Chicago mayor wants to move migrants into winterized tents
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
There’s more, including react, so click here to read the rest. It doesn’t look like at least some key city council allies were briefed.
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Afternoon roundup
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gov. JB Pritzker was asked again today about the unionization attempt among some House Democratic employees. Would he support a law that puts legislative employees under the jurisdiction of the Illinois Labor Relations Board to give them a pathway to unionizing?…
…Adding… I asked AFSCME Council 31 for its response to the organizing effort…
* Background is here if you need it. WBEZ…
This is basically an admission that the city’s public schools are not up to par. Gee, if only she was in a position to do something about that, or perhaps help others in similar situations to attend private schools who don’t have her personal financial resources. Just saying. Also, she was not asked in the interview about her previous statements like this one...
…Adding… Press release…
* Dave Dahl…
* WMBD…
The 93rd House District is overwhelmingly Republican. Darren Bailey won it by 26 points. * Daily Wire…
Illinois ranked 37th in most conservative Republican legislative voting behavior in 2022, at 72 percent, which is about average and the opposite of what’s portrayed in the last paragraph of that excerpt. * Mayor Brandon Johnson chafes at the suggestion that he’s moving too slow on appointments, but I don’t think it’s out of line to ask why CTA President Dorval Carter still has a job…
38 percent of Red Line trains ran? What the heck? * Isabel’s roundup… * Illinois Times | Tough choices at Memorial Health: Illinois Times has learned Memorial Health’s recently announced layoffs totaled about 300 – with 120 involving people in leadership positions – and that the cuts will save the Springfield-based health care system an estimated $40 million a year. * Sun-Times | Toxic Acme site on Southeast Side picked for EPA Superfund cleanup: Cyanide and mercury are among the harmful chemicals and metals found through recent testing of the Acme soil and surrounding areas used for fishing may be contaminated as well, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said. * Center Square | Right-to-work group enters nursing home labor dispute: Officials from the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Healthcare Illinois had threatened to call a strike on Labor Day, but have since gone back to the bargaining table. If talks break down, employees from 11 Infinity Healthcare nursing facilities in northern Illinois will be ordered off the job. National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation Vice President Patrick Semmens said workers don’t have to walk off the job if they choose not to. * Farm Progress | Illinois FFA to help spread the word on mental health: Following the success of a state-supported program to help Illinois farm families access mental health resources, Gov. JB Pritzker announced funding for up to 20 grants at $1,000 each to support FFA chapters implementing local initiatives that encourage access to such resources. All FFA chapters in Illinois are eligible to apply for the grant, and grant applications will be available from the Illinois FFA Foundation in fall 2023. * NBC Chicago | University of Illinois, 4 other Midwest schools rank on Forbes’ ‘Top 25 Public Colleges’ in US:“University of Illinois is home to more than 9,000 works of art, over 46,000 artifacts, four theaters and four cultural centers,’ Forbes wrote. “Students have the opportunity to be mentored by faculty members who have been awarded Nobel Prizes, Pulitzer Prizes and the Fields Medal in Mathematics.” * WMBD | Tazewell County files to intervene in CO2 pipeline running under central Illinois: “The Tazewell County Board is currently in the process of taking public comment from Tazewell County residents and the developer of the proposed (carbon dioxide) pipeline. The filing of this Petition to Intervene will ensure that Tazewell County will be a participant in all future proceedings,’ said State’s Attorney Kevin Johnson. * Sun-Times | Committee approves labor contracts for thousands of city workers: The deal’s prevailing wage portion covers 7,000 members of 30 trade unions employed by 16 city departments. Those workers also will now accrue half a day of sick leave per month and be eligible for 12 weeks of paid parental leave. * Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools is becoming less low-income. Here’s why that matters.: A decade ago, nearly 73% of students at the school, Helen C. Peirce School of International Studies, came from low-income households, according to district data. Last school year, that figure was just over 34%. […] Even though the number of students from low-income families has dropped, nearly three-quarters of the district’s student body is still considered “economically disadvantaged.” But if the downward trend continues, Chicago schools could continue to see fewer dollars than expected from the state, which funds districts in part by considering how many students from low-income families are enrolled. * WICS | Push for state funding amid learning loss: Illinois schools strive to bounce back post-pandemic: According to the 2022 Illinois Report Card, proficiency in reading and math for Illinois students is running below pre-COVID-19 levels. Federal and state dollars have been dished out to try to help students get caught up. […] Next year, Illinois won’t be receiving federal COVID-19 funds, which has helped pay after school programs. Pritzker said increasing state funds for education is key, along with targeting those in need the most. * NYT | Who’s really paying to bus migrants from the border?: No. In fact, the migrants boarding the Texas-funded buses represent only a fraction of the thousands arriving at the border each month, and some migrants are wary of accepting a free ride. The Texas busing program has sent about 34,740 migrants to other states since April 2022, enough to populate a small city. But that is a paltry subset of the hundreds of thousands who have crossed the border during that period, most of whom have probably also made their way to destinations outside Texas. * South Side Weekly | Larry Snelling Garnered Multiple Use-of-Force Complaints in the 1990s: As a beat cop in Englewood and Morgan Park in the 1990s, Larry Snelling was the subject of eight excessive force complaints, two of which resulted in suspensions. Some of the allegations describe Snelling slapping or punching people as young as fourteen in the head, while others detail verbal abuse. The allegations describe behavior that, if true, violated long-standing departmental rules that “prohibit all brutality, and physical or verbal maltreatment of any citizen while on or off duty.” * South Side Weekly | ‘Doesn’t Make it Wrong’:While he was a sergeant working at the Police Training Academy in 2015, Larry Snelling testified in a civil suit that a lieutenant who allegedly pressed his hand forcefully into a mentally ill woman’s nose because she would not submit to fingerprinting had used an appropriate amount of force for that type of situation, according to documents obtained by the Weekly. * Block Club Chicago | Migrant Barbers Arrested, Ticketed For Cutting Hair Without License Downtown: One of the migrants who was arrested, who asked not to be named for safety reasons, told Block Club Wednesday police handcuffed all of the barbers and detained them for eight hours, informing them it was illegal to operate a pop-up barbershop without a license or permit. * Bloomberg | Chicago Area Faces 30% Transit Cuts Without New Taxes, State Aid: The area’s three transit systems, which average about a million daily rides combined in northeast Illinois, could see collective deficits expand to $1.19 billion in 2031 from about $730 million in 2026 after emergency pandemic funds run out and if no new money is allocated, the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning said in a draft report this month. * Block Club Chicago | Judge Urges Feds To Review Whether Soccer Team’s Deal To Build On Public Housing Land Violates Civil Rights Laws: The advocates want the CHA to fulfill 20-year-old written plans to build hundreds of new homes on and around the Near West Side site. It was once part of the ABLA public housing development where 3,600 families lived. Instead, former Mayor Lori Lightfoot engineered a no-bid deal last year that would let the Chicago Fire lease 23 acres for at least 40 years. The team, owned by billionaire Joe Mansueto, plans to build a state-of-the-art training center on the property. * Crain’s | Stadium rebuild can’t happen without concerts, Northwestern insists: Until last night, it was unclear to the commissioners and members of Evanston’s City Council, who will have final approval after the Land Use Commission gives its recommendations, on what would happen if a proposal for the stadium was approved by the city, but the separate concert proposal was struck down. * Facing South | Illinois town offers solidarity to gender migrants fleeing far-right tyranny in Southern states: Right now, C.A.R.E is working with 16 “cases” through its organizational offshoot, Rainbow Refuge. They are mostly from Florida; others hail from Texas, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, according to Carrie Vine, one of C.A.R.E.’s founders and volunteer case managers. * Tribune | Column: Sheriff ‘frustrated’ after recent fatalities on Kane County roads: While these crashes have all been in different locations and were caused by different reasons, they were “mostly due to the lack of awareness or attention to the surroundings of the drivers,” he said. And even if there had been deputies “on every corner of the county, most of these crashes would’ve still occurred.” […] “People need to stop blaming the sheriff’s office for failing to have a presence” when these crashes are often caused by “sheer negligence or ignorance of traffic laws,” Hain said on Tuesday. * Tribune | Chicago calls for safety as city prepares for Mexican Independence Day events following problems last year: “Car caravans that create a threat to public safety will not be tolerated,” spokesperson Mary May said in the statement. “We also remind everyone that drag racing and drifting are not only illegal, but dangerous. Anyone in violation of the ordinance will be held accountable.” * Crain’s | Inside and around the Obama Presidential Center as it rises in Jackson Park: Cement trucks roar around the 19.3-acre site and workers — 53% of them minority, according to the center — scurry about. The shell of the combination 425-car parking garage and Chicago Public Library branch is done, all to be topped with a landscaped green roof. The center’s central tower, which will house a digital presidential library and museum filled with memorabilia from Barack and Michelle Obama’s lives and time in Washington, is now several stories in the air and set to be topped off by April. * WBEZ | Three big questions, asked and answered, about Chicago’s move to an elected school board: The move to an elected board is the realization of a dream for many organizers who have long argued that parents and communities are shut out of important decisions affecting their schools. They think an elected board will ensure that parent and community wishes and concerns will be heard. * Farm Progress | Illinois FFA soils judgers win big at Farm Progress Show: The 2023 edition featured the largest participation ever, with over 120 students competing from Indiana and Illinois combined. Sixteen schools fielded around 30 teams combined for the contest. Illinois FFA members competed against other Illinois FFA members for bragging rights and cash awards, provided to the winners by Farm Credit Illinois, one of the contest sponsors. * Marijuana Moment | Illinois Concert This Weekend Will Be State’s First To Allow On-Site Marijuana Consumption: Kicking off Saturday afternoon, the two-day Miracle in Mundelein festival will feature complimentary rolling papers, lighters and grinders, as well as dab bars and rolling stations for use by attendees. Marijuana products themselves will be available for sale through a retailer located next door. * Block Club Chicago | ‘DMVs’ In Illinois? Secretary Of State Says So — But It’s Not Quite What You Think: Asked Thursday if “DMV” was part of an official change in terminology by his office, Giannoulias joked that he’s “not creative enough” to launch a rebrand. Instead, the acronym is just a way to specifically refer to the services offered at each location, he said. * NYT | Philanthropies Pledge $500 Million to Address Crisis in Local News: The initiative, called Press Forward, is spearheaded by the MacArthur Foundation and supported by organizations including the Knight Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
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UIC’s Great Cities Institute looks closely at Chicago’s mayoral runoff numbers
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Block Club Chicago…
* Some selected bullet points from the study…
* A deeper dive into Latino voting patterns…
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Today’s quotable
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Our old pal Maxwell…
* Full quote…
Please pardon all transcription errors.
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Here’s something you don’t see every day
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* Go to the website and scroll down and you’ll see a link to the explanation for the governor’s award…
OK, a bit much on the laudatory side for my taste, but whatevs. It’s their shop, they can say what they want. Maybe they’re looking for a future check. * But here’s a paragraph I edited out from the above explanation…
OK, what? * I was eventually able to reach an official with the organization, who asked that his name not be used. He said the Hall of Fame (which is a virtual institution, not a physical structure) asked the governor’s office for some copy to post on the site, but never heard back. So, “we just threw that up on the website as a placeholder.” I told him I wasn’t looking to bash the governor because, let’s admit, I’m not exactly an athlete these days either, so I have no room to talk. And I wasn’t looking to bash his group, or whoever wrote that bio. I just thought it was hilarious, and so has everyone else I’ve sent the excerpt to this week. He took it in stride. “Go right ahead,” he laughed. “I’ll take all the PR I can get.” Consider it done.
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Groundbreaking finally held for SIUE health science building
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
The building was supposed to have been completed by now, but SIU President Dan Mahony told reporters that the pandemic explained much of the delay. Also note that LG Stratton is quoted in this release, even though she wasn’t present at today’s event. We discussed this topic yesterday.
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Food for thought
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Far too much of our public discourse is at the cartoon level…
…Adding… I just realized that the national Republican Legislative Campaign Committee is meeting in Chicago this week. So, if the city is truly the cartoonish hellscape the GOP regularly claims, why the heck are they there? It’s all just rhetoric.
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It’s not likely to get any better
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Yesterday…
Cristina Pacione-Zayas, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff, said much the same thing last month. * OK, keep in mind when reading the figures in this next item that the DNC announced Chicago would host the convention on April 11th…
Title 42 expired on May 11th, which also had a lot to do with this. * From Amnesty International’s report on Venezuela…
* Inflation has been a gigantic problem…
…Adding… Good point in comments…
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Open thread
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * This week is just flying by. What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Tribune | Prosecutors do not intend to call ex-Ald. Daniel Solis to testify in Ed Burke trial: Prosecutors notified defense teams via a letter Wednesday about the tactical decision to keep Solis from testifying, meeting a deadline set by U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall, sources with knowledge of the letter told the Tribune. Prosecutors did leave one caveat, saying they could potentially call Solis if Burke’s lawyers tried to present an entrapment defense. * Tribune | Michael Madigan relinquishing his remaining elected post as Democratic committeeman: His protege, 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn, confirmed Madigan was not running for the committee position and said that he planned “to circulate petitions (for the post) and see how it goes.” * WMBD | Weaver running for re-election in Illinois House 93rd District, Democrat challenger emerges: Weaver says he reached out to his first known opponent, Democrat Zoey Carter of Pekin, on Facebook after she announced her candidacy last week. He says he wants to keep the race cordial and respectful. “I think it’s important to have open lines of communication, because Zoey may say something at some point that I believe is untruthful or deceptive, and I’d like to be able to call that out,” Weaver said. “And I also empower Zoey to have that same relationship with me. * Patch | Darien Area Lawmaker Bowing Out: On Wednesday, Rep. John Egofske, a Lemont Republican, said he wanted to focus on his other elected job, mayor of Lemont. * WJBC | Head of Illinois Emergency Management blaming climate change for severity of weather: “We have seen over fifteen different billion-dollar disasters in the United States in 2022. That’s up from where it was in 2021,” said Gen. (Ret.) Alicia Tate-Nadeau. “We need to make sure that we are prepared to respond to those. And of that, there were $332 billion worth of damages. $181 billion of that was from uninsured folks.” * WTTW | 14 Chicago Public Schools Employees, Officials Connected to PPP Loan Fraud, Watchdog Report Finds: In one case, a district full-time employee who makes more than $140,000 per year claimed in their loan application to have earned more than $100,000 in 2019 alone by working as a chef. * Sun-Times | Civilian oversight commission poised to bury CPD’s error-filled gang database: Three years ago, CPD unveiled plans to upgrade and remodel its gang database to eliminate racial and ethnic biases and mistakes pinpointed by then-Inspector General Joe Ferguson. Those mistakes included two people listed as 132 years old and 13 people recorded as 118 years old. * Tribune | Aldermen, mayor and other Chicago officials set for another, albeit smaller, pay bump: This time around, the salary bump would be far smaller: 2.24%, according to a memo from the city’s budget office obtained by the Chicago Tribune. City Council members have until the end of Sept. 15 to reject the raise, or else it will automatically be applied to their salaries next year, the budget office informed them last month. * Sun-Times | Restaurant association offers alternative to ending subminimum wage for tipped workers: Armed with a survey showing a higher wage could be a death knell for smaller restaurants, association President Sam Toia is proposing a less costly alternative. He’s urging dramatically higher fines for restaurants that thumb their noses at the mandate that restaurant owners make up the difference whenever their tipped workers — now paid $9.48 an hour — don’t make enough in tips to reach the $15.80-an-hour mandatory minimum wage that applies to all other Chicago workers. * IBJ | Intersect Illinois looks to John Atkinson as board chairman: John Atkinson, managing director and chairman of Marsh Chicago, has been nominated as Chairman of Intersect Illinois’ board of directors. Atkinson will bring his vast leadership experience in both the public and private sectors to advance economic growth and help bring jobs to Illinois. In this role, Atkinson looks forward to partnering with Governor Pritzker to both engage Illinois’ business leaders, as well as drive economic development throughout the state. * SJ-R | Jacksonville man charged with threatening Biden, Obama, Hillary Clinton on social media: According to the initial complaint in the U.S. District Court of the Central District of Illinois, Mouser, under the account @tryntakeit, posted expletive-laced threats to Biden, his wife Jill, and son, Hunter on Aug. 10. Mouser then taunted police by saying that they were too scared to come to his house, as he was armed. * Sun-Times | Ex-Chicago Park District electrician gets more than 3 years for helping break through barricades on Jan. 6: Federal prosecutors alleged that Daniel Leyden of Chicago was among those “directly responsible” for the breach of a police barricade around the Peace Monument to the west of the Capitol, and that his actions helped set the tone for the mob that attacked the Capitol that day. Prosecutors say Leyden also raised his arms in triumph after he helped break through a secondary barricade made of metal bike racks, even though at least two officers were trapped underneath it. Both suffered serious injuries, authorities say. * SJ-R | Gwendolyn Harrison named Lincoln Library director pending city council approval: Harrison’s appointment was on first reading during council meeting Tuesday. Also on first reading was the extension of the contract of the library’s interim director, Kathryn Harris. Votes on both could come as early as Sept. 19. * Sun-Times | After 41 years covering sports, ABC 7 Chicago’s Jim Rose to retire: But for all that, Rose said, “I couldn’t have been more fortunate than to come to Chicago.” It has passionate fans, he said, and he got to cover Michael Jordan from the very start, getting a front-row seat to view six NBA championships and the greatest sports story of the era.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Sep 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.
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