Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Dec 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Press release…
* Tribune…
* ‘Tis the season…
* More… * QCBJ | Illinois Chamber of Commerce deepens its legislative team: The Illinois Chamber of Commerce announced the addition of Keith Wheeler as senior legislative affairs advisor in a news release today, Dec. 19. He will join the chamber’s Government Affairs team effective Jan. 1, 2024. Mr. Wheeler is a business owner and former Illinois House of Representatives member who served the 50th District from 2015 to 2023. * WTTW | United, American Airlines Push Back Against Rising Costs of O’Hare Airport Expansion: United and American airlines want to ground — or significantly scale back — the massive O’Hare International Airport redevelopment designs. The change comes after the airlines signed an agreement to foot much of the bill through increased gate fees. But now the airlines say the project is over budget, and pandemic-era losses put them at a disadvantage. Will the elaborate Jeanne Gang-designed Terminal 2 ever take flight? * QC Times | Bureau of Prisons cuts retention bonuses at Thomson Prison: Staff at Thomson Prison learned Monday morning the Bureau of Prisons will no longer provide them a 25% retention bonuses after Dec. 31, 2023. Retention bonuses for Thomson staff, equivalent to about $16,000 annually, were approved in September 2021 after pressure from Illinois Democratic Senators Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin and then- U.S. Rep. Cheri Bustos, according to previous reporting. * Crain’s | Plasma company settles Illinois AG lawsuit over donor discrimination: Plasma collection company CSL Plasma and its parent company CSL Behring have settled with the Illinois attorney general’s office, resolving a lawsuit alleging the company’s policies discriminate against people with disabilities, the AG’s office said in a press release Thursday. * Block Club | Chicago Police Make An Arrest In Only 20 Percent Of Fatal Shootings: The Trace filed a Freedom of Information Act request with CPD and learned that police made arrests in 21 percent of fatal shootings between 2013 and mid-October this year. That number has remained almost the same over the past decade, dropping slightly from 19.4 percent in 2013 to 18.6 percent in 2022, which is significantly lower than the national average for overall homicide clearance rates. In 2022, the most recent year for which the FBI’s national data is available, about 45 percent of homicides across the country were cleared by arrest. * The Beverly Review | Burke won’t seek return to Springfield: State Rep. Kelly Burke has decided not to seek re-election for the position she has held since 2011, a decision she made in the fall. “I still have a lot of enthusiasm; I love the job,” said Burke, who was also elected as mayor of Evergreen Park in 2021. “I had some health challenges during the year, and it made me think that it might be nature’s way of telling me it’s time to slow down a little bit.” * Sun-Times | IHSA announces that high school football district proposal has failed: Illinois high schools voted against the implementation of a district system for football the Illinois High School Association announced on Tuesday. The new format would have divided the state’s football-playing schools into 64 eight-team districts, eight per class. Schools would have played seven district games in Weeks 3-9 and would have been able to schedule any opponent for non-district games in Weeks 1-2. * The Bond Buyer | Citi’s exit carries costs for issuers, market liquidity, but industry expected to weather it: A tough year for Wall Street municipal underwriting firms culminated Thursday with Citigroup’s announcement it would exit the business, a stunning move that market participants warned would raise state and city financing costs and that Citi would come to regret as headwinds calm and business rebounds. * Daily Herald | Ski resorts tackle unseasonable warmth: Bartlett’s Villa Olivia resort plans to open its hills to skiers on Friday, but on the outset of another warm winter, managers are already sensing a trend becoming familiar in the Midwest’s ski industry. The Chicago area had an unusually warm winter last year — the 14th warmest on record going back to 1872 — and the season seems to be headed in a similar direction this year. Every day of December so far has seen average temperatures warmer than the region’s climatological normal for the day. * WAND | Retired ISP Colonel, Commander of Macon County Law Enforcement Training Center dies from cancer: Tad Williams, 57, a retired Illinois State Police Colonel as well as a retired Commander of Macon County Law Enforcement Training Center, passed away on Saturday. Williams, who served in law enforcement for 33 years, died after a battle with cancer. His career with the Illinois State Police took him across the state before he settled back in the Decatur area, according to an obituary shared by his children. With the ISP, Williams became a colonel in 2015 to serve as Deputy Director of the Division of Operations. * Sun-Times | Prosecutors drop charges against man whose murder conviction was based on legally blind witness. ‘Best Christmas gift ever’: Earlier this month, a judge overturned Harris’ conviction but he remained in jail because prosecutors planned to try him again. On Tuesday, prosecutors said they had decided not to move forward with the case and dropped all charges against Harris. No physical evidence connected Harris to the shooting that left Rondell Moore dead and Quincy Woulard hurt. The case was largely based on the testimony of Dexter Saffold, who was legally blind and whose vision problems were documented in court records for years before the shooting. * SJ-R | The Southern Illinoisan was sold. Then the new owner eliminated its entire news staff: Brandhorst said he still hopes that Paxton’s management makes good on promises to maintain news coverage of the region. “But,” he continued, “in terms of watchdog, ‘capital J’ journalism, that’s not a thing that at the moment exists here. And I would hope that the new owners and those responsible for the Southern will try to really lift this place up, really do some investigative journalism, watchdog reporting and accountability within the community. … They seem to talk like they’re going to uphold those things. But who knows?” * Dallas Morning News | Brands see online content creators as key to shaping buying habits, especially Gen Z: Gen Z – generally defined as those born in the mid- to late-1990s to the early 2010s – now makes up 40% of all global consumers with spending power estimated to exceed $150 billion annually. How they shop is important to brands’ bottom lines.
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- Stix Hix - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 2:58 pm:
To: Matt Topic
Congratulations on the free publicity for your field of expertise, and for enlightening us on abusing FOIA.
- Hannibal Lecter - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 3:30 pm:
“I made a #FOIA request to
@fbi
for records indexed for the term “Santa Claus.” FBI claims I did not provide enough info, and asked for Santa’s DOB, addresses, employment, and information about any FBI investigations into #Santa. I’m not making this up.”
Stupid requests get stupid responses.
- Rich Miller - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 3:40 pm:
People, it’s Christmas. Lighten up.
- 47th Ward - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 3:48 pm:
Address: #1 Christmas Street, North Pole.
Employment: Toy Maker.
Or maybe the Post Office can share the address they send the letters to? Trying to keep it light.
- DuPage Saint - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 3:54 pm:
Without proper I D the FBI might send stuff on the wrong Santa
- Three Dimensional Checkers - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 3:57 pm:
That’s funny because I filed a FOIA request to Treasury for “records indicating a waste of government time and resources” and got a picture of Matt Topic.
- JoanP - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 4:14 pm:
Oh, come on. Everyone knows that Santa’s name is really Kris Kringle, that he’s from the North Pole but lives in a nursing home on Long Island, he works at Macy’s, and is as old as his tongue and slightly older than his teeth.
- Hannibal Lecter - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 4:19 pm:
=== People, it’s Christmas. Lighten up. ===
Sometimes the holiday season brings people down more than it lightens them up.
- very old soil - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 4:45 pm:
Right on Joan, Watched it again last night. Merry Christmas.
- Steve - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 4:57 pm:
“With this new minimum wage increase, we are once again making Illinois a more affordable”
This is one of the greatest lines ever. I thought the demand for labor was always a downward sloping curve.
- Dotnonymous x - Tuesday, Dec 19, 23 @ 5:26 pm:
- Sometimes the holiday season brings people down more than it lightens them up. -
Those people might try faking a smile…can’t hurt…may even help.
Merry Christmas/Happy Holidays to one and all.