In a hotly contested western suburban state House race, outgoing state Rep. Kelly Burke is raising eyebrows for a letter she wrote endorsing Rick Ryan, her pick to succeed her. Burke tells voters Ryan has “deep roots in our community” and that he’s a candidate that “we can trust.” And without naming Ryan’s opponent, Sonia Anne Khalil, Burke refers to the campaign as “outsiders” and “people outside the district pushing their own candidate.” The phrases are seen as racial microaggressions given Khalil, who has lived in the district her whole life, is Arab American. The 36th District covers the Evergreen Park, Oak Lawn and Palos Hills communities.
Burke called the claim “desperate,” saying she’s talking about outside political influences similar to what she faced in her own 2010 race. “Rick has been working in the district for 20 years, and he’s being supported by leaders from within the district.” His opponent is sending out mailers featuring Congresswoman Delia Ramirez and former County Clerk David Orr, “who don’t even live in the district.” Her letter, she told Playbook, makes “a clear distinction” between the candidate vs. her supporters.
* Press release…
The Illinois Supreme Court has received and approved the report and recommendations from the Pretrial Release Appeals Task Force (Task Force).
The Task Force was convened to thoroughly review pretrial release appeals and their impact on the caseloads in each of the five Appellate Court districts. The report notes the staggering increase in caseloads the appellate courts have faced since the implementation of the Pretrial Fairness Act (PFA) began on Sept. 18, 2023, going from an average of 17 annual bond appeals to a projected 4,557 appeals under the PFA – a 268-fold increase.
The amendments are available here and are effective April 15, 2024.
“There is no doubt that the volume of PFA cases is a problem; that’s why the Task Force was created,” said Fourth District Appellate Court Justice Eugene G. Doherty, who Chaired the Task Force. “We think our recommendations can help address the volume while making the process of appellate review more meaningful.”
The full report with recommendations can be found here.
The Task Force’s creation was announced in January 2024 in response to the implementation of the Pretrial Fairness Act (PFA) in September 2023 creating a dramatic increase in the number of appeals from pretrial release decisions by the circuit courts.
In its report the Task Force proposed amendments which are intended to streamline the PFA appeal process while ensuring meaningful review of decisions to detain, release, or impose conditions of release in the pretrial setting.
The National Association of Realtors will drop the long-held policy on broker commissions that has been the target of several lawsuits, the Chicago-based professional association announced March 15.
It’s the end of a Chicago-born standard of real estate sales, where the agents for buyer and seller agree to share a commission, most often dividing in half a commission of around 5% to 6%, although NAR’s rules say the split can give one party as little as zero. Lawsuits seeking to kill the standard have argued the sharing rule amounts to collusion to keep prices high by preventing buyers’ agents from competing against one another on price. […]
NAR will also pay $418 million over the next four years to settle the lawsuits, which revolve around the claim that its commission standards violate antitrust laws. Key among them is the Sitzer-Burnett case, where a Kansas City jury hit NAR and two big brokerages with a $1.78 billion verdict in October. With NAR no longer pursuing an appeal, only HomeServices of America, which in Chicago operates Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Chicago, is still defending, NAR’s release said.
* Yesterday’s early vote totals for Chicago…
The Early Vote total stands at 48,364 ballots cast (with 1,659 Same Day Registration, 32 Provisional votes).
48,583 Vote By Mail ballots have been returned to the Board – total VBM applications stands at 178,316.
The grand total is 96,947 ballots cast so far for the March 19, 2024 Presidential Primary Election in Chicago.
If you’re reading this, you’re probably a news and politics junkie. Someone who reads multiple news sites a day, follows several news organizations on social media, and receives a few email newsletters.
Most people aren’t like this. A 2020 study found that news represents just 14 percent of Americans’ media consumption. Attention does pick up, however, during an election year. While roughly one-third of Americans closely follow the news in non-election years, 39 to 43 percent do so when there’s a presidential election, according to Gallup.
However, new research—and recent reporting about how artificial intelligence is changing the online information environment—suggests that even as people start tuning into the election, they could end up more misinformed, not less. The reason: People have greater faith in their own abilities to “fact-check” the news than they have in the news itself. In the past year, we have published two academic studies that suggest this faith is misplaced, and that it actually leaves people more likely to believe misinformation.
* WBEZ | Routine traffic stops have resulted in gun charges for thousands of Chicagoans: In 2014, about 60 unlawful use of a weapon cases stemmed from traffic stops in Cook County. In 2023, there were nearly 500 — an increase of more than 700%, according to an analysis of data from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office in response to an open records request. During that 10-year span, more than 3,600 unlawful use of a weapon cases resulted from traffic stops, with 86% made by Chicago Police.
* PJ Star | Iconic folk punk band Violent Femmes will play unique show in Peoria: The Peoria concert will kick off with the group performing its second album, 1984’s “Hallowed Ground.” The band will then play its debut album, the self-titled “Violent Femmes,” which included the songs “Blister in the Sun” and “Gone Daddy Gone.” The show will conclude with a few tracks from later albums.
* Block Club Chicago | For 40 Years, The ‘South Side Irish’ Song Has Been A Neighborhood Anthem. Meet The Man Behind It: McEldowney, 77, a perennial performer and raunchy wisecracker at Irish pub Reilly’s Daughter, gets his own float in the South Side Irish Parade traveling through Beverly and Morgan Park. “He’s the guy with the neighborhood’s fight song,” said Skinny Sheahan, a former right-hand man to Mayor Richard M. Daley. “All the kids around here learned the words in basements of churches. They grow up and sing it at packed bars. It’s a rite of passage.”
* SJ-R | The IHSA has set a timeline for adding a shot clock to Illinois high school basketball: “I think we’re looking at probably three years, to be honest with you,” [Illinois High School Association assistant executive director Kurt Gibson] said in an interview with the Aledo-based FM radio station on March 9. “We’ve had a couple of really good years with this experiential phase. I think we’re going to talk about maybe allowing schools to transition into just using it during the regular season without having to have any approval.
* SJ-R | Thousands of dollars raised for families of fatal school bus, semi crash in Illinois: Since Monday, the GoFundMe has already raised over $39,000 in assistance to the families, with 552 donations. “Every contribution, big or small, will make a difference and show these families that they’re not alone during this incredibly difficult time,” organizer for donations Dominic Thurman wrote on the page. “Your support will help cover funeral expenses, medical bills, and other unforeseen costs, allowing these families to focus on healing without the added stress of financial worries.”
* Can you imagine the outrage if a Chicago landlord was callously dithering about whether to mass-evict 5,600 tenants, many of them children, some of them in quarantine?
Progressive alderpersons/legislators/activists/unions/etc. would be freaking out of their minds.
Well, that’s pretty much what’s been playing out in Chicago, only the dithering landlord is the city itself and the tenants are asylum-seeking migrants. And most (not all) of the progressives have remained unusually silent as a self-declared progressive mayor has cavalierly dangled a sword of Damocles over the heads of thousands of people, some of whom have been exposed to the measles virus.
“Pressed by reporters, Johnson said [Wednesday] he did not know how many migrants were on the verge of being evicted from city shelters,” WTTW reported last night. “A spokesperson for Johnson said conversations were ongoing Thursday morning about whether the limits would be enforced.”
This is what happens when a mayor tries to move on from a crisis before the crisis is actually over. Governments can’t just wish away reality. Sun-Times…
Evictions for migrants in Chicago shelters all around the city will begin Sunday, the city announced Friday.
The city clarified the rules of evictions and who will be impacted by them at a briefing Friday afternoon, less than 24 hours before the previously announced shelter exit dates.
The city will give a reprieve to migrant families with children under age 18 until the end of the school year but will carry out evictions of migrants in shelters strictly for adults, beginning with 35 individuals in total from the shelters on Elston Avenue near Goose Island, the former Wadsworth Elementary school building in Woodlawn, and the Gage Park Field House.
* However, it looks like the city may finally have a plan beyond mass, same-day eviction threats. They’re moving to much more manageable staggered evictions, which makes more sense. The “plan” they had would’ve unnecessarily flooded the landing zone. Tribune…
The mayor had told reporters Wednesday the city would move ahead with limited Saturday evictions, amid outcry from a group of aldermen opposed to the policy.
Instead, 35 migrants will get kicked out Sunday. Another 244 are set to be removed by the end of March, and 1,782 more are scheduled to be forced to leave shelters between April 1 and April 30, the administration said.
The late change comes as residents of a Lower West Side shelter currently grapple with a measles outbreak. As of Thursday, 12 cases of the highly infectious disease have been reported in Chicago — the first such cases in five years — ten of which are from the migrant facility that is in the midst of a lockdown.
It is unclear how many migrants would have been affected were the Johnson administration to have proceeded. While his team previously estimated as many as 5,600 migrants could be removed under the shelter limit policy, he hinted Wednesday that scores would have been spared thanks to exemptions granted by the city.
Those required to leave were going to be directed back to the city’s landing zone if they wished to restart the process of waiting for a shelter bed.
* Meanwhile, the Texas governor apparently hoodwinked that state’s taxpayers with a pie in the sky boast…
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott boasted shortly after he began soliciting private donations for his controversial migrant busing program that there would likely “be no cost to the state” given the outpouring of support from concerned citizens across the country.
But after nearly two years of fundraising to offset the program’s costs, Abbott’s operation has collected less than half of 1% of the roughly $150 million spent on busing migrants to sanctuary cities, according to a review of state records. And CNN found that the largest donation – $900,000 – never made it into the state’s coffers, either because it was a mistake or a prank.
Records show that at most, around $550,000 has been raised to date. [About 0.4 percent of the actual cost, if the number is even correct.]
The data provided by the state reflected donations submitted online or by mail through check, credit card or bank transfer, not funds actually received by the state — meaning the data could contain donations that were rejected by banks and credit companies during processing. Reporters tried to reach the woman behind the supposed $900,000 donation, but they could not locate the person with the name provided, and the phone number submitted to state officials was disconnected. […]
CNN also spoke with another donor listed in the data who confirmed he did not make the $2,000 donation listed under his name. Yet another donor showed reporters a letter he said he received from the state after complaining that his $1,000 donation to the state border wall fund had been instead allocated to the busing efforts.
* More from Isabel…
* Tribune | Cook County offers to chip in on food costs for migrants, approves delay to paid-leave mandate for schools, parks: If passed by the Cook County Board, the measure would not add to the county’s bottom line. Preckwinkle is asking county commissioners to reallocate money already set aside in an emergency fund for migrant health care in this year’s budget and instead use it to “reimburse the City of Chicago for food service or other new arrival operating costs throughout calendar year 2024,” according to the proposal.
* WCIA | State agencies now quarantining Chicago migrants exposed to measles: Since Monday, the state has put up almost 100 family members from 26 households who have been exposed but not tested positive for the virus in the hotel. Families will quarantine for three weeks. The hotel is being used as a temporary quarantine shelter solely and is not open to the public. It has a capacity of up to 110 families.
* ABC Chicago | Measles cases reported at CPS schools; migrants quarantined at hotel: State officials are moving families who have been exposed to measles from shelters to unnamed hotels, specifically pregnant women and babies who are not able to be vaccinated. Babies are recommended to get their first dose of the measles vaccine when they are 12 to 15 months old, according to the CDC.
* Axios | What we know (and don’t) about Chicago’s measles outbreak: School-aged Pilsen shelter residents have been advised to stay out of school until the vaccination status of all fellow residents has been resolved. Over this week, every eligible Pilsen shelter resident has consented and received an MMR vaccination, Ige says. Officials are also now administering them to new arrivals at the landing zone.
* Sun-Times | Migrants improvise to re-create dishes that remind them of home: It’s always been Tomás Alvarado’s dream to own a restaurant. After crossing into the United States with his wife Carmen Ollarves, their 3-year-old daughter Grecia and Ollarves’ brother Luis, that dream is in reach now more than ever. Back in Venezuela, there were moments when the couple struggled to find food and make it last. … One dish, in particular, is a nod to the blending of cultures, thanks to the Italian colonial and migratory history in Venezuela: spaghetti with ground beef, plantains and garlic bread.
The governor proposed raising another $200 million by upping the tax rates paid by sportsbooks to 35 percent from 15 percent. When the General Assembly legalized sports betting in 2019, lawmakers dedicated all revenue from it to building infrastructure projects. But the governor’s plan would direct all extra revenue generated by the increase to the state’s General Revenue Fund.
Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, one of the architects of the original sports betting legalization plan, questioned the logic of the move.
“Wouldn’t it make more sense to keep this under the capital fund, so that we fully fund the projects that we’ve been trying to get out the door?” he asked.
Pritzker’s Office of Management and Budget Director Alexis Sturm responded that video gambling and cigarette taxes that also fund infrastructure have outperformed expectations.
“The revenues that are coming into the capital projects fund have been sufficient to cover the debt service needs out of that fund,” she said, adding that new casino licensing fees and other casino revenues fund “pay-as-you-go” projects that don’t require borrowing.
* The Question: Would you rather see this new $200 million go into the General Revenue Fund, as the governor proposes, or stay in the capital fund? Explain.
Today Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) announced plans to dedicate capital funds to rebuild Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln and Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill, addressing critical infrastructure needs at both facilities. The funding is included in the capital proposal the governor presented the General Assembly as part of his FY25 budget proposal.
The capital investments will begin to address years of disinvestment in facilities built almost a century ago, saving the state hundreds of millions in deferred maintenance and annual upkeep costs. The capital investment plan will initially focus on rebuilding two facilities that have been identified as having the most significant deferred maintenance costs as the administration continues to assess the IDOC infrastructure and where additional investments might be needed.
“The capital funds dedicated to Stateville and Logan further demonstrate our commitment to continuing to rebuild and strengthen our state’s infrastructure,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “These investments will allow staff to work in modern and safe facilities, ensure those who are incarcerated can safely serve out their sentences, and save taxpayers hundreds of millions in deferred maintenance costs from years of neglect.”
IDOC will work with the Capital Development Board and stakeholders on a timeline and next steps, with work to begin pending capital appropriations in the FY25 budget. Based on assessments of each facility and land availability, it is anticipated that Stateville will be temporarily closed and demolished with a new facility to be built on its grounds. The status of Logan in the interim is still to be worked through with various stakeholders, and the location of the new facility is still being finalized.
The plan estimates construction costs will total between $805 to $935 million. Governor Pritzker’s proposed FY25 capital budget included $900 million in new funds to demolish and rebuild these facilities. Long-term, the projects are expected to save the state an average of $34 million in annual operations savings, over the long term, by lowering overtime, maintenance, and utility costs on the facilities. Rebuilding these facilities will also save the state hundreds of millions in deferred maintenance costs that have accrued after decades of neglect. These facilities were selected based on a 2023 CGL report the state contracted to identify and prioritize IDOC facility needs.
In accordance with the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) process, construction will not commence until all requirements of the State Facilities Closure Act are met. The design and buildout of the new facilities is anticipated to be completed over the next three to five years. IDOC will coordinate closely with staff at these facilities, organized labor, individuals in custody, and other stakeholders to ensure a smooth the rebuilding process and the department is continuing its work to hire for a number of open positions.
“This plan marks a pivotal moment in IDOC’s ongoing efforts to ensure the safety and well-being of our staff and the individuals in our care,” said Latoya Hughes, Acting Director of IDOC. “These investments underscore Illinois’ unwavering commitment to implementing modernized and secure correctional environments while taking a fiscally responsible approach to address aging infrastructure.”
“The Illinois Justice Project has an essential goal to reduce the number of people in prison. We also support the elimination of any and all conditions that are unsafe and unhealthy or put those housed in the Illinois Department of Corrections at risk,” said Illinois Justice Project Director Ahmadou Dramé. “We will continue to work with advocates and policymakers alike to reduce incarceration and create humane conditions for those who are incarcerated.”
Our union was only notified late Thursday of the Department of Corrections plan to demolish Stateville and Logan prisons and build new facilities in their place. The department did not seek or consider the input of frontline employees or the union in the development of this plan.
“We have grave concerns,” said Roberta Lynch, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, the state employee union whose members include some 10,000 corrections employees.
“Closing facilities even temporarily would disrupt and potentially destabilize the prison system, while bringing upheaval to the lives of affected employees and individuals in custody.”
While there is no question that state prisons are in dire need of tens of millions of dollars of deferred maintenance, the information released so far raises many more questions than it answers. For example:
• If both facilities are closed for reconstruction, where will offenders be relocated in a way that does not destabilize other facilities? Stateville primarily houses maximum-security offenders. Logan is one of only two facilities that house women and the only facility for medium- and maximum-security female offenders; placing this population at other facilities that currently house male offenders—or overcrowding the only other women’s facility—poses logistical and safety concerns.
• The plan would result in the layoff of all employees at both facilities. Although the department claims that positions would be available for these employees at other facilities, how far away would these positions be? IDOC is already finding it extremely difficult to hire and retain employees in the current environment. This plan could all too easily drive staffing levels so low that the entire system would be destabilized.
• Are there truly no other alternatives to razing these facilities and rebuilding on the exact same site? Stateville grounds encompass some 2,200 acres, Logan 150 acres. Why not build new facilities elsewhere on the grounds while utilizing the existing facilities in the interim? Could rebuilding on the exact location require remediating environmental hazards caused by demolition?
• Stateville is valued for its proximity to the Chicago area, allowing individuals in custody to more easily stay connected to their family members in the state’s largest population center. Logan’s central location offers efficient access to transport offenders to legal, medical and other mandatory appointment in any part of the state.
“We cannot support this plan unless and until the department provides satisfactory answers to these compelling questions,” Council 31 director Lynch said.
*** UPDATE *** Jordan Abudayyeh with the governor’s office…
The union’s grave concerns are unusual given their continued demands to increase the safety and security of the work environment of their members. This plan fully addresses those concerns at the two facilities facing the most serious and expensive maintenance issues. It will ensure that AFSCME members can do their jobs in modern, safe facilities. It is not fiscally responsible or feasible to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in a continuing effort to shore up facilities that have been neglected for decades and used for over a century. As we have assured the union, all of their members will continue to be employed at all times as we transition to safer facilities. As we move forward, transfers of incarcerated individuals will only take place with appropriate timing, in a way that minimizes disruptions to the greatest extent possible, and while ensuring the safety and security of all involved.
[ *** End Of Update *** ]
* From Logan County…
State Senator Sally Turner (R-Beason), State Representative Bill Hauter (R-Morton), Logan County Board Chairman Emily Davenport, and Lincoln Mayor Tracy Welch released the following joint statement in response to the Pritzker Administration’s announced decision to close the Logan Correctional Center:
“The decision by the Governor’s Administration to close the Logan Correctional Center without any assurance of its reopening within Logan County is both devastating and infuriating. While we recognize that Logan Correctional is in need of repairs, it is only in its current state of disrepair because of neglect and the misplaced priorities of this Administration.
“Logan Correctional is an instrumental part of Lincoln and its surrounding communities. It provides more than 500 direct jobs, hundreds more indirect jobs, and immeasurable local economic benefits. We will continue to fight for each and every one of these jobs and ensure our communities get the answers they deserve from the Governor’s Administration.”
* Sen. Ventura…
— State Senator Rachel Ventura (D-Joliet) released the following statement after the governor announced a plan for transformative capital investments in Illinois Department of Corrections facilities:
“There is no reason incarcerated individuals should be subjected to a facility that lacks basic human necessities — from clean water to outdoor recreational space. The quality of life at the Stateville prison is beyond repair. It’s imperative we build a new facility — but we must do so in a way that takes into account the needs of its residents, their loved ones and workers.
“Employees of Stateville have made Will County their home. A just transition must be put forward to ensure not a single job is lost. Further, conversations must be had to ensure families of incarcerated individuals have a feasible way to see their loved ones — be that an option to zoom or transportation services. It’s imperative we keep people as close to their families as possible.
“I will be monitoring the situation closely and working with state officials to ensure a fair and just transition plan is implemented. All stakeholders — from employees to families — should have a seat at the table to put forth tangible solutions to safeguard jobs and the humanity of incarcerated individuals.”
Today’s announcement by Governor Pritzker to shutter Logan and Stateville Correctional Centers in order to rebuild them recognizes that these prisons are decrepit, unsafe, and inhumane. Acknowledging that both Logan and Stateville are not fit for human habitation represents an important step towards respecting the dignity and rights of people who are incarcerated, and there is benefit to rethinking our carceral environments in order to move towards smaller, more rehabilitative, modernized spaces that are adequately equipped and staffed to provide people with individualized help and treatment and reduce the suffering and trauma so often experienced in our current prisons. However, this announcement does not address the fact that the Illinois prisons are currently well under capacity, with close to 12,000 excess prison beds throughout the system; we can and should also permanently close some of our worst prisons. This makes good sense financially and morally.
The Facility Master Plan Report, commissioned by the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC), authored by an independent consultant, and published in 2023 laid bare the unsafe and inhumane conditions that exist at Logan and Stateville Correctional Centers – as well as at many other Illinois prisons – as JHA has been documenting and reporting on for years. According to the report, billions of dollars are required to address the ravages of excessive deferred maintenance at many of the prisons, many of which – including Logan and Stateville – have infrastructure beyond fixing and could never be made to be appropriate spaces to treat, rehabilitate, or house people in custody. Most of Illinois’ prisons were built before the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Prison Rape Elimination Act became law, making them out of compliance with legal safeguards that should be provided to every person and in violation of the civil rights of people who suffer because of this. Wheelchairs and assistive devices cannot be accommodated, and establishing sight lines and protections to stop or deter sexual victimization is not possible. Beyond these issues are the lack of technological infrastructure (making improved and increased communications, information access, and programming impossible) and the horrible conditions people incarcerated in these prisons contend with every day: mold; poor ventilation; discolored, odorous, and particle filled water in cells and showers; water damage that leads to ceilings and floors collapsing; roofs caving in; infestations of rodents and vermin; extreme temperatures; and sewage and sanitation system failures, all of which impact the safety, health, and well-being of the people who live and work inside the prisons.
It is long past time that Logan and Stateville be depopulated and demolished. In 2023, women at Logan who responded to a JHA survey commented that, “our water has legionella, our showers, have leeches, our housing units have black mold & asbestos, The housing units are falling in on us” and that, “Every day, all day, we breathe BLACK MOLD, ASBESTOS, AND COAL DUST”. According to the Facility Master Plan Report, “[o]ur review found the existing Logan Correctional Center to be inefficient, ineffective, and unsuitable for any population. The aging coal-fired power system, molding housing units, and facility layout all work in opposition to the mission and goals of the facility. IDOC should find a more suitable location for housing its incarcerated women” (pg. 44).
Conditions at Stateville are similarly horrible; in assessing this prison as part of the Facility Master Plan Report, it was found that, “[i]n addition to the extremely poor conditions throughout the facility (peeling paint, leaking roofs) the facility’s 100 year old design is reflective of 1800’s prison philosophy, with multitiered housing units. These units are poor for a maximum custody population, but even worse for a multi-custody re-entry mission. The units lack dayroom space or any adjacent program space. Cells are small and there is limited electrical connections resulting in extension cords ran from cell to cell. Due to limited line-of-sight, an intensive level of staffing is necessary to adequately supervise these units. Maintaining a constant ambient temperature is nearly impossible from the lower tier to the upper tier. Shower facilities are poor and create PREA issues. Overall, the facility can’t comply with ADA requirements” (pg. 46). In response to JHA surveys at Stateville in 2023, people incarcerated there wrote that, “Stateville should be overhauled or closed. No hot water for the past two months, legionella bacteria in our drinking water supply, also lead was found… infestation of roaches and spiders. I sleep with roaches crawling all in my bed and I keep myself and my cell clean” and that, “The drinking water is contaminated; people are developing cancer here at an alarming rate; the air circulation is very poor and we are developing upper respiratory problems from breathing in entirely too much dust/other unknown air pollutants on a daily basis for years on end; Black mold inside cells; very bad roach and mouse infestation…”
Removing people from immediate harm by taking them out of Illinois’ most decrepit and unsafe prisons is critical. Closing outdated, uninhabitable, redundant prisons is also critical in order to respect the human rights of all citizens and invest in strategies that will benefit everyone. We can reduce our reliance on incarceration and close the most inhumane prisons, while also considering new ways to house people who must remain that are safe, rehabilitative, and recognize and respect those who live and work inside our prisons. Investing in communities and social safety networks, increasing and improving educational and employment opportunities, and utilizing deflection and diversion more often will improve outcomes. Illinois cannot continue to house and employ people in prisons that pose a danger to everyone inside of them due to degraded and hazardous conditions; the costs are too high when measured in dollars, morality, and our humanity.
A full rebuild of Stateville will cause transfer of inmates and staff. There may be some challenges with this, but I am here to work with folks and be a voice through the transition. I am glad they are finally updating the outdated facility for safety and efficiency purposes, which will be good jobs for building trades, but feel terrible for staff that is temporarily transferred. Some staff has already been transferred there from permanent closures in the past.
The governor proposed raising another $200 million by upping the tax rates paid by sportsbooks to 35 percent from 15 percent. When the General Assembly legalized sports betting in 2019, lawmakers dedicated all revenue from it to building infrastructure projects. But the governor’s plan would direct all extra revenue generated by the increase to the state’s General Revenue Fund.
Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, one of the architects of the original sports betting legalization plan, questioned the logic of the move.
“Wouldn’t it make more sense to keep this under the capital fund, so that we fully fund the projects that we’ve been trying to get out the door?” he asked.
Pritzker’s Office of Management and Budget Director Alexis Sturm responded that video gambling and cigarette taxes that also fund infrastructure have outperformed expectations.
Senate Bill 1556 from state Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, would mandate two state regulators, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and the Illinois Pollution Control Board, to establish a “clean transportation standard” and reduce the use of carbon-based fuels by Illinois drivers on the state’s roads.
The two agencies would assign state-mandated “deficits” to fossil fuels like gasoline and diesel.
The Illinois Fuel and Retail Association, on behalf of more than 4,000 gas stations, convenience stores and truck stops across Illinois who serve millions of customers, opposes the proposal.
“Having the No. 1 gas tax in the nation, Illinois, my members and certainly motorists here can’t afford it,” IFRA CEO Josh Sharp said.
* Protect Illinois Restaurants…
[Deleted by Rich because the “poll” is highly suspect.]
Sen. Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) said his plan calls for a stewardship program to ensure proper handling, recycling and end-of-life management for used portable and medium-format batteries. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency would be responsible for implementing, administering and enforcing the program.
“Having grandkids that have a lot of toys and things, you collect your used batteries,” Koehler said Thursday. “I used to take them to my local Lowe’s store. They took them for a while. Then, all of a sudden, they didn’t. What am I supposed to do with these?”
Producers selling or distributing batteries in Illinois would be required to participate in an approved stewardship plan starting January 1, 2026. Retail stores would also no longer be allowed to sell batteries unless their producer participates in the Illinois battery stewardship program by July 1, 2026. […]
“It’s a public safety bill to reduce the risk of fire and the risk of loss of human life to any fires at facilities and in trucks,” said Christina Seibert, Executive Director of the Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County. “But also, it’s a mechanism to recapture these valuable materials and reproduce them into new batteries and reduce the mining of those resources.”
State lawmakers are pushing for legislation that would require Illinoisans to verify their age when clicking on pornographic sites. Those Illinois businesses that fail to enact verification methods would be subject to civil penalties.
State Sen. Erica Harriss’ Senate Bill 2590 is much like legislation that has been filed in 25 other states, and has passed in at least seven of those states. […]
Harriss has bipartisan support. State Sens. Rachel Ventura, D-Joliet, and Mary Edly-Allen, D-Libertyville, have co-sponsored the legislation. The Democratic lawmakers did not immediately respond to The Center Square’s request for comment. […]
Alongside Harriss at a news conference in Springfield Thursday was state Sen. Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia. He said he has a bill that would require school boards to put their curriculum on the school district’s website.
The Senate Judiciary Committee passed a bill Tuesday changing how liability is calculated under BIPA.
Under the current law, companies need to get written consent from customers and employees to use biometric information like fingerprints, face scanners and retina scanners. That part of the law would not change, though the bill would allow companies to obtain an electronic signature for consent. What would change is what happens when a company violates the law.
Currently, they can be held liable in civil court for $1,000 in damages for each violation. It means every time an employee uses their fingerprint to punch the clock or enter a restricted area, the company could be held liable if they did not get consent. If the proposal becomes law, damages would change to $1,000 per person.
“If anyone violates the law, whether it’s an individual or a company, they have to be held accountable, and this bill doesn’t change that. What this bill does is essentially ensure that the punishment fits the crime,” said state Sen, Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, the bill’s sponsor.
Attorney General Kwame Raoul today announced legislation that would protect workers from retaliatory conduct by employers, strengthen current protections under state law and codify the authority of Raoul’s Workplace Rights Bureau to investigate and hold employers who retaliate or threaten to retaliate accountable.
“Currently, workers who want to assert their basic workplace rights risk losing their livelihood and ability to provide for themselves and their families. For some immigrant workers, asserting their rights means risking their ability to remain in the United States,” Raoul said. “We must encourage workers to step up and report dangerous or unlawful practices, and I look forward to continuing to work with members of the Illinois General Assembly to pass these needed reforms.”
Raoul’s legislation – contained in House Bill (HB) 5561 – would fill existing voids in labor enforcement that leave workers unprotected from often-devastating employer retaliation when they seek to enforce their rights or blow the whistle on unlawful employer practices.
Specifically, the legislation would:
- Broaden the scope of conduct protected under the Illinois Whistleblower Act to protect employees who report violations of the law or threats to public health and safety directly to their employer.
- Expand the definition of retaliation to include blacklisting an employee from future opportunities and immigration-based retaliation.
- Provide express statutory authority to the Attorney General’s office to bring suit against employers who retaliate or threaten retaliation against employees.
HB 5561 is sponsored in the Illinois House of Representatives by Assistant Majority Leader Marcus C. Evans, Jr. and passed the House’s Judiciary Civil-Committee on Wednesday.
* Sen. Kimberly Lightford…
The rise of co-branded alcoholic beverages – like Hard Mountain Dew and Spiked Sunny-D – has piqued the interest of children. Whether the marketing is intentional or not, Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford is working to put a stop to the issue by restricting the location certain alcohol items can be displayed and sold. […]
Co-branded alcoholic beverages contain the same or similar brand name, logo or packaging as a non-alcoholic beverage. Senate Bill 2625 would prohibit stores over 2,500 square feet – which primarily is anything bigger than a convenience store – from displaying co-branded alcoholic beverages immediately adjacent to soft drinks, fruit juices, bottled water, candy, or snack foods portraying cartoons or child-oriented images.
Establishments that are smaller would be required to either not display co-branded alcoholic beverages immediately adjacent to non-alcoholic beverages and snacks, or equip displays of co-branded beverages with clearly visible signage stating that the product is alcoholic. […]
Senate Bill 2625 passed the Senate Executive Committee Wednesday and heads to the full Senate for further consideration.
* ICYMI: Illinois’ high court reports ‘breathtaking’ rise in appeals following elimination of cash bail. WTTW…
- Justices on Illinois’ high court are pitching these changes; legislative sign-off on making an office dedicated to pretrial services into its own standalone entity, and the creation of a new office to support public defenders.
-Supreme Court Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis said the spike in appeals is the “biggest challenge” to the judicial branch’s implementation of the pretrial justice system.
- The Illinois Supreme Court is seeking $569.1 million in state general revenue funds — $30.9 million more than the $538.2 million proposed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker.
* Injustice Watch | Name-change law used to target women running for judge: Ashonta C. Rice’s name was removed from the Cook County ballot under a 2007 law intended to prevent candidates from using name changes to deceive voters. She’s not the first, and some say the law has been used as a political weapon against female candidates instead.
* Tribune | Gov. J.B. Pritzker announces plan to tear down, replace historic Stateville prison: Pritzker’s proposed budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 includes $900 million to demolish and rebuild the correctional centers and the administration estimates the construction costs at $805 million to $935 million. Pritzker’s administration said it expects that once they’re completed, the rebuilt prisons will save the state an average of $34 million annually by lowering overtime, maintenance and utility costs.
* SJ-R | Why Pritzker holds ‘degree of skepticism’ on new carbon capture bill: “We’re going to be working through how if he would, we would implement carbon capture in the state of Illinois,” [Pritzker] said at the governor’s office. “Is it going to be safe for people who are living in areas where carbon capture will be taking place? How would we implement it to make sure that in the construction of that, that it would be safe?”
* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker agency heads questioned on $1.1 billion revenue proposals: “The idea is that they will not be able to use those losses to reduce revenue,” Illinois Department of Revenue Director David Harris told the House Revenue and Finance Committee on Thursday. “So they’re limited. And thus, since they’re limited in terms of using those losses to reduce revenue, that revenue is going to be now taxed.”
* Sun-Times | Fewer Illinois residents using payday lenders after state crackdown, study finds: In 2019, Illinois consumers paid $607.4 million in interest and fees — the fourth highest amount in the nation — on more than 1 million payday loans, installment payday loans, auto title loans and small consumer loans, according to Woodstock. In 2022, a year after the predatory loan act went into effect, borrowers took out 105 of those loans and the fees totaled $1,279.
* WBEZ | Nearly all of state’s attorney hopeful Eileen O’Neill Burke’s big funders are white men:Those 25 donors — venture capitalists, investment managers, traders, real estate developers, upscale restaurant chain owners, personal-injury lawyers, and so on — account for about half of the $3.1 million in campaign fundraising that O’Neill Burke had reported to the state by Thursday afternoon, just a few days before the end of voting Tuesday. Her Democratic primary opponent, University of Chicago lecturer Clayton Harris III, won the party’s endorsement but has lagged in fundraising. Harris, whose top 25 donors include nine African Americans and 10 women, has reported $1.2 million in campaign donations.
* Tribune | As U.S. Rep. Danny Davis seeks 15th term, opponents argue it’s time to move on: Emboldened by Davis’ close call in 2022, when he beat progressive activist Kina Collins by just 6 points, the second-term treasurer is mounting a challenge built on the argument that the South and West side neighborhoods comprising the core of the district have little to show for Davis’ nearly half-century in public office — with more than half of that time in Congress — that began when he was elected the 29th Ward alderman in 1979.
* Landmark | Rashid faces challenge from former cop in Democratic primary: This is the 62-year-old Vasquez’s second political race. In 2003, the resident of the southwest side of Chicago ran for alderman of Chicago’s 23rd ward, where he was trounced by former Ald. Michael R. Zalewski, the father of the former state representative. Vasquez received only 18.31% of the vote. Vazquez, who now works as an Amtrak police officer after a 32-year career with the Chicago Police Department, said that race soured him on running for office for some time, but now he has decided to make another run for office. Vasquez said that he is running against Rashid because he believes Rashid has not been active in the district and is more focused on Palestinian issues than the nuts and bolts work of being a state representative.
* Sun-Times | Illinois history has lessons on the politics of abortion: You may not know the names Rosemary Mulligan and Penny Pullen, but their 1990 race for a seat in the Illinois Legislature foreshadowed the role of abortion in politics today. Down-ballot races like this highlight the important work of state legislators on issues that affect people most.
* Sun-Times | Waukegan city clerk charged with misconduct, misapplication of funds: A 15-count indictment was returned Wednesday alleging Kilkelly gave thousands of dollars in credits to businesses that did not qualify for the financial support, the Lake County state’s attorney’s office said. Kikelly’s office and the Waukegan City Council had “repeatedly established” that the credits would solely go to businesses that were considered to be in “good standing,” the state’s attorney’s office said.
* Chicago Reader | Illinois made it easier for gun violence survivors to apply for compensation. Why aren’t more Chicagoans finding the program?: Yet, during the Trace’s recent survivor storytelling project, an initiative that helped victims write about their experiences, participants said they were still struggling to receive funding. Using records obtained through the Illinois Freedom of Information Act, the Trace analyzed nearly 23,000 claims between January 2018 and November 2023, almost half of which came from Chicago, to see whether the program had improved. The Trace looked at the outcome of claims opened within each calendar year, not the year when they were closed, to assess the timeliness of the program and how legislative changes might have affected application results.
* WBEZ | Toni Preckwinkle flexes her political muscle as she backs Democrats in Tuesday’s election: From presidential tarmac visits to lauded policy decisions during crises, Preckwinkle focused instead on the power and influence she already had in two of the most important political roles in the region. “She decided to step back, look at what she had and use what she had to show her power. That she was just as powerful as Lori Lightfoot, if not more,” said veteran political strategist Delmarie Cobb, who has known Preckwinkle for more than 20 years. “She didn’t have to flex her muscles publicly. She could go behind the scenes, use the tools she had at her disposal as the Cook County Board president and as the chair of the party, and still continue to amass power and to wield power. And that’s what she did.”
* Tribune | Cook County approves $17 million settlement for Jackie Wilson, exonerated in 1982 cop killings: The payout will resolve a civil rights lawsuit filed by Jackie Wilson that accused several former Cook County assistant state’s attorneys of railroading him for murders committed by his older brother. It is thought to be among the largest wrongful conviction settlements for a single defendant in county history.
* CBS Chicago | South suburban Chicago mayor sued by ex-employees claiming they were wrongfully fired: One lawsuit was filed by former Thornton Township human resources manager Sandra Tracy, who claimed she was retaliated against after she refused to put together a list with the “dirt” on township employees. Tracy also claimed she was retaliated against for taking leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) – and was locked out of the township building and made to work out of her car in the parking lot for six months, attorneys alleged.
* Patch | IPHCA, IHA Welcome Prescription Drug Savings Court Ruling: The 8th Circuit’s decision upheld Arkansas law (Act 1103) prohibiting drug companies from restricting provider access to 340B discounts through contract pharmacies, and agreeing that state law isn’t preempted by federal law, but instead supports the 340B program. Of note, the Court found, “Pharmacy has traditionally been regulated at the state level, and we must assume that absent a strong showing that Congress intended preemption, state statutes that impact health and welfare are not preempted.”
* Slate | The Parents in My Classroom: My student was partly right. Emergencies happen. Parents want access to their kids. But this wasn’t an emergency. “When my dad texts and asks me how I am,” another ninth grader said, “he gets worried if I don’t message back immediately.” Her friend said: “My mom expects a text each class period so she knows what I’m doing.”
* Tribune | Chicago has a new ‘I voted!’ sticker. Meet the artist behind the bold and simple design: The artist behind the new sticker, Jane Ignacio, has designed everything for the board for more than 20 years, from its social media posts to its election judge handbooks. “Going to the polling place on Election Day is like my Super Bowl,” the freelance designer said in an interview Thursday.