Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
Setting aside the Madigan stuff for a moment (if you can), Bridgeview is eye-deep in debt because the town financed a gigantic soccer stadium which doesn’t currently have an MLS team. It’s still in junk bond territory, according to S&P. And now he’s on a board that, by its own account, is “one of the largest issuers of private activity bonds in the nation.” * Press release…
The complete scorecard is here. * Rep. Dan Didech’s new Republican opponent…
Gov. Pritzker won that district by almost 36 points. Mr. Henning is on his own. * WTTW…
Ald. Rodriguez Sanchez won that February race by 21 points. * Isabel’s roundup… * Politico | ‘A big f-ing deal’: Dem convention delegates will stay within Chicago city limits: “It means we’ll be able to conduct joint activities together whether it’s nighttime fundraisers or events. You name it,” Ken Martin, chair of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party for the past 13 years and vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, told POLITICO. * Crain’s | Why rescheduling would be more than just a tax break for cannabis: Now that the Department of Health and Human Services recommended moving cannabis to schedule 3, the industry is asking what impact a potential reclassification would have on the financial futures of U.S. cannabis companies. Mike Regan, director of research at Excelsior Equities, recently spoke with Green Market Report to break down the math. “Consensus estimates expect about $4.3 billion of total gross profit in 2024 for the public U.S. marijuana companies, so removing 280E taxes would free up about $900 million to pay interest expenses and be reinvested in operations, marketing, and employees,” he said. * Center Square | New Illinois program aims to help reduce legal fights among divorcing parents: Established by the Illinois Supreme Court, the program allows local circuit courts to establish a program permitting judges to appoint a “parenting coordinator” to resolve minor disputes between parents who cannot come to agreement with each other. * Chalkbeat | Illinois parent mentors kick off the school year, ready to get back into classrooms: The Parent Mentor Program has around 2,000 parent mentors and staff in over 200 schools, at almost 40 school districts around the state, according to a press release. The organization works with 44 community-based organizations across the state to help recruit parents from their neighborhoods. Through the program, community organizations train parents to work in their child’s school — experience that they can later use to work in classrooms as a special education classroom assistant or toward becoming a teacher. * Crain’s | United Airlines lifts nationwide ground stop: This is the second ground stop this year due to a computer malfunction. Southwest Airlines issued a ground stop April 18 that delayed nearly 2,000 flights nationwide. * SJ-R | Here’s the latest on what we know about the cybersecurity attack on HSHS systems: Workers are still trying to restore the clinical, administrative and communications systems that were impacted by the attack, including MyChart communication, which helps patients schedule, manage, and check in for appointments; message care teams; pay bills; get test results and after-visit instructions and request prescription refills. * WBEZ | Chicago says employers should give contracts to domestic workers, but that’s not happening: As of January 2022, house cleaners, nannies and caregivers who work in Chicago are entitled to a written contract in their preferred language, outlining, at minimum, their wage and work schedule. If households use an agency, the agency is responsible for providing workers with the contract. Other provisions in a written contract might include who provides supplies, what happens when an employer cancels, and situations where a worker might be asked to do something outside their scope. The contracts are meant to protect workers from being taken advantage of, as well as to make employers’ expectations clear. * Sun-Times | Chicago Trump Tower’s pollution fines don’t have to be covered by insurers, court rules: The state agency said that every day, the owners of the building drew about 20 million gallons of water out of the Chicago River for its cooling system and released the same amount back into the river at a higher temperature — potentially causing harm to fish and other aquatic life. * Benzinga | Benzinga Cannabis Capital Conference Unites Industry Titans and Advocates in Chicago: Speakers for the Sept. 27-28 event include Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker, former Rep. Ed Perlmutter, former Sen. Cory Gardner, and more. … Benzinga Cannabis Capital Conference, the world’s largest and most successful cannabis investing and finance event, will return to Chicago on Sept. 27-28, 2023, at the Magnificent Mile Marriott in the heart of the Windy City. This year’s event promises to be an extraordinary convergence of thought leaders, policymakers, advocates, and institutional investors at a time when community is vital to the success of the industry. * WBEZ | New union petitions continue to rise in Chicago, following last year’s trends: The high number of new union petitions is even more powerful when combined with high success rates of union votes, [Robert Bruno, professor of Labor and Employment Relations at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign] explained. His research has found that most petitions for new unions are making it past the union elections, which if successful, means the union can officially enter negotiations with the employer. * Citizens for Ethics | Routine Disqualification: Every state has kept ineligible candidates off the ballot, and Trump could be next: In Illinois, the secretary of state excluded presidential candidate Linda Jenness from the ballot because she was 31, four years younger than the requirement in Article II of the U.S. Constitution that a president must be at least 35 years old. Following Jenness’ petition for candidacy, the State Electoral Board, composed of state election officials including the secretary of state, governor, and attorney general, voted to deny certification, excluding Jenness from the ballot on two grounds. First, Jenness refused to submit a signed loyalty oath, which Illinois state law required at the time. And second, Jenness did not meet the federal constitutional requirement of being at least 35 years old. * AP | Conservative book ban push fuels library exodus from national association that stands up for books: This summer, the state libraries in Montana, Missouri and Texas and the local library in Midland, Texas, announced they’re leaving the ALA, with possibly more to come. Right-wing lawmakers in at least nine other states — Arizona, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota and Wyoming — demand similar action. * The Guardian | Texas fracking billionaire brothers fuel rightwing media with millions of dollars: “Farris and Dan Wilks, who believe their billions were given to them by God, have spent the last decade working to advance a dominionist ideology by funding far-right organizations and politicians that seek to dismiss climate change as ‘God’s will’, remove choice, demonize the LGBTQ community, and tear down public education, all to turn America into a country that gives preference to and imposes their extreme beliefs on everyone,” said Chris Tackett, a Texas-based campaign finance analyst. * Star Tribune | Consumers have yet to develop a taste for Kernza, the environmental wonder grain: “I still have half of my 2021 crop in storage, I have all of my 2022 crop in storage, and at this point I will have all of my 2023 crop in storage with no market available to me,” Coffman said. He decided to plant only 10 acres of Kernza next year, down from 30.
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First look at mass transit rethink
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Greg Hinz…
Many thanks to Greg for reading the entire study. He has more, and the study is here. Bottom line: This is gonna be a huge lift. Huge.
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Meanwhile… in Opposite Land
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Minnesota…
Illinois passed a similar law, but it was not funded. * Michigan…
In Illinois, at 16, minors can get married with parental permission. * Denmark…
Here’s the Illinois statute…
* California…
* Texas…
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * WBEZ…
* The Question: Your suggestions for the class syllabus?
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Murderous carjacker caught in three hours because of eyewitness, police and high tech
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Harwood Heights Police Department…
The victim later died. * The Law Enforcement Agencies Data System, or LEADS, is run by the Illinois State Police and “allows access to Criminal History Information, Hot Files and Interdepartmental Messaging as well as an access portal to the Secretary of State Drivers License and Vehicle Database, NCIC [National Crime Information Center] and other Federal Databases.” ISPERN is the Illinois State Police Emergency Radio Network. Information on the Flock license plate reader system and its LPR cameras is here. A good eyewitness, combined with quick and strong police work and the proper use of technology resulted in an apprehension within 3 hours of an absolutely hideous crime.
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Some stories from the break
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Background is here if you need it. Decertified Riverside cop’s career is back on track after state committee backs appeal. Tribune…
* Chalkbeat…
* A year since the first buses of migrants arrived from Texas, Tribune reporters reflect on Chicago and Illinois’ response…
* More… * Daily Herald | At last, a move to lure teachers for disabled : Over the past 14 years as a parent advocate for my adult son with autism, I have passed from start to finish, over seven state developmental disability pieces of legislation. None have been more important than the last two that passed through the General Assembly, SB 3972 and just recently SB1558. This legislation will allow interested students from junior and senior year in Illinois high schools through the first two years of college to set up training programs through the Illinois Department of Human Services for credit courses and apprenticeship programs that will provide a career path to be a direct support professional, to work with adults with developmental disabilities in adult day programs and group homes. * Tribune | State Rep. Mayfield behind drafting of Illinois Literacy Plan; ‘I knew we needed to do something’: When passage of the legislation became certain in the spring, the ISBE began to write a first draft of its Illinois Literacy Plan. It began a four-city listening tour the same day the law was signed, ending with virtual sessions July 31 and Aug. 4. Educators, organizations and other individuals who want to give their ideas about the Illinois Literacy Plan and teaching literacy in the state’s schools must submit them online to the ISBE by Sept. 1 to have it considered for the next draft of the plan. * Labor Tribune | Union member, Labor ally seek to unseat Elik for Illinois’ 111th House District: At least two Democrats are planning to challenge Republican state Rep. Amy Elik for the 111th House District next year. Labor ally Don McDonough and union member Nick Raftopoulos have both launched their efforts to win the Democratic nomination for the 111th District. * Jim Dey | Changing of the guard for Vermilion County Democrats: Vermilion County Democrats have a new leader. Mickensy Ellis-White, who unsuccessfully sought the appointment to fill the late state Sen. Scott Bennett’s legislative seat, has replaced former party chairwoman Sandra Lawlyes. * WTVO | Illinois opens new center to train students for the trades: Governor JB Pritzker cut the ribbon on the South Central Illinois Training & Innovation Center on Monday, which is located about 40 miles south of Springfield in Litchfield. It will give high school students an opportunity to train for certain jobs. The idea is for these students to get a boost so they are able to enter the work force more quickly when they graduate. * WAND | Illinois bill calls for age verification to access porn websites, protect vulnerable kids: Under this plan, porn companies could face a $5,000 fine for each day they fail to have reasonable age verification methods. The Attorney General would also have the power to investigate violations of the law after companies receive 30 days to comply. Courts may impose an additional civil penalty of up to $10,000 for each company “knowingly failing to perform reasonable age verification methods.” * CNN Politics | Dana Bash asks Pritzker about abortion limits: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker tells CNN’s Dana Bash that women from nearby states are coming to Illinois because his state protects abortion rights. * Center Square | Pritzker ‘not informed’ if AG will appeal injunction against pregnancy center law: “Well, I am not the one who takes that on,” Pritzker told The Center Square. “That is the job of the Attorney General, and I do not know. He has not informed me of what his plans are for that.” […] “I think Kwame Raoul will let it die. I do not think he has the guts to appeal it,” Glennon said. “I wish he would because then the [Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals] would then further affirm what is going on here. They may try to amend the law, they may have to gut it to make it constitutional, or they may just let it die.” * Crain’s | Towns could opt out of Illinois rent control ban under proposed law: Now state Rep. Hoan Huynh, whose 13th District includes north lakefront neighborhoods heavily populated by renters, is pushing to let municipalities to lift the ban within their own boundaries. HB 4104, also known as the Let the People Lift the Ban Act, is Huynh’s proposal, introduced June 6 in the Illinois House. It would allow local governments to adopt rent-control provisions if a majority of voters in the locality support a pro-rent control referendum. * WLPO | A Sit-Down with Rep. Lance Yednock: The day after State Rep. Lance Yednock announced he’d decided not to run for another term in the Illinois House of Representatives, he sat down with Tom Henson to discuss the good and bad of serving in the General Assembly, and his reasons behind his decision to leave the dome. * AG News | Legislation supports Healthy Soils Initiative: The legislation calls for IDOA to administer and support the Healthy Soils Initiative, a locally led effort to pinpoint and guide voluntary strategies to improve the ability of Illinois farms to grow vigorous crops and maintain resilience to extreme weather events. * Daily Herald | State leaders announce mental health grant program for farm groups: Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced Tuesday that chapters of FFA — the group once known as National FFA Organization — will be eligible for $1,000 grants to fund mental health awareness programs in schools and rural communities. Up to 20 such grants will be available through the Illinois FFA Foundation starting this fall. * WTTW | As Close Aides Face Prison Time, Madigan Preps for Trial Against Undefeated Prosecutors: U.S. District Court Judge Robert Blakey told Madigan’s attorneys during a brief hearing Tuesday that he was determined to start the former speaker’s racketeering trial April 1, as scheduled, putting an end to delays that will see more than two years elapse between his indictment and his trial. * South Side Weekly | Chicago Cops Accused of Domestic Violence are Rarely Disciplined: Records the Weekly obtained from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office and CPD show that at least thirty-eight officers — most from CPD but also including the Cook County Sheriffs and suburban municipalities in Cook County — were charged with domestic battery between 2011 and 2023. At least thirty-one of them had their cases dropped or dismissed, three were found not guilty, and two are active. Only two officers were convicted. That’s not altogether unusual: a 2018 study by the US Department of Justice found that prosecutors in state courts secure convictions for misdemeanor domestic violence offenses, like domestic battery, in less than one-quarter of cases. * Tribune | Oversight commission sharply criticizes arbitration award for police union that would keep discipline from public: Earlier this summer, as the city continues to negotiate a new contract with the Fraternal Order of Police, an arbitrator ruled that state law mandates that police officers accused of serious misconduct should have the option to have their cases heard in private. The arbitration award is not yet binding as the City Council hasn’t voted on the contract. * South Side Weekly | Larry Snelling Was Implicated in ’97 Corruption Scheme: In formal statements to investigators, all four denied that they had threatened the man with prison time or that they had ever told him to get them a gun. Haile claimed that after removing the gun from the bag, he’d balled up the bag and thrown it away without ever seeing the zip-lock baggies with fake crack cocaine. * ABC Chicago | Vacant Tinley Park mental health center sold to park district; 90 acres set to be sports complex: The Village of Tinley Park spent years vying for the land. It was willing to pay close to $20 million for the site and for environmental cleanup. While a casino was once floated as a possibility, the plan was to use the land for mixed-use development. * WBEZ | Chicago State president gets hefty bonus despite school citing financial strain during faculty strike: During a faculty strike this year, Chicago State University’s administration said “significant financial strain” prevented leaders from meeting professors’ salary demands. But last month the Far South Side university’s president, Zaldwaynaka Scott, was awarded a $50,000 bonus, bringing her total compensation for the year to more than $500,000. * Crain’s | Big biz challenges ComEd surcharge that costs them more than $100M: The Aug. 31 filing by the Chemical Industry Council of Illinois, along with several other individual companies and other institutional power consumers, takes aim at ComEd’s monthly charge gradually clawing back credits the utility provided customers last year and early this year under the Climate & Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA). * Block Club Chicago | Why Chicago Is Losing The War On Rats: Last year, Chicagoans made more than 50,000 rat complaints, a slight decline from the prior two years but still significantly more complaints than in recent years, according to data from the city’s 311 call center. * Block Club Chicago | One Real Estate Empire, $15 Million In Unpaid Rat-Related Tickets: The tickets were issued for such municipal infractions as uncut weeds, dumping and “providing rat harborage” by accumulating materials and junk. All of these companies are registered to a single post office box in Glenview and managed by Suzie B. Wilson, of Northbrook, state incorporation records show. Those companies rank as one of the most egregious examples of how the city of Chicago routinely fails to collect after it tickets properties for rat-related issues.
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House Dem staff union reiterates call for Speaker Welch’s recognition or a union election: ‘He should practice what he preaches’
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Axios reports on some new state laws that expand workers’ rights…
* Meanwhile, from the Tribune…
* Full statement from the Illinois Legislative Staff Association…
* Speaker Welch’s office didn’t respond to the Tribune…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Call Pritzker’s bluff and run a new nuke bill
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column from the start of the August break…
That veto and another one apparently caused a recent dustup with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The other Pritzker veto was of a bill that gave Ameren the right of first refusal to build new power lines. The United States Department of Justice has publicly argued against this concept, warning that it would reduce competition. The legislature ignored the Justice Department and passed the bill anyway. And now several of the same people who voted for that bill are demanding ethics reforms in the wake of Justice Department corruption probes in Illinois.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Open thread
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We’re back! What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Sep 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* WBEZ | Dying and disabled Illinois prisoners kept behind bars, despite new medical release law: Behind the lower-than-expected numbers is the Prisoner Review Board, a state body appointed by Pritzker and confirmed by the Illinois Senate with final say on medical release requests. As of mid-August, the board had denied nearly two-thirds of medical release requests from dying and disabled prisoners who met the medical criteria to get out of prison under the Coleman Act — including Merritt. * Tribune | Illinois House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch’s staffers say he’s rebuffed their efforts to unionize: “Despite his outspoken pro-labor rhetoric and vocal support for the right of all employees in Illinois to unionize, he is apparently intent on denying this right to his own staff,” the association said of Welch in a statement. “It should not be controversial in 2023 for a group of workers in a blue state with a strong union tradition to form a union, especially when the right to organize is enshrined in the state constitution.” * Tribune | Ex-Madigan aide Tim Mapes found guilty but he’s still collecting a big pension: Illinois’ pension laws generally require a direct connection to a crime that happened during a public employee’s official duties before a pension can be halted. Given Mapes’ lies to a federal grand jury came nearly three years after he was forced by Madigan to resign, the highly forgiving pension laws may give Mapes plenty of room to stop any efforts to halt his pension after he’s expected to be sentenced by a federal judge early next year. * Crain’s | Illinois GOP funding pitch takes a turn for the red-meat right: In a line of attack more commonly heard in deeply red states, the email links to video of a recent speech by state Sen. Andrew Chesney, R-Freeport, objecting to a bill that would require sex-neutral language in certain state health-insurance laws. In his speech, Chesney noted that the bill would specifically affect coverage for pap tests, used to screen for cervical cancer in women, and prostate tests, for men. “Biological males can’t get pap tests. . . .Biological women can’t get a prostate test,” Chesney declared. Such moves explain “why kids get confused. . . .This is why kids are dressing up as furries and want kitty litters in the bathroom.” * SJ-R | State creates task force to consider merits, needed regulations for AI: The task force will consist of 20 members and hold at least five public meetings in Chicago, Springfield, Metro East, Quad Cities and Southern Illinois. The summation of these meetings will lead to a report shared with the governor’s office and the General Assembly by Dec. 31, 2024. * Sun-Times | At O’Hare Airport, hundreds of migrants are stuck at a shelter that’s overcrowded, unsanitary: The problems at O’Hare follow a doubling of the number of incoming migrants to Chicago seeking more long-term shelter. As of Thursday, that figure was 2,089. At the airport, the number was 411, up from just 31 at the beginning of August. That population is almost four times the capacity limit initially set by the city. * Tribune | Illinois is solidly blue. So why did President Joe Biden’s reelection effort spend so much time here this summer?: Illinois is an “easy in and out to a major market in the middle of the country,” David Axelrod, political strategist for President Barack Obama and a CNN analyst, said when asked about Biden’s focus on the state this summer. “I assume some of them are picking up some campaign money while they’re here. And, it is the (DNC) convention city, so they’re building toward that.” * Tribune | Chicago treasurer accused of misconduct and ethical violations in letter city kept secret for years: City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin used government workers to plan her daughter’s birthday party and be her personal bodyguard while she also pressured public employees to hold events benefiting political allies and repeatedly misused taxpayer resources, two former top aides alleged in a recently released letter the city fought for years to keep confidential. * WBEZ | At summer’s end, Chicago murders are down 21% from horrendous 2021: Gun violence citywide has been trending down for about 20 months. By Thursday night, the Chicago Police Department had counted 420 murders during the year’s first eight months. That tally is 7.9% less than during the first eight months of 2022 and 21.3% less than during those months of 2021, when Chicago had its worst gun violence in a quarter century. * NBC Chicago | Locked out on Labor Day: Kinzie Hotel workers protest: Sanchez received a letter from Kinzie Hotel’s General Manager Karen Criss, saying in part, “We are exercising our right under the NLRA to hire a replacement worker in order to continue operations. You have an opportunity to apply for reinstatement after the strike. There is no guarantee your positions will be available.” * Crain’s | Union calls off Labor Day strike at 11 Infinity nursing homes: About 900 workers at the nursing homes owned by Infinity Healthcare Consulting of Illinois had threatened to strike over what the union said were “poverty wages” that led to dangerous staffing shortages. The union said staffing levels at Infinity nursing homes often fall critically below state-mandated minimum care hours per day. * Daily Herald | ‘Oversaturation’? Video gambling profits shrinking for many suburban businesses: A Daily Herald analysis of video gambling revenue in 70 suburban locales shows the devices in 27 towns were generating less money per machine from August 2022 through July 2023 than they were during the same months a year earlier. * CBS | Bally’s needs state’s OK before opening temporary Chicago casino in matter of days: The slots are up and running, but the doors remain closed to the public. The Illinois Gaming Board will run testing on Wednesday and Thursday. If approved, the temporary casino could be operational in days. Revenue generated could bring $55 million a year to the city. * USA Today | Student loan repayments surge ahead of official restart, but many may still be scrambling: How people handle student loans, which total $1.7 trillion spread across more than 40 million Americans, could be a barometer for which way the economy could be headed. Early voluntary payments could be seen as a sign of financially healthy consumers, but looking closer, Goldman Sachs says the situation may not be as rosy as it looks. * Crain’s | Rivian hires former Porsche exec as sales chief: Automotive News had reported in July that Gruner was jumping to Rivian after a relatively short tenure with the German luxury brand. Porsche said then that Gruner was leaving “at his own request” after less than three years. Gruner steered Porsche’s U.S. business through the pandemic and put it on track to hit a three-year sales high this year. * WCBU | Stoller says he won’t seek a third term in state Senate: The Germantown Hills Republican says his district shifted much further north after the recent remap, and he doesn’t want to be a career politician. * WBEZ | Professor Lori Lightfoot is teaching Harvard students how to run a city in a pandemic: In an interview with WBEZ, Lightfoot said she’ll use a mock press conference, a simulated community meeting and guest speakers to teach in part about the dangers of politicizing a pandemic and how to interact with the media, drawing on the lessons learned from running a city amid COVID-19. * Tribune | Secretary of state plans requiring appointments at driver service facilities begin: Walk-in service will still be available for people seeking title and registration services or hoping to renew license plate stickers in person, the release said. The secretary of state’s office is also pushing customers to go online for many driver services, including renewals of licenses and plate stickers. The office will also send more alerts to drivers advising them they can renew licenses and get other drivers services online. * SJ-R | Here are the most interesting things included in State Fair Grandstand performer contracts: McGraw was paid $750,000 guaranteed with all the box office receipts over $850,000; Parker received a guarantee of $5,000. Interesting stuff found in their rider(s): McGraw has ten pages of suggestions for meals and dressing rooms, with the suggested meals including a grilled cheese bar for lunch and a made-to-order pasta bar for dinner. As for his dressing room, McGraw asks that in addition to providing him with six cans of Coke, he also have four Muscle Milk protein drinks – preferably the “Intense Vanilla” flavor.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Sep 5, 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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