real Housewives franchise, will “trade big-city chic for small-town charm” as the duo fronts “Luann and Sonja: Welcome to Crappie Lake,” a new show premiering on NBC’s streaming service Peacock beginning in July.
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* Back in 2015…
Officials with the Shawnee School District #84 fear schools could face closing if the county reassesses a southern Illinois power plant’s property value.
A letter from the Jackson County Board of Review to the school district details the Grand Tower Energy Center, LLC is asking the county to lower its full market value on the Grand Tower Power Plant from $100,337,421 to $7,049,295. […]
Now, a letter from the county to the school district details what the plant’s new owner is asking. It asks that the county lower its full assessed value on the property by more than $90 million.
* Also from 2015…
A power plant says it hasn’t been able to pay more than $2 million in taxes to Jackson County because of a property tax assessment.
The Grand Tower Energy Center said in a statement to the Southern Illinoisan that it’s “not in a financial position to make tax payments based on the current assessment.” The plant said it has been working with the county assessor’s office for nearly two years to resolve the issue but its efforts have been “rebuffed.”
The Jackson County Board of Review in May upheld the assessed tax valuation after plant officials tried to get the property’s full valuation reduced from about $100 million to about $7 million.
* From the above-referenced Southern Illinoisan story…
In the statement from the power plant, it says the plant has submitted its appeal for the second year to the Board of Review.
Rendleman said the decision on the property taxes in 2014 has already been made by the Board of Review. If the power plant wants to appeal that decision, it must go through the Property Tax Appeals Board in Springfield.
Scott Ginsburg, legal representation for the Shawnee School District, said the procedure in Springfield requires the plant to pay the taxes first, and if it wins, they get the difference back plus interest.
* The Grand Tower Energy Center did go to the Property Tax Appeals Board, and it ruled in 2019 that full market value should be $20 million, not $100 million.
WSIL TV…
A recent decision by the Property Tax Appeal Board could cost local taxpayers millions of dollars.
The board decided Tuesday to lower the Grand Tower Energy Center’s property tax bill retroactively for 2014 and 2015. […]
Ameren owned the power plant until 2014, when it sold the plant, along with two others in Illinois, to a financial firm called Rockland Capital. […]
The Shawnee School District stands to lose the most, about $2.5 million according to the Jackson County Tax Assessor’s office.
* The school district had also complained that Grand Tower Energy Center was “required to pay the taxes under protest before filing a statutory objection with either the PTAB or the court.” PTAB rejected that argument and the school district appealed. The Fifth District Appellate Court ruled three years later, in 2022, that PTAB was right on both counts (the property value and that the company didn’t need to pay taxes up front in protest). From the school district…
In a momentous departure from longstanding Illinois law, an appellate court found that delinquent taxpayers who deliberately withhold taxes may still pursue a claim for property tax assessment relief. In so doing, the court, in the case of Shawnee Community Unit School District No. 84 v. Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, 2022 IL App (5th) 190266-U, provided a roadmap to taxpayers looking to coerce taxing districts into accepting favorable settlements, lest the taxing districts, including schools, lose the local property tax revenue they need to perform their essential functions like providing education to children and safety services to the public. […]
The Fifth District’s decision upended nearly a century of Illinois case law reaffirming the “payment under protest” doctrine meant to prevent taxpayers from harassing local taxing bodies by withholding operating funds as part of a strategy to extract favorable property tax settlements.
* Last September…
Shawnee School District Superintendent Shelly Clover-Hill says her schools and Galatia School District will receive a significant loss grant in the Illinois State Fiscal Year 2023 budget.
* Last October…
“Can you imagine the catastrophic breakdown of social services if every tax payer in Illinois found out now, there’s a 5th district decision that says you don’t have to pay while you protest,” [Shawnee School District Superintendent Shelly Clover-Hill] explains. “That’s hospitals and road and police and fire and schools.” […]
Clover-Hill says other school districts across the state are concerned about the 5th district’s decision and how it could impact their tax funding. Those districts have offered their support to Shawnee.
She expects this case to be heard by the Illinois Supreme Court in the Spring of 2023.
* Yesterday…
A school district in southern Illinois is asking the state for some financial help and this isn’t the first time a company nearby refuses to pay its property taxes, for the second year in a row.
“This is unfortunately not the first time they have failed to pay their taxes. They put us in this same boat last year,” said Shawnee District #84 superintendent Shelly Clover-Hill.
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* US Attorney’s Office…
A Prophetstown, Illinois, man, Philip J. Buyno, 73, has been arrested and charged by federal criminal complaint with attempting to use fire to damage a building used in interstate commerce. Danville, Illinois, police officers arrested Buyno on Saturday, May 20th, and he is scheduled to appear in federal court in Urbana today at 1:15 pm before U.S. Magistrate Judge Eric I. Long. At that time, Judge Long will address whether Buyno will be released on conditions of bond or held in custody pending further proceedings.
According to the affidavit filed in support of the complaint, Danville police officers responded to an alarm at 600 N. Logan Avenue in Danville around 4:30 a.m. early Saturday morning. They found Buyno stuck inside a maroon Volkswagen Passat that he had backed into the entrance of the building, which is being renovated for use as a reproductive health clinic. According to the affidavit, Buyno brought several containers filled with gasoline with him.
If convicted of attempted arson, Buyno faces a minimum penalty of five years up to twenty years in prison, a fine of up to $250,000, and three years of supervised release.
The charges are the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Springfield Field Office, and the Danville Police Department. Supervisory Assistant U.S. Attorney Eugene L. Miller is representing the government in the prosecution.
Members of the public are reminded that a complaint is merely an accusation; the defendant is presumed innocent unless proven guilty.
* WAND…
“Let’s focus and call it what it is. This is an act of terrorism, and this is a fight against women’s rights,” said Caylynne Dobbles, President of VC Pride Coalition. […]
WAND reached out to Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. who said that he did not have a comment due to this being an open investigation.
“The community should know that not everyone on either side is like this. Not everyone is out to hurt people or harm buildings. And that the VC Pride Coalition is here,” said Dobbles.
* WCIA…
A neighbor, who doesn’t want to be identified, says she heard banging that sounded like someone was messing with her car, but instead, she says it was someone ramming their own car into the clinic building. She says shortly after she saw a man trying to get away. […]
The neighbor says police used to sit in the parking lot to keep an eye on the building. But since these no-trespassing posts went up, she says she hasn’t seen them. While she doesn’t agree with the clinic opening, she says that doesn’t give people the right to destroy it.
* Chicago Tribune…
The alleged attack follows recent heated, high-profile demonstrations in support of and against abortion access in this community of about 30,000.
Earlier this month, the Danville City Council narrowly passed a controversial ban on the mailing and shipping of abortion pills, a measure Attorney General Kwame Raoul and civil rights experts have warned is illegal in Illinois. […]
The attack in Danville occurred just a few months after another man was accused of setting fire to a Planned Parenthood Health Center roughly a hundred miles away in Peoria.
Tyler W. Massengill, 32, of Chillicothe in February pleaded guilty to setting the fire; when he was arrested in January, he told authorities that an ex-girlfriend had an abortion several years ago in Peoria, which upset him. The blaze was set a few days after Illinois passed expansive reproductive rights legislation that included protections for abortion providers and out-of-state patients as well as an expansion of the pool of clinicians that can perform abortions.
Buyno is a decades-long activist. Click here for video of him being arrested outside a clinic in Milwaukee back in 1991. And click here to see him talk about being arrested in Peoria a few years ago.
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* The state’s turnaround times are still too long, but at least the trend is finally moving in the right direction…
Illinois State Police (ISP) Director Brendan F. Kelly today announced ISP has received final accreditation for the new ISP Decatur Forensic Science Laboratory and it is now officially open for business. The new four-story facility located along U.S. Route 51 on the south side of Decatur houses12,200-square feet of laboratory space and will serve law enforcement agencies across the state.
“This top-tier facility will increase capacity to significantly reduce turnaround time for DNA testing, produce rapid results, and further reduce the case backlog,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Since day one, my administration has been committed to delivering justice for every Illinoisan, and this new Decatur lab will ensure we can accomplish that.”
The new lab will focus on high-throughput DNA testing, which comprises about 20% of all ISP forensic cases in the laboratory system. Forensic scientists at the laboratory will examine evidence collected from crime scenes and analyze biological material to identify DNA profiles from suspects.
“The Decatur facility is equipped with the latest state-of-the-art technology and will be staffed with highly trained individuals who are critical to providing DNA analysis for the citizens of Illinois,” said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. “The new lab will further reduce backlogs and allow us to solve crimes faster and bring justice to all involved.”
The new high-throughput DNA laboratory utilizes robotics, which will increase ISP’s testing capacity. These robots can process case samples with minimal hands on from the forensic scientist. The technology will be crucial in providing a short turn around for cases such as property crimes, homicides, and criminal sexual assaults requiring DNA analysis.
The Decatur facility houses ISP’s seventh forensic laboratory, as well as Crime Scene Services. The new facility brings new jobs to the area and has space for approximately 27 employees, including 12 forensic scientists, five evidence technicians, five administrative staff, and five crime scene investigators. Approximately $5.4 million was awarded for staffing and equipment at the new laboratory for the first year.
The ISP forensic science laboratory system has been recognized as one of the largest crime laboratory systems in the world providing forensic science analytical services to more than 1,200 state, county, and local criminal justice agencies. The ISP laboratory system, currently comprised of seven operational laboratories and a training and application laboratory, processes evidence from criminal cases in seven disciplines: drug chemistry, trace chemistry, toxicology, biology/DNA, latent prints, firearms/toolmarks, and footwear/tire tracks.
The average turn-around-time for a DNA case to be completed is 3.6 months. At the end of March 2023, 37% of the assignments for DNA analyses were completed in 60 days or less. Backlogs in testing for trace chemistry, drug chemistry, latent prints, firearms, toxicology, and footwear have all decreased by approximately 37% since 2021.
In June 2022, ISP announced that after decades of extensive sexual assault forensic backlogs, the number of pending sexual assault forensic assignments older than 180 days reached zero. This was the first time since the General Assembly passed the Illinois Sexual Assault Evidence Submission Act in 2010 that the State of Illinois was in compliance with the statute.
It’s just ridiculous how the state let the rape kit problem so horribly deteriorate. I mean, it was so bad they had to pass a law, and it still took a dozen years to reach what is really a not optimal result of 6 months.
Anyway, click here for some videos of the new lab.
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* Click here for the report. Press release…
Attorney General Kwame Raoul today released a comprehensive report detailing decades of child sex abuse by members of the Catholic clergy in Illinois. The report concludes a multi-year investigation into child sex abuse by members of the clergy in all six Catholic dioceses in Illinois. Attorney General Raoul’s report reveals names and detailed information of 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers who abused at least 1,997 children across all of the dioceses in Illinois.
The Attorney General’s Report on Catholic Clergy Child Sex Abuse in Illinois – released this morning during a press conference in Chicago – represents the state of Illinois’ first comprehensive accounting of child sex abuse by members of the Catholic clergy in the six dioceses across Illinois. The nearly 700-page report features detailed narrative accounts of child sex abuse committed by Catholic clerics. Many of the narratives were written in consultation with survivors, are based upon their experiences, and told from the survivor’s point of view. Although the report formally concludes the investigation the Attorney General’s office opened in 2018, it contains 50 pages of the office’s recommendations to the dioceses for the handling of future child sex abuse allegations.
“I was raised and confirmed in the Catholic church and sent my children to Catholic schools. I believe the church does important work to support vulnerable populations; however, as with any presumably reputable institution, the Catholic church must be held accountable when it betrays the public’s trust,” Raoul said “It is my hope that this nearly 700-page report will provide some closure to survivors of child sex abuse by Catholic clerics by shining a light both on those who violated their positions of power and trust, and on the individuals in church leadership who covered up that abuse,” Raoul said. “These perpetrators may never be held accountable in a court of law, but by naming them here, the intention is to provide a public accounting and a measure of healing to survivors who have long suffered in silence.”
Before Raoul’s investigation, the Catholic dioceses of Illinois publicly listed only 103 substantiated child sex abusers. By comparison, Raoul’s report reveals names and detailed information of 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers who abused at least 1,997 children across all of the dioceses in Illinois.
Attorneys and investigators in Raoul’s office reviewed more than 100,000 pages of documents held by the dioceses and received more than 600 confidential contacts from survivors through emails, letters, interviews and phone calls. Raoul’s office also worked closely to record accounts of the survivor experiences of children who were sexually abused by clerics.
“I am extremely proud of the work done by my office’s team of investigators and attorneys who faced challenges and intervening factors including a pandemic and a ransomware attack to the office’s IT infrastructure. The emotional impact of the work was unique to this investigation, and our team committed to approaching the investigation with grace and compassion,” Raoul added. “I thank each of them for the tireless work and commitment to allowing survivors to share their experiences.”
Raoul’s nearly 700-page report is organized into five sections, with sections highlighting detailed information on each diocese’s historic handling – and inaction – of child sex abuse, data analysis showing the extent of child sex abuse by clerics in each Illinois diocese, and specific recommendations from the Attorney General’s office to the dioceses for handling future child sex abuse allegations.
The survivor narratives demonstrate a troubling pattern of the church failing to support survivors, ignoring or covering up reports of abuse, and survivors being revictimized by the church when they came forward to report being abused. Repeatedly, church officials prioritized the reputation of the institution over protecting children, frequently giving abusive priests the benefit of the doubt – giving abusers the chance to abuse again – and even covering up the abuse by misleading the public. The Attorney General’s investigation also found instances in which church officials were in a position to report abuse but chose not to do so. As a result, many narrative accounts demonstrate the continued trauma and impact survivors continue to experience decades later.
As a result of the Attorney General’s investigation, Illinois Catholic dioceses have adopted uniform policies to improve the handling of alleged child sex abuse. Among those are policies requiring dioceses to investigate allegations against clerics who are deceased, have resigned or been laicized. Additional policies require the dioceses to ensure that allegations against religious order and extern clerics are investigated, and to publicly list a religious order or extern cleric who is substantiated as a child sex abuser if the cleric had sufficient connection with the diocese.
While these policies demonstrate a step in the right direction, they do not go far enough. Attorney General Raoul’s report includes 50 pages of recommended policies the office strongly encourages the dioceses to enact to further improve the handling of future allegations of child sex abuse. Those recommendations range from how the dioceses communicate with and support survivors, investigate and make determinations related to alleged abuse, as well as disclosure and transparency protocols, mediation and compensation, and the handling of allegations related to religious orders.
Raoul’s report contains detailed descriptions of child sex abuse, assault and trauma. Resources for survivors of child sex abuse can also be found in Attorney General Raoul’s report.
…Adding… Sun-Times…
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.”
“We posted all of the names,” Cupich told the group, referring to the publicly available church list of clergy members in the Archdiocese of Chicago deemed to have been credibly accused of sexual abuse.
Cupich’s assertions were far off the mark, according to the results of the investigation announced Tuesday by Madigan’s successor, Kwame Raoul, who said the archdiocese, covering Cook and Lake counties, and the rest of the Catholic church in Illinois failed to acknowledge hundreds of allegedly abusive priests and other religious figures.
…Adding… Ugh…
* Also, from the report…
. What can be said is that as things stand, the Diocese of Springfield has yet to reconcile itself with its past. To do that, the diocese must commit to transparency and survivor healing through deeds, listening to survivors and their pleas for trauma-informed responses. The diocese must also openly acknowledge that turning its back for half a century on the needs of children suffering sex abuse at the hands of its clerics was in no way “virtuous.”
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It’s almost a law
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WCIA…
A bill moving through the state legislature would prohibit Illinoisans from paying exorbitant costs for generic brand medications.
A bipartisan group of legislators worked to pass the Pharmaceutical and Health Affordability Act, which aims to stop skyrocketing prices of generic and off-brand prescription medications. The bill passed the Senate Wednesday and the House of Representatives Friday and now heads to the governor’s desk.
In the bill, price gouging is defined as “an increase in the price as 30% or more within the preceding year, 50% or more within the preceding 3 years, or 75% or more within the preceding 5 years.” It also must be found the price hike burdens consumers because of little to no competition in the marketplace. The bill does exempt if companies raise the price because of production cost increases. […]
If signed into law by Governor J.B. Pritzker, the law would go into effect Jan. 1, 2024.
* Brenden Moore…
A bill that would allow the state to explore entering into an agreement with a private company to run the World Shooting and Recreational Complex near Sparta is headed to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk.
The legislation is a trial balloon of sorts that will permit the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to gauge interest in a public-private partnership to manage the state-owned, 1,600-acre site, which is the home grounds for the Amateur Trapshooting Association’s Grand American Trapshooting Championships.
The amended bill, sponsored by state Rep. David Friess, R-Red Bud, and state Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, passed the Senate 56-0 and the House 111-1 earlier this month.
“IDNR is constantly reviewing our nearly 400 property holdings across the state and considering our options,” said IDNR director Natalie Phelps Finnie in a statement to Lee Enterprises. “Top of mind for the department is always whether we are providing taxpayers with the best value for their money.
* WGN…
A bill headed to the governor’s desk will assist law enforcement in finding stolen vehicles by requiring automakers to provide location information.
HB2245 passed unanimously in both the Illinois House and Senate and, if signed by Gov. JB Pritzker, will force any car manufacturer which sells its vehicles in the state to create a 24/7 hotline. This hotline would be used by law enforcement, to include 9-1-1 center operators, to obtain a stolen car’s location to the best of a manufacturer’s technical abilities.
Cook County Sheriff Thomas Dart helped to craft the bill and he wants to see similar legislation at the federal level.
Dart held a news conference Tuesday morning to discuss the state legislation and what he sees as its impacts on his own fight against carjacking in Cook County.
* Ag Clips…
The passage of Senate Bill 1701 advances agriculture conservation in Illinois by supporting farming practices that will yield healthier, stronger soils and cleaner water across the state, advocates said May 19.
Legislators approved Senate Bill 1701 as part of the final days of the spring legislative session in Springfield. It now goes to the Governor for review. […]
The legislation sends a strong message that Illinois must accelerate its efforts to protect soil health and prevent nutrient losses. It directs the Illinois Department of Agriculture to work with Soil and Water Conservation Districts and other conservation-focused state agencies to help with the accelerated soil health framework. […]
The organizations supporting this legislation are now calling on legislators to vote for an Illinois state budget that follows through on SB1701’s promise of more support for sustainable farming practices. By putting more money into Soil and Water Conservation Districts and urging farmers to make voluntary conservation practices a key part of how they manage their operations, we will invest in our future success – on our farms and across our state.
* Sen. Willie Preston…
Taking a step forward in ensuring the safety and well-being of employees and incarcerated individuals, State Senator Willie Preston advanced a measure through the Senate addressing indecent exposure in correctional facilities. […]
House Bill 1399 amends the Criminal Code of 2012 to create the offense of “lewd sexual display in a penal institution,” making it a Class A misdemeanor for incarcerated individuals to expose themselves with the purpose or effect of intimidating, harassing or threatening someone in the presence of such a display. Repeat offenders would face more severe penalties, with subsequent violations being considered Class 4 felonies. The provisions will be repealed on Jan. 1, 2028, allowing for thorough review of annual reports provided by the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority.
Brought forth by the Cook County Sherriff’s Office, the measure mirrors penalties for public indecency but changes the penalties given the context and motivation of the crime. House Bill 1399 excludes facilities of the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice and other juvenile detention facilities, as well as individuals under the age of 18 and those suffering from behavioral health issues. […]
House Bill 1399 passed the Senate on Friday.
* Center Square…
A measure that implements full-day kindergarten throughout Illinois is now awaiting to be sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzker for his signature.
State Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington Heights, filed House Bill 2396. It passed the House in March. After several amendments in the Illinois Senate last week, the House voted to concur Friday.
State Sen. Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, said the bill better prepares the state’s youth for the future.
“Full-day kindergarten has shown to boost academic gains and prepare children for the social and emotional demands of early elementary,” Lightford said. “This can provide students and their families with sufficient support and opportunities in their early education career.”
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Sierra Club Illinois…
Environmental justice organizations and allies will speak at a press conference calling on the Illinois General Assembly to oppose House Bill 2878 and House Joint Resolution 23 (HJR23). At the tail end of a legislative session marked by the failure to act on environmental injustice, advocates are urging lawmakers to reject last-ditch efforts to prop up polluting industries and instead protect communities from diesel emissions, air pollution, and environmental injustice.
In the eleventh hour of the spring legislative session, the legislature introduced HJR23, which would allow the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) to enact a public-private partnership to fund a construction project expanding I-55. Expanding this highway would worsen climate change, increase pollution, and put already overburdened environmental justice communities at risk. Then, the Senate amended HB2878, an omnibus state procurement bill, to include new pathways to highway expansions like the I-55 widening project in HJR23, through a broad expansion of public-private funding for large transportation projects. Both HJR23 and HB2878 hurt environmental justice communities and should be opposed by lawmakers.
WHAT: Press conference calling on the Illinois General Assembly to prioritize environmental justice ahead of key votes during the final week of the spring legislative session.
SPEAKERS:
State Rep. Theresa Mah
Jen Walling, Illinois Environmental Council
José Miguel Acosta-Córdova, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization
Brian Urbaszewski, Respiratory Health Association
Additional speakers to be announced, and legislators will be present.
WHEN: Tuesday, May 23, 2023 at 2:15pm CT
WHERE: Virtual via Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84815172312
* WAND…
An Illinois House Democrat has been trying to phase out the sub-minimum wages for workers with developmental and intellectual disabilities since 2019. State representatives had the opportunity to pass a bill tackling this issue Friday, but the Dignity in Pay Act failed to gain enough support after an intense debate.
Disabled workers have been paid much less than the state’s minimum wage for many years, and some lawmakers stress it is past time to eliminate the sub-minimum wage. […]
The plan failed to pass on a 59-32 vote with 11 representatives voting present.
Mah asked for the bill to be put on postponed consideration. That means the House could vote on her plan when lawmakers return this week.
* Effingham Radio…
If your dentist closes permanently, how do you find out? What do you need to do to get your records so you can start with a new dentist? Thanks to legislation sponsored by State Senator Steve McClure (R-Springfield) dental patients will have advanced warning of closures as well as information on obtaining copies of their records. […]
House Bill 2077 requires that dental facilities are required to inform patients of a planned closure at least 30 days in advance. As part of that requirement, the facilities must inform their patients about how they obtain copies of their dental records.
The legislation also contains several updates to dental rules and cleans up errors in existing law.
House Bill 2077 passed the Illinois Senate on May 19th and awaits a concurrence vote in the House.
* Patch…
After months of contention between two Tinley Park public entities, the much-coveted Tinley Park Mental Health Center campus and Howe Developmental Center could soon be in the hands of the Tinley Park-Park District—at a price of just $1—following the advancement of a piece of legislation Friday. […]
Tinley Park-Park District’s officials are invigorated by the legislation.
“We are excited to hear about legislation supporting the Park District’s vision for the vacant land and hope for the General Assembly’s support of our plan to finally move forward with the vacant property, clean it up, and redevelop the site,” the board of commissioners said in a prepared statement. “After years of inaction, we are thrilled with the prospect of turning the site into a recreational and athletic hub for the entire southland region to enjoy.”
Tinley Park Mayor Michael Glotz and Village Manager Pat Carr called the move “disappointing” in light of the Village’s more than decade-long quest to acquire the property. […]
The amended legislation will need to go back before the House, ultimately also requiring Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s signature.
* Center Square…
State Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford, filed Senate Bill 90. The measure, as amended by the House, requires Illinois school districts, excluding private religious schools, to create and maintain at least one written policy prohibiting discrimination and harassment against students based on race, color or national origin. […]
State Rep. Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City, said if you read between the lines, there is another motive involved.
“In the analysis it says that this is for teachers to grow in their skills for culturally responsive instruction, so if you’re against some of the culturally responsive teacher standards, you may want to take a look at this,” Wilhour said.
The House passed an amendment to the bill by an 87 to 18 vote, and it now heads back to the Senate for concurrence. Legislators return Wednesday.
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Open thread
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Obligatory Oscar pic for y’all…
* What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* ADDED: ABC Chicago | AG Kwame Raoul to give update on Catholic Church priest sex abuse investigation: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is expected to update his investigation into sex abuse allegations in the Catholic Church Tuesday. His office says he’ll provide a “significant update” on the investigation.
* WTTW | Illinois Lawmakers Set to Return Wednesday In Push to Pass a Budget: 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. Democrats, who control the General Assembly, say continued negotiations are coming along, but they’re not at the point of full agreement.
* Crain’s | Final Chicago school board map still a work in progress in Springfield: “I think we will get it done,” says state Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago. “I anticipate we’ll have it done by the end of the week,” by which time lawmakers are hoping to wrap up their spring session.
* Scott Holland | Hoping for a productive, substantial General Assembly week: New members from Democratic strongholds have their own learning curves, but Democrats who might have won seats from Republicans are likely to be advocating for constituents trying to make newer voices heard. Add in this being the first budgeting process following the decennial redistricting as well as the fact House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch is relatively fresh in his role, compared to the lengthy shadow of predecessor Michael Madigan, and it seems clear getting anything done early was always fairly ambitious.
* Patch | For $1, Tinley Park District Could Soon Own Mental Health Center Land: Backed by Sen. Mike Hastings (D-Frankfort), House Bill 3743 would grant ownership of the 280-acre campus and adjacent Howe Development Center to the park district, as written into an amendment to the bill declaring September as Alopecia Awareness Month.
* Daily Herald | Deal would allow Schaumburg police to access school cameras in emergencies: The Schaumburg Police Department’s 18-month-old Real-Time Information Center is expanding its capabilities through a recent $175,000 grant. It was created with the help of an earlier $552,000 federal grant. Though the information center’s operators can routinely monitor municipal cameras throughout the village, they won’t have the same freedom with those in District 211’s schools.
* Sun-Times | Dozens of new immigrants joining Chicago Public Schools as school year nears end: As many as 50 immigrant children staying temporarily at Piotrowski Park joined Zapata Academy in South Lawndale, and about a dozen youths may enroll in Little Village Lawndale High School, the Sun-Times has learned.
* Chicago Defender | Hunter Celebrates Resolution Creating Task Force on Black Immigrants: House Joint Resolution 18 creates the Task Force on Black Immigrants to study the economic, social and legal status of Black immigrants and provide recommendations for how to better support them — whether through state resources, programs or funding. The task force will consist of 16 members, serving without compensation, with the Illinois Department of Human Rights providing administrative support.
* Sun-Times | Chicago’s top cop ends training agreement with Texas firm with ties to ex-police superintendent: Chicago’s acting top cop is ending the department’s relationship with a Texas firm that has been paid more than $1.3 million to train officers and is owned by a colleague of the city’s former police superintendent. The firm, Professional Law Enforcement Training, is led by Byron Boston, who served in the Dallas Police Department with Fred Waller’s predecessor, David Brown.
* WTTW | Indicted Former Ald. Carrie Austin Collecting More Than $114K Annual City Pension, Records Show: When she stepped down, Austin was the second-longest serving member of the City Council, earning more than $142,000 annually. In July 2021, Austin was charged with accepting bribes from a developer, including bathroom tile and a sump pump, and lying to FBI agents.
* Tribune | Developer transforming Northwest Side’s Marshall Field’s complex into Chicago’s latest film studio: Knickpoint Ventures held a topping-off ceremony Monday for The Fields Studios, what the company bills as Chicago’s first purpose-built film studio, at the former Marshall Field’s warehouse campus on the Northwest Side. The developer bought the site in 2018 and plans to complete construction and open nine soundstages, along with creative and production offices, by early next year.
* Daily Herald | Bloomingdale mayor leads effort to go big in remaking Stratford Square: Bloomingdale has been buying mall real estate to facilitate a full-scale redevelopment of Stratford Square. The village paid $2.4 million for the vacant Carson’s department store, $2.15 million for the former Burlington building and $1.1 million for a vacant parcel east of the mall, between townhouses to the north and medical offices to the south.
* Sun-Times | Millennium Park fox family is the latest Chicago wildlife to go viral: The viral fox family joins other recent animals to gain fame, including giant turtle ‘Chonkosaurus,’ piping plover couple Monty and Rose, and alligator ‘Chance the Snapper.’
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Live coverage
Tuesday, May 23, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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