Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Adam Niemerg was kicked off the ballot…
* Press release…
* Tribune…
* Press release…
* Sun-Times…
* On this day…
* Here’s the rest…
* Block Club | The CHA Owns More Than 130 Acres Of Vacant Land And Buildings — Enough To Fill 25 City Blocks: All that vacant property could fill 25 city blocks — and the total amount at all CHA sites is likely far higher. The land was supposed to be used for new homes. Instead, it highlights decades of development delays under four mayors and eight CHA CEOs, with crippling consequences for some of the city’s poorest neighborhoods. * Tribune | Commuter advocates: The CTA vows to double rail operator trainees this year. Its data shows that’s impossible: However, the CTA’s own data reveals that the agency cannot meet this goal due to its current training requirements, recruitment and retention levels. We used the Freedom of Information Act to request the number of flaggers the CTA has employed since November 2021 — plus how many flaggers were terminated, promoted, transitioned or transferred to other roles each month since then. * WCIA | Republican Representative Adam Niemerg kicked off March primary ballot: “The objective intent of the law is to make sure that, you know, you’ve got a process, that people are qualified for the ballot. There’s no fraud involved. And, more generally, if they’re serious candidates,” UIS Professor Emeritus Kent Redfield said. “I mean, if all you had to do was say, I want to run in your names on the primary ballot, you obviously would have way too many people.” * SJ-R | Still on the ballot: ISBOE denies objection to Illinois 95th House District candidate: The decision allows Village of Chatham Trustee Kristen Chiaro to continue her campaign for Illinois House District 95, a district spanning portions of Sangamon, Macon, and Christian counties. She is the sole Democrat in the race and will face incumbent state Rep. Mike Coffey, R-Springfield, in November. * Tribune | Businesses that opened during COVID eligible for state grants: ‘Small businesses across the state are the heart of our economy’: Businesses and nonprofits that launched in 2020 or 2021, and are still open today, are eligible for up to $30,000 from the state’s Back to Business NewBiz grant program. The program is aimed at assisting businesses that were not operational prior to the pandemic, and were ineligible for other federal or state pandemic relief programs. * WRSP | New law protects workers from abusive anti-labor tactics: Scherer sponsored House Bill 3396, which set forth penalties for those who interfere with labor demonstrations. The new law went into effect on Jan.1 and introduced a $500 penalty for those who obstruct the public way or disrupt any picket or demonstration. * Madison-St. Clair Record | Madison, St. Clair Counties adjusting well to SAFE-T Act mandates, but see increased demand on public defenders: In particular, the Pretrial Fairness Act portion of the SAFE-T Act - which eliminated cash bonds - carried a heavy burden on “all of the stakeholders in our criminal justice system,” said St. Clair County Chief Judge Andrew Gleeson. “We have made continuous adjustments in response to the new Pretrial Fairness Act (PFA),” Gleeson told the Record. “As a result of extensive planning, commitment from all the stakeholders, and a willingness to adjust to needs and ever-changing interpretation of the law, we have managed to carry out the law’s requirements.” * Center Square | State Rep. Halbrook visits southern U.S. border amid migrant crisis: State Rep. Brad Halbrook, R-Shelbyville, visited the border last week to see firsthand and explained what he saw. “It was an eye-opening experience, to say the least,” Halbrook said. “I would advise everybody who is involved with policymaking to take a trip down there to see what the real story is because you get the truth when you are down there on the ground.” * Press release | Rep. Mary Gill Seeks to Preserve LSCs Right to Decide on Police Protection: State Rep. Mary Gill, D-Chicago, is introducing legislation to ensure that Chicago Local School Councils (LSC) maintain the authority to decide if Chicago Police officers are assigned to their schools. Gill’s proposed change to state law would preempt the Chicago Board of Education’s reported plan to strip LSC members of that decision-making power, which would effectively end the practice of having resource officers in any Chicago Public School. * Illinois Answers | Repeat Violators Leave Families Out in the Cold: Buildings department inspectors flagged over 700 cases where one or more tenants were living without heat or hot water at 456 buildings across the city from November of last year through this May, according to city records, when the city heat-requirement ordinances are in effect. All of those inspections were prompted by complaints made through 311 or directly to the buildings department. * Daily Herald | Should Fox River dams be removed? Groups to hold meetings: Based on the findings of a recent study, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is recommending the removal of all nine Fox River dams in Kane County, from Carpentersville to Montgomery, to restore the river’s natural wildlife habitat and improve water quality. * Daily Southtown | Parents spar over bulletin board with Pride symbols in Manhattan District 114 in Will County: Gabriella Barraco, who has children in the district, quoted parts of a speech by Theodore Roosevelt to soldiers ahead of battle before asking why the transgender flag is still on the bulletin board if sex education isn’t taught in the schools. “I bet that most of our children or us didn’t know what the transgender heart looked like before tonight,” Barraco said. “Yet its symbolism is being stamped visually into the subconscious from the very hallway.” * Sun-Times | UIC campus cop with extremist ties is banned from testifying in Cook County court cases: The officer continued to work for the state university despite acknowledging he signed up years ago with the anti-government Oath Keepers, which played a key role in the riot at the U.S. Capitol in 2021. * Block Club | City Installed 50+ Miles Of Bike-Friendly Stretches In 2023 — And Has More Planned For 2024: The Chicago Department of Transportation released its Chicago Cycling Strategy in March, laying out plans to hit the 150-mile goal “in the next couple of years.” City-designated bikeways include protected bike lanes, neighborhood greenways and other routes with painted bike markings. * Sun-Times | Breaking down Illinois’ top high school basketball teams from outside the Chicago area: There is a lot of tunnel vision for Chicago area high school basketball fans when it comes to top teams outside the city and suburbs. Without a big-named star –– i.e. EJ Liddell and Belleville West, Shaun Livingston and Peoria, Darius Miles and East St. Louis –– top teams around the state don’t typically garner the attention they deserve from the Chicago area. * Sun-Times | Chicago winter storm set to dump 6 or more inches of heavy snow: Weather forecasts as of Thursday morning say the storm will arrive early Friday with a mix of rain and snow. The precipitation will turn to all snow by 3 p.m. and could be heavy at times, complicating afternoon commutes for those trying to get home for the weekend. * Sun-Times | Going down the ‘Rat Hole?’ Viral phenom is actually decades-old squirrel imprint beloved by the block, neighbors say: “This is just like such a little lovely piece of joy,” said Winslow Dumaine, an artist whose social media post about the imprint has gained over 4 million views. “You can show this to someone who doesn’t speak a word of English, you can show this to someone 500 years ago, and they would know exactly what happened,” he added. “It’s just a universally lovely, funny thing.”
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Illinois Policy Institute ran $2.5 million deficit in 2022 as revenues fell by almost half, but group anticipates rebound
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I get lots of emails every day and some pique my interest more than others. This one, slightly edited for style, was about the Illinois Policy Institute as well as its companion 501(c)(4), the Government Accountability Alliance…
* I asked the IPI about the 2022 revenue drop and deficit…
* OK, you can click here to see the IPI’s 990s, and click here to see the IPI’s Government Accountability Alliance’s (GAA) 990s. The IPI ran some smallish deficits last decade, but nothing close to the $2.51 million deficit it experienced in 2022. And while the combined revenues for both the IPI and its c4 GAA were similar to those in 2018, there’s been quite a bit of inflation since then. So, the $10.63 million the two organizations raised during 2018 would have been $12.56 million by the end of 2022. That’s $1.59 million more than the groups actually raised in 2022. * Historical revenues for both the c3 IPI and c4 GAA using those two links above…
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Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Short-term budget gimmick creates $200 million hole next fiscal year
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
$39 for a household earning roughly double the median household income ain’t exactly a whole lot of money. Our standard exemption is basically a joke. It’s so small mainly because of the state constitution’s mandate that the income tax must be imposed at a “non-graduated rate.” * But here’s the problem: The change saved the state budget $114 million this fiscal year, but as the article notes, the costs will rise next year…
$200 million is real money. * Back to Dave’s story…
*** UPDATE *** This change was part of SB1963, which was an omnibus tax bill. From a subscriber…
Interesting.
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Out-of-state abortions in Illinois rose by 49% in 2022
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
Click here for the IDPH statistics. * Daily Herald…
* Related…
* NYT | Tracking Abortion Bans Across the Country: Twenty-one states ban abortion or restrict the procedure earlier in pregnancy than the standard set by Roe v. Wade, which governed reproductive rights for nearly half a century until the Supreme Court overturned the decision last year.
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sen. Dan McConchie filed SB2707…
* HB4423 from Rep. Jason Bunting…
* SB2669 from Sen. Jil Tracy…
* Sen. Laura Ellman introduced SB2682 yesterday…
* SB2705 from Sen. Laura Fine…
* SB2706 from Sen. Laura Murphy…
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Open thread
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: State opens migrant shelter, Pritzker talks supplemental spending plan. Capitol News Illinois…
- Pritzker said his administration is exploring ways to deter bus companies and airlines from transporting more migrants to the city from the southern border. * Related stories… * Isabel’s top picks… * Tribune | Illinois abortions surged the year Roe fell, with nearly 17,000 patients traveling from other states — a 49% spike: In contrast, the number of Illinois residents having abortions in-state decreased slightly, from a little over 40,000 in 2021 to nearly 39,000 in 2022. Abortions overall increased by about 9% from 2021 to 2022, according to the report, which was released Tuesday and includes the most recent state health department data on abortion available. * Hyde Park Herald | U. of C. students barred from county jail for criticizing restrictions : After two years of devoting their spare time to the program, they would no longer be allowed into the detention facility at 27th Street and California Avenue, because, as their supervisors told them, due to their May Sun-Times op-ed criticizing restrictions on paper materials brought to the jail. * Tribune | Migrants go without showers, dig for food in trash at city’s ‘landing zone’ as they wait for shelter: With 27 designated shelter buildings at capacity and more migrants arriving every day, numbers have overflowed to buses in the city’s “landing zone,” a parking lot run by OEMC officials. Migrants began being placed at the loading zone at the end of December after the city emptied police stations that had been housing migrants waiting for space indoors. Governor Pritzker will be at the Southern Illinois Health Care Center in Carterville at 10 am, click here to watch. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * WJOL | Rezin named co-chair of National Conference of State Legislators’ energy committee: In recognition of State Senator Sue Rezin’s (R-Morris) dedication to advancing policies that address critical issues impacting energy needs, she has been appointed as one of the co-chairs of the National Conference of State Legislatures’ (NCSL) Natural Resources, Energy, and Environment Standing Committee. * WJBC | McLean County Board to vote on migrant resolution Thursday: A resolution which would prohibit the use of taxpayer funded services for migrants sent into McLean County from another state will be introduced and voted on at Thursday’s county board m * Illinois Times | Disparity in access to college credit for high schoolers: According to the study, a small number of dual credit courses are offered through public four-year universities, but the overwhelming majority – about 97% – are offered through local community colleges. As a result, the courses offered in any given high school are strongly influenced by the policies and programs of the community college district that overlaps with the high school district. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Supreme Court to Determine If Cannabis Odor is Cause for Vehicle Search: In People v. Redmond, defendant Ryan Redmond was pulled over by Illinois State Police for an unsecure license plate and driving three miles per hour over the speed limit, court records show. Upon smelling cannabis, the officer searched the vehicle and found about one gram of cannabis in the center console. He later charged Redmond with a misdemeanor for failure to transport cannabis in an odor-proof container, according to court documents. * Check CU | School Board Refuses AG Order to Release Secret Meeting Recording – Yorkville, Illinois: On January 9th, the district denied that request, arguing that “the Open Meetings Act prohibits the release of closed session recordings and minutes to the public.” The denial was issued by District FOIA Officer Cathy Anderson. Check CU has also searched online, including on the Yorkville District 115 website and their Youtube Channel, for any place that the District might have made the August 7th meeting recording “publicly available”, in accordance with the AG order, but the recording could not be located. * WAND | Illinois lawmakers discuss potential move to universal vote-by-mail system: A proposal in Springfield could allow the state to send vote-by-mail ballots to all eligible voters instead of having people apply to have their ballots sent in the mail. Rep. Carol Ammons (D-Urbana) said counties could save money by not having to send notifications and applications for vote-by-mail ballots to voters. * WBEZ | Journalists from Chicago and Paris reflect on common experiences with racial profiling: In Chicago and the United States, “the problem of profiling is something that is pervasive, and to see that that is the case in France was eye opening,” said Alden Loury, WBEZ’s data projects editor. Last September, WBEZ and the Investigative Project on Race and Equity published a three-part investigation that revealed stark disparities in the share of Black drivers stopped by Illinois police compared to white drivers. * Rock River Current | 8 Ways Rockford Will Spend Federal American Rescue Plan Dollars In The Next Phase: The next use for federal post-pandemic stimulus money in the city will go toward bolstering adult education, supporting survivors of domestic violence and improving the historic field where the Rockford Peaches once played. * Sun-Times | Markham woman named 2023 Bears fan of the year, wins free trip to Super Bowl LVIII: In addition to her relentless support of the Bears, Leach was picked as the team’s nominee because of her “significant community involvement in her hometown … as well as her dedication to the club’s community initiatives,” the Bears said in a story posted on their website. * Sun-Times | TSA intercepted 122 firearms at Chicago airports in 2023, including record number at Midway: Officers stopped 72 handguns from making it through security checkpoints at O’Hare International Airport, a decrease from the previous year, according to the TSA. However, a new annual record was set at Midway, where 50 firearms were seized — breaking the previous record of 42 handguns set in 2021.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Jan 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news the way we’ve done since Twitter stopped ScribbleLive from working…
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