Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Apr 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Second District Appellate Court ruling via the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin…
The enabling legislation passed the House without opposition and passed the Senate with just one “No” vote. * WBEZ…
* A swing and a miss…
* Press release…
Sen. Preston’s bill is on Third Reading it has Friday deadline to leave the Senate. * NECANN…
* Here’s the rest…
* Tribune | Unionized staff at Columbia College urge president to halt scheduled layoffs: Union representatives say the layoffs will most affect the roughly 6,000 students at Columbia in the South Loop, potentially creating longer wait times to meet with academic advisors, difficulty meeting with campus therapist and reduced support in the Department of Equity and Inclusion. * Tribune | Oberweis Dairy to lay off 127 workers in wake of bankruptcy filing: In its bankruptcy filing, Oberweis Dairy said it had 1,149 employees, of which 933 work part-time, mostly in the dairy stores. Its ranks often swell to more than 1,500 employees during the summer months during peak demand for ice cream at its stores, Kraber said in a declaration filed Monday. Oberweis filed a motion Monday requesting to pay $340,000 in outstanding wages owed to employees. Payroll averaged about $891,000 every two weeks from January through March this year, according to the filing. * Tribune | After son’s suicide, Lincoln Park couple push measure for greater scrutiny of social media use: The Bronsteins are suing the Latin School and current and former board members and staff for wrongful death, alleging Nate notified the school that he felt the messages about him constituted bullying. According to the lawsuit, students sent messages saying “kill yourself” and spread a “death threat involving smoking Nate’s ashes.” A Latin School representative has said the school acted responsibly and that the allegations in the lawsuit are “incomplete and misleading.” * Sun-Times | Chicago Pride Parade denies all previous year’s school participants: When making decisions on which organizations to accept, the parade’s committee is prioritizing “LGBTQ+ groups and organizations, LGBTQ+-owned businesses and those businesses with LGBTQ+ ERGs (Employee Resource Groups),” PRIDEChicago, which produces the event, said last week in a statement. * WTTW | Chicago Teachers Union Leaders Hopeful for ‘New Chapter’ in Contract Negotiations as Bargaining Set to Begin: “Every contract that we have been a part of since 2012 has been hard fought and hard won,” CTU President Stacy Davis Gates said at a press conference Tuesday morning. “We are OK with the struggle, we are OK with making it work. And this time, though, we want to make it work with everyone at the same time.” * Daily Southtown | Lockport High School officials look to bonding authority after failed $85 million referendum: The board met Monday for the first time since 53.43% of voters March 19 opposed funding Central Campus improvements. “Whether you voted yes or you voted no, there is still work to do,” Superintendent Robert McBride said. McBride said the board has researched improvements to its Central Campus, built in 1909, well before the ceiling collapsed in Room 310 last fall and closed the school, causing the district’s freshmen to be bused to the former Lincoln-Way North High School. * SJ-R | Buildings ready to be demolished as reconstruction of 3 Springfield High Schools rolls on: Meanwhile, the $93 million reconstruction of Lanphier High School will move into its final phase with the demolition of the Edison Wing in the coming weeks that will allow for the construction of the school’s first-ever auditorium. Funding for both projects comes from the 1% sales tax increase that Sangamon County voters approved in November 2018, netting District 186 an average of $13 million per year. * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights using budget surplus to replace lead pipes: Village officials predict it could cost $40 million to replace all of the town’s old lead pipes, which represent nearly a quarter of all service lines on public and private property. And because it is an established community, Arlington Heights is among the suburbs with the most lead pipes, in a state that has the most lead pipes per capita in the country, according to a 2023 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report. * Daily Herald | Barrington considering TIF district for downtown redevelopment: Officials said several steps are needed to start the legal machinery leading to the creation of a TIF district. The first is an Interested Parties Registry, through which any resident or village-based organization can apply to receive information should officials move forward with establishing the district. * PJ Star | ‘Lies and deceit’: Hotel Pere Marquette developers sentenced to prison for fraud scheme: A federal judge said Monday that Monte Brannan and Gary Matthews engaged in “lies and deceit” when they defrauded investors in a scheme to line their own pockets with money that was supposed to go toward a redevelopment of the Hotel Pere Marquette. Brannan, 71, of Peoria and Matthews, 81, of East Peoria were sentenced to prison on Monday and ordered to pay millions of dollars in restitution for defrauding investors, including the city of Peoria, during their time as the developers of the downtown Peoria hotel. * Crain’s | Pullback in warehouse-building spree keeps vacancy in check: Despite fears of a possible vacancy problem from a record year for industrial real estate development, the share of available warehouse space in the Chicago area only inched up during the first quarter to 5.29% from 5.25% at the end of 2023, according to data from real estate services firm Colliers. The industrial vacancy rate is up from a record-low 4.5% in late 2022 after five straight quarters of increases, though, it continues to hover at one of the lowest levels it has been over the past 25 years. * Sun-Times | GI Bill case sees Supreme Court rule against VA, giving decorated Army vet James Rudisill full benefits: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 Tuesday in favor of decorated Army veteran James Rudisill in a case that questioned whether the federal government could limit college money for veterans who’d earned benefits under more than one version of the GI Bill. The case could unlock greater educational benefits for veterans nationwide who, like Rudisill, had earned college benefits under both the Montgomery GI Bill, which covers tuition, and the newer, more generous Post-9/11 GI Bill, which pays for tuition, fees, housing and books. Federal law allows veterans to tap both plans up to a maximum of 48 months. * CNN | Antisemitic incidents in US hit all-time high, Anti-Defamation League report shows: The majority of the incidents documented by the ADL - 6,535 - were cases of harassment, which the group describes as instances when either one or more Jewish people, or people perceived as Jewish, are harassed with antisemitic slurs, stereotypes or conspiracy theories. This category includes online and in-person incidents. The group also tracked 2,177 cases of vandalism and 161 assault incidents. * NBC | Verified pro-Nazi X accounts flourish under Elon Musk: The pro-Nazi content is not confined to the fringes of the platform. During one seven-day period in March, seven of the most widely shared pro-Nazi posts on X accrued 4.5 million views in total. One post with 1.9 million views promoted a false and long-debunked conspiracy theory that 6 million Jews did not die in the Holocaust. More than 5,300 verified and unverified accounts reshared that post, and other popular posts were reshared hundreds of times apiece. * PJ Star | Illinois basketball loses another player to NCAA transfer portal: Illinois basketball is once again dealing with the NCAA college basketball transfer portal. Redshirt sophomore Sencire Harris has entered his name into the portal, he announced Monday on social media. This comes a day after Arizona transfer Kylan Boswell announced his commitment to the Fighting Illini. * Crain’s | Hewn Bread, named one of America’s best bakeries, to open new North Shore location: The Hewn name is a regular on “best bakery” lists. Food & Wine magazine declared the Evanston shop one of the 100 best bakeries in America in 2020. Two years later, the magazine reiterated its praise, listing the bakery’s bread as the best in Illinois. Similarly, Thrillist recognized Hewn as one of the “absolute best bakeries in Chicago” in 2021.
|
- Three Dimensional Checkers - Tuesday, Apr 16, 24 @ 2:59 pm:
No matter your political leanings, no one want to be on the receiving end of a Joe Ferguson word salad vendetta.
- Big Dipper - Tuesday, Apr 16, 24 @ 3:08 pm:
Can the COPA official go after Timpone and Proft for libel? Seems like they should be expected to employ due diligence before smearing someone. Did they even reach out to her for comment which would have cleared it up?
- DougChicago - Tuesday, Apr 16, 24 @ 3:46 pm:
It would be great to have Timpone and Prof(i)t held accountable and I won’t shed a tear if they are. Although the spectacle of the two of them wrapping themselves in the First Amendment if they were to be sued is truly a sickening thought.
- MG85 - Tuesday, Apr 16, 24 @ 7:59 pm:
It’s almost like the Bellville News Democrat read what the John Howard Association had to say about all of the excess “bed space” and asked the very basic question of “why?”
Amazingly, they found an answer.
- DougChicago - Wednesday, Apr 17, 24 @ 6:01 am:
An ironically funny item from another Timpone-Prof(i)t “newspaper”
https://kankakeetimes.com/stories/657663489-opinion-justin-beaton-a-lesson-on-fact-checking-and-responsible-journalism