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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* As you know, Gov. Pritzker has been pushing Illinois as a quantum computing hub

Practical quantum computing tools are about 3 to 5 years out from workforce use and will likely be accessed through cloud based environments, a top National Security Agency official predicted at a Tuesday Palo Alto Networks public sector cybersecurity event.

Neal Ziring, the NSA’s cybersecurity directorate’s technical director, said that quantum computing systems — which use the laws of quantum mechanics to solve problems at an exponentially faster rate than traditional computers and are still largely theoretical — will likely be accessed via cloud computing platforms rather than on-premise installs, due to cost and practicality considerations. […]

For now, the U.S. is still in a “good spot” to take advantage of quantum, but better partnerships between government, industry and academia will be needed to reap the full benefits of the nascent technology, Ziring said.

* Shaw Local

An Illinois Supreme Court ruling that favors truckers in a case against Joliet City Hall has statewide impact, an attorney for the truckers said Thursday.

The court ruling issued Thursday basically says Joliet violated its own city ordinances in issuing fines to truckers ticketed for violating overweight restrictions without allowing them to take the case to a circuit court.

The larger impact, according to Joliet attorney Frank Andreano, is that Illinois municipalities cannot independently fine truckers without providing them recourse in court. […]

The supreme court decision does recognize home rule authority for cities like Joliet that conduct administrative hearings on trucker violations of local laws. But the supreme court ruled that truckers still had the right to object in circuit court once decisions were delivered at city hall.

* Daily Southtown

A Dolton bar is suing the village in federal court, saying it has been denied the renewal of its business and liquor licenses because it didn’t contribute to Mayor Tiffany Henyard’s first mayoral election campaign.

The village contends, however, that Pablo’s Cafe and Bar is a nuisance and the subject of numerous police calls since it opened four years ago.

It has been closed by the village on multiple occasions and was recently shut after a shooting incident, Lewis Lacey, Dolton’s deputy police chief, said at Monday’s Village Board meeting.

Pablo’s isn’t the first Dolton liquor license holder to go to court over renewal of permits, and others have had success in the courts.

* Here’s the rest…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Bill ending state’s tipped wage advances but prospects uncertain amid pushback: While the bill is intended to increase wages for tipped workers and address inequities within the industry, much of the roughly two-hour debate in the committee hearing focused on how the proposal will impact businesses and employees.

    * WTAX | Giannoulias calls organ donors “Superstars”: A single donor can save or improve the lives of as many as 25 people in need of a transplant, Giannoulias said. We need more Superstar of all ages, ethnicities and racial backgrounds to register and fill the critical need for organ and tissue donors. A more diverse donor pool increases the likelihood of finding suitable matches for those who wait.

    * WTTW | Chicago Police Continued to Target Black, Latino Drivers With Flood of Traffic Stops in 2023: Report: The vast majority of the more than 537,000 traffic stops made by Chicago police in 2023 were based on dubious evidence of minor violations that took direct aim at Black and Latino Chicagoans but spared White Chicagoans, according to a new report from Impact for Equity, a nonprofit advocacy and research organization that has helped lead the push to reform the Chicago Police Department.

    * Daily Herald | Pro-Bears-to-Arlington Heights group sends school districts a message: The Bears say they’ve shifted their focus to developing a new domed stadium on Chicago’s lakefront, but a pro-Bears-to-Arlington Heights business coalition isn’t giving up on Arlington Park just yet. In the shadow of the shuttered racetrack property the NFL franchise now owns, Touchdown Arlington hosted a rally and letter-writing party Wednesday night at Jimmy D’s District sports bar to show there’s still plenty of support for a Bears move to the suburbs.

    * Shaw Local | State Rep. Yednock appointed to Illinois Forestry Development Council: Yednock was appointed to the state’s Illinois Forestry Development Council by House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch this week. “As an outdoorsman and nature enthusiast, I am ready to get to work to protect Illinois’ forests and make them work better for everyone across our state,” Yednock said in a Wednesday news release. “We are in the midst of a climate crisis, and we must do what we can to keep our forests in good condition for future generations.”

    * WBEZ | Democratic National Committee hires local sustainability firms for Chicago convention: The Democratic National Convention Committee and Chicago 2024 Host Committee selected two Chicago-based firms, Bright Beat and Purpose, to help implement sustainability practices during the four-day, multimillion-dollar convention. Together, the two women-owned businesses will be responsible for cutting down on greenhouse gas emissions.

    * Pensions & Investments | Chicago’s pension funding crisis is a century in the making. 5 grad students could change that: To decrease liabilities, the team proposed introducing a new tier for newly hired city employees that creates an adjusted vesting schedule. According to the team’s presentation, pension fund participants earn between 2.4%-2.5% of their baseline annuity per service year, and the team proposed a graduated percentage: 2% for one to 20 service years, 3% for years 21-25, 4% for years 26-30 and 5% for 31 or more years. This would save between $20 million and $25 million in liabilities annually, according to the presentation.

    * Daily Herald | Lots of construction angst on I-80 in Will County as rebuild revs up: The $1.3 billion project, which is 16 miles in its entirety, stretches between Ridge Road in Minooka and Route 30 near Joliet. Workers will replace over 30 bridges and multiple interchanges, including a new flyover ramp connecting southbound I-55 to eastbound I-80.

    * Crain’s | Chicago Fed chief shrugs off inflation pickup in early 2024: The wave of commentary from officials follows remarks by Chair Jerome Powell just a day earlier. Powell emphasized the Fed has time to assess incoming data before reducing rates, signaling policymakers are willing to wait for clearer signs of lower inflation to act. It’s not yet clear whether the pickup in key price gauges at the start of 2024 is a temporary blip on the path to the central bank’s 2% inflation goal or a sign that progress has stalled.

    * Sun-Times | Sean Tyler proved his innocence but the trauma of wrongful murder conviction has become its own sentence: “It’s still a hurting feeling and I don’t think that’ll ever be gone,” he said. “It’s so many layers and so much hurt wrapped up in it. It doesn’t feel like you can even enjoy it.” Tyler said he can finally walk down the street knowing no one can look at him and call him a murderer — worse, a person who killed a child.

    * Reuters | Bird flu hits Texas dairy cows, hens, human as ducks migrate: The U.S. government since last week has reported cases of the disease in seven dairy herds in Texas and one person who had contact with cows, making it the state most affected by the country’s first-ever outbreaks in cattle. Texas is the biggest U.S. cattle producer.

    * MSN | Tired of late messages from your boss? A new bill aims to make it illegal.: If passed, the California bill would require employers to establish a companywide policy on what their working hours are and how they will respect employees’ “right to disconnect.” The law would not supersede any collective bargaining contracts and applies only to salaried workers, as hourly and gig workers are protected by other laws. It’s needed to keep laws up to date with the modern realities of work, said Matt Haney, a State Assembly member representing San Francisco who introduced the bill this week. Thirteen other countries, including France, Australia, Portugal and Canada, already have laws like this, he added.

    * NYT | Ford Slows Its Push Into Electric Vehicles: “We are committed to scaling a profitable E.V. business, using capital wisely and bringing to market the right gas, hybrid and fully electric vehicles at the right time,” Ford’s chief executive, Jim Farley, said in a statement.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago-area solar eclipse hunters plan trek south to take in totality: ‘You have to experience it’: Sanchez, his wife and their 3-year-old daughter, along with his brother’s family will leave their home in Riverside about 4 a.m. Monday to drive to Carbondale, take in the eclipse, then drive home. It should take about five and a half hours to drive there, he said. Sanchez expects about an eight-hour trip home, plus he wants to find some souvenirs for his daughter to “look back on this experience” that he described as “extraordinary.”

    * SJ-R | Are you hearing about a ‘new’ path of totality in Illinois? Don’t worry about it too much: The reports are based on an article, “Why Your Total Solar Eclipse Map Is Now Wrong (And Where to Find the New One),” by Jamie Carter, a Forbes.com senior contributor. The story cites revised calculations for the size of the sun. It says previous maps of the path of totality might be off by about 2,000 feet at their edges. But the article concedes that those heading far into the path will see little consequence.

    * Chicago Review of Books | Chicago in Flux: An Interview with Gregory Royal Pratt about “The City is Up for Grabs”: Gregory Pratt: As soon as I started covering Mayor Lightfoot, I understood early in 2018 that we were potentially looking at a big sea change in Chicago, where you had the big bad, established Mayor Rahm Emanuel, leaving. Now, you potentially had a power vacuum and turnover. I thought this could be a great story. I got more serious about writing a book about this in 2020. I would cover Mayor Lightfoot day-to-day then, which I like to think of as our soft apocalypse here. Because it was crazy, right? You had the pandemic, you had civil unrest, you had a lot of institutions being remade and tested.

    * Tribune | Do they still make pinball machines? They do, in a huge new factory near O’Hare — with most selling to the 1 percent: They still make pinball machines? They do, and Stern is not alone: There’s also Jersey Jack Pinball of Elk Grove Village, American Pinball of Palatine, Chicago Gaming Company of Cicero, as well as several others, in Wisconsin, Texas. But none as large as Stern these days. Stern, by several assessments, controls at least 75% of the pinball market now, internationally. It’s been so successful the past few years, the company has doubled its workforce since 2019 and sold enough new machines that they need to upgrade from a nearby Elk Grove Village factory of 100,000 square feet to this new one, with 160,000 square feet.

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Musical interlude

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It isn’t every day that a candidate kicks off a campaign while singing a song he co-wrote that won both an Academy Award and a Grammy…


Full song is here.

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Improve Support For Relatives Caring For Youth In DCFS Care

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Question of the day

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago

Speaking to Block Club Tuesday, Johnson punched back at his critics and expressed almost unbridled confidence in his tenure so far, despite “unexpected or unanticipated” crises like the influx of migrant buses and destructive flooding on the city’s West Side.

“Name one thing that I said I was gonna do that I haven’t done. You won’t be able to,” he said.

The mayor, a former public school teacher and union organizer, declined to give himself a letter grade for his performance thus far. Instead, he listed a series of measures he sees as proof he’s fulfilling his campaign promises: phasing out the tipped minimum wage, providing funding to reopen mental health centers, expanding paid time off requirements and not raising property taxes, he said. […]

Also on Monday, an ordinance advanced to the full City Council that would give alderpeople final say on keeping the gunshot detection technology ShotSpotter in their wards — which, if passed, could reverse Johnson’s decision to end the city’s contract to use the devices. Johnson promised on the campaign trail to halt the city’s use of ShotSpotter.

* The Question: Can you name one thing the Mayor said he was gonna do and hasn’t done?

…Adding… Click here to see an archived version of the mayor’s campaign promises.

  26 Comments      


Former PRB Chair says he takes issue with governor’s criticism

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Last month, Governor Pritzker announced the resignation of Prisoner Review Board Member LeAnn Miller

“The Prisoner Review Board must be able to operate independently as they review enormously difficult cases, but I believe LeAnn Miller has made the correct decision in stepping down from her role.” said Governor JB Pritzker. “It is clear that evidence in this case was not given the careful consideration that victims of domestic violence deserve and I am committed to ensuring additional safeguards and training are in place to prevent tragedies like this from happening again. My thoughts are with Laterria Smith as she recovers and with the entire family of Jayden Perkins as we mourn this tragic loss—may his memory be a blessing.”

* Today from WTTW

Donald Shelton, who served on the Prisoner Review Board since 2012 and who led the board since last year, took issue with a statement released by Pritzker concerning board member LeAnn Miller’s resignation. […]

“I don’t agree,” said Shelton, in an exclusive interview with WTTW News. “It’s one thing to say that I think the judgment was in error. It’s another thing to say that there was a lack of concern for a victim of domestic violence.” […]

“If the decisions are being made in good faith, then I don’t think she (Miller) is responsible for a murder that happened that she could not anticipate,” said Shelton. […]

“[Board members] have an obligation not only to hold the person that’s before them accountable for their actions if they believe that’s the appropriate point of view,” said Shelton. “They have an obligation to hold the state responsible for making its case to a preponderance of the evidence standard. Now, that’s a low standard, but it’s still a standard. And I can’t tell you how many cases in 11.5 years where I had a gut feeling that, ‘Jeez, I don’t think I like this person.’ But I can’t decide that a person’s going to be held in custody and is a violator because I have a gut feeling that they’re not a nice person.”

Thoughts?

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It’s just a bill

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGEM

linois state lawmakers took another step Wednesday towards eliminating the subminimum wage for tipped workers.

The state House Labor and Commerce Committee passed a bill requiring employers pay tipped workers the full minimum wage. They’re currently only required to pay them $8.40 per hour plus tips in Illinois. The state’s full minimum wage is currently $14 per hour. Employers are required to make up the difference if tips don’t get their employees to at least $14 per hour.

Supporters argue the bill will clear up confusion in minimum wage laws and bring uniformity after Chicago passed similar legislation phasing out the tipped wage by 2028. […]

Opponents fear the bill would lead to job losses, especially for those whom it’s supposed to help.

* Brenden Moore



* WCIA

A bill in the Capitol aims to protect people from how companies store and collect their health data.

The proposal passed out of a House committee Wednesday, but the bill’s sponsor and advocates say they still have more work to do on it.

“We don’t want to do things that we don’t need to do and require businesses to go through hurdles they don’t need to but at the same time, this is really the wild wild west, there is very little regulation,” State Rep. Ann Williams (D-Chicago) said during the committee hearing Wednesday. […]

The bill would require companies to have a health data privacy policy laying out what information they’re collecting, using, selling, and storing and why. They would also have to get people’s consent. […]

Opponents of the bill argue the definition of health data in the proposal is too broad.

* Center Square

State Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, offered up House Bill 2161 in committee Wednesday. […]

“House Bill 2161 adds family responsibilities to the list of protected categories in the Illinois Human Rights Act protection against harassment and retaliation,” he said.

Democratic state Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, said there needs to be clarity for the bill. […]

Guzzardi said the measure doesn’t protect anyone from being held accountable by their employer for poor job performance. The measure advanced out of committee. Guzzardi said he plans to bring back an amendment he hopes will allay concerns.

* Illinois PIRG…

Legislation to phase out fluorescent lighting (HB2363) passed through the Illinois House Energy and Environment Committee on Tuesday. If the bill becomes law, fluorescent lighting would be replaced over time with highly efficient LED bulbs, saving Illinois consumers more than $1.5 billion on utility bills, avoiding 2.2M metric tons of C02 emissions by cutting energy waste, and avoiding 419 pounds of mercury pollution by 2050, according to analysis by the Appliance Standards Awareness Project.

“Passing the Clean Lighting Act is a clear winner – it will save consumers money, cut energy waste, and remove a persistent neurotoxin from the Illinois waste stream,” said Illinois PIRG State Director Abe Scarr. “Members of the Illinois General Assembly should jump at the opportunity to save their constituents money and protect our environment.”

If the bill becomes law, Illinois would become the 9th state to pass similar policies. With a clarifying amendment filed at the hearing, there is no known opposition to the legislation.

The utility bill savings of replacing fluorescent lights with LEDs are clear and overwhelming: A typical small office could see $900 a year in savings and an average school could save $3,700 per year. […]

The bill has until April 19th to be passed by the full Illinois House for consideration in the Illinois Senate.

* The Coalition for Prescription Drug Affordability…

This morning, President Biden made an announcement, echoing previous remarks in his State of the Union address, about his proposal to allow Medicare to negotiate prices on up to 50 drugs annually. This proposal would create an added savings of $200 billion on top of the current projection of $160 billion over the next ten years.

The Illinois General Assembly is currently considering HB 4472, which would leverage federal drug price negotiations to benefit all Illinoisans. The bill would give Illinois a mechanism to extend Medicare-negotiated drug prices for all Illinoisans and require a pass-through of those savings to consumers. Without such a mechanism, more than 6.8 million Illinoisans on commercial insurance would not see the benefits of drug price negotiations through lower prescription co-pays and insurance premium costs.

HB4472 also allows for additional drugs to be considered for upper payment limits, extending even greater relief for seniors grappling with prescription drug costs. 90% of seniors regularly rely on prescription medication.

“President Biden is fighting to lower the out-of-control cost of prescription drugs that keeps people up at night,” said Julie Sampson, Executive Director of Citizen Action/Illinois. “The Illinois General Assembly has an opportunity to leverage federal drug price negotiations and bring those savings home for all Illinoisans by passing HB 4472.”

* Rep. Jed Davis…

Yesterday, House Bill 4350, filed by State Representative Jed Davis (R-Yorkville) passed the Adoption & Child Welfare Committee with a unanimous vote of 14-0.

“I am thrilled the Child Abuse Notice Act passed committee yesterday,” said Rep. Davis. “This act will require specific establishments to post informational signs targeting minors caught in child abuse and trafficking, providing pathways for immediate help.”

Establishments with the highest likelihood of being frequented by children being abused or trafficked, such as bus stations, emergency rooms, and hotels will be required to post these signs. Rep. Davis worked with the Illinois State Police when identifying these locations.

Rep. Davis continued, “Children who are in these horrendous situations may not know how to get help. Many of them feel alone and trapped, and these signs will provide victims a way out.”

“I also want to thank Colleen Murphy who testified on behalf of this legislation. Colleen is a constituent and the founder of the national movement, My Body Tells The Truth (MBTTT). She brought the idea for this legislation to my office, and I appreciate her continued determination to protect children in Illinois.”

This bill is one of five bills included in the Protecting Kids legislative package filed by Representative Davis.

* KHQA

In the push to increase wages, Direct Support Professionals (DSP) are fighting for a wage increase for their work and care across Illinois. Senate Bill 3764 aims to help caregivers get the pay they believe they deserve. […]

On Wednesday the Illinois Senate Appropriations – Health and Human Services Committee held a hearing to discuss this legislation.

With unfilled positions, closed group homes, excessive overtime, and thousands of Illinoisans stuck on the waitlist for services and care, DSP caregivers are seeking a $3 an hour wage increase for their work and care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. […]

At the committee hearing, it was shared with the public that this isn’t the first time the state has improved funding over the years for this community. However minimum wage increases have weakened the impact of wage increases for the developmentally disabled community.

* WAND

Illinois lawmakers know there were 109 cardiac events involving Illinois students under 18 during 2022. School districts may soon be required to develop cardiac emergency response plans to help address the growing issue.

The Illinois General Assembly has previously passed plans to require every school to have AEDs available on school property. However, House Bill 5394 would require school districts to work with local paramedics to create a plan in case there is a cardiac event. […]

Moline High School student Maddox McCubbin became an advocate for this change after he suffered from a sudden cardiac arrest last year. He was on the ground of his study hall room without oxygen for three minutes until the school nurse arrived and was able to quickly provide CPR. […]

House Bill 5394 passed unanimously out of the House Elementary & Secondary Education: School Curriculum & Policies Committee. The plan now moves to the House floor for further consideration.

* SJ-R

A bill proposed by Peoria state Sen. Dave Koehler aimed at lowering carbon emissions into the atmosphere could result in higher gas prices, opponents to the legislation say.

Koehler, who proposed SB 1556 — also known as the Clean Transport Standard — says any fears that his bill would raise gas prices is a “scare tactic” being used by its opponents and the legislation is something that needs to happen now to tackle climate change. […]

Koehler and his team are currently working on another amendment for the bill. He said they hope to have it done within a month but added this is something he wants to “get done right, not fast.” If the bill has to wait until a later legislative session to become law, Koehler said that is a satisfactory outcome.

The coming amendment is ironing out details on how the credit system works, among other things, at the request of some agriculture groups, Koehler said.

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Open thread

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Restaurants push back against bill ending tipped wage. SJ-R

    - Tipped workers at restaurants throughout the state earn an hourly wage of $8.40 plus tips. Through House Bill 5345, tipped wage would jump to $15 starting next January.
    - Rep. Mike Coffey manager of Saputo’s, expects inflation that will be passed on to the customer.
    - Sponsor Rep. Lisa Hernandez said the bill will be held on second reading, allowing for further discussion before a full chamber vote in the House.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Michael Phillips | Is Gov. Pritzker’s sales pitch to Hollywood working?: I talked to Gov. Pritzker and, separately, Illinois Production Alliance executive director Christine Dudley about last week’s flurry of Los Angeles sit-downs and meet-ups; what Georgia offers filmmakers in tax incentives that Illinois doesn’t; and, inevitably, “The Bear,” now filming its third and fourth seasons in Chicago.

    * Tribune | Illinois lawmakers consider measure to criminalize AI-generated child porn: The measure, which ultimately passed through the House Judiciary Criminal Committee, is being pushed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul. Its main sponsor is state Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, a Glenview Democrat who has been working on ways to have state law keep up with the new technology. […] David Haslett, chief of the attorney general’s office’s high-tech crimes bureau, testified that AI could make it more difficult for law enforcement to bring charges of child pornography because of confusion over whether images were real or computer-generated.

    * Capitol News Illinois | Lawmakers question Pritzker’s plan for new early childhood agency: The plan, which Pritzker first announced in October and which he included in his budget address in February, would consolidate a host of programs and services currently run by three different agencies under one roof. That would include such things as child care subsidies for low-income families currently housed in the Department of Human Services; preschool block grants administered by the State Board of Education; and the licensing of day care centers, which is currently done by the Department of Children and Family Services.

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul presented the proposed budget for the Attorney General’s office for the next fiscal year to lawmakers today in Springfield. Raoul announced to a legislative committee that his office generated more than $1 billion in revenue on behalf of the state in 2023. The revenue the Attorney General’s office collected for the state shows that for every dollar of taxpayer funding the office received in Fiscal Year 2023, it generated $17.55 for the state. Since Raoul took office, the Attorney General’s office has generated more than $5.4 billion for the state.

“The Attorney General’s office serves our state as the people’s law firm, and we are able to bring in needed revenue as we do this critical work,” Raoul said. “We have remained steadfast in our work to curb violent crimes in our communities and protect children and our most vulnerable populations. I look forward to building upon our efforts to improve the quality of life in every part of Illinois.”

In 2023, the Attorney General’s office was able to bring in $290 million through collections litigation, including cases involving the collection of funds for damage to state property, child support enforcement, fines and penalties. The Attorney General’s office also collected more than $299 million through tobacco litigation and more than $284 million in estate tax revenues.

* Some perspective



* Here’s the rest…

    * WREX | $4.3 million in state grants awarded to prepare current high school students for teaching careers: This is the fourth round of funding for this program, which has awarded a total of $5.6 million so far. The grants have benefitted nearly 12,000 Illinois high school students across 212 school districts and three community colleges.

    * STLPR | Missouri solar power grew significantly last year, but it’s still far behind neighboring Illinois: Solar energy grew faster in Missouri than Illinois in 2023. Missouri generated almost 32% more power from the sun in 2023 compared to 2022, while Illinois’s solar generation grew by about 24%. […] Illinois still produces significantly more wind and solar energy than Missouri does, the Climate Central report said. In 2023, Illinois generated more than 25,500 gigawatt-hours of solar and wind energy, while Missouri produced about 7,700 gigawatt-hours.

    * Block Club | Mayor Brandon Johnson, 1 Year After Election: ‘Name One Thing … I Haven’t Done’: The mayor, a former public school teacher and union organizer, declined to give himself a letter grade for his performance thus far. Instead, he listed a series of measures he sees as proof he’s fulfilling his campaign promises: phasing out the tipped minimum wage, providing funding to reopen mental health centers, expanding paid time off requirements and not raising property taxes, he said.

    * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s ex-chief of staff joins private security firm that hires Chicago cops: Guidice stepped down as Johnson’s top deputy Monday following a City Hall career that stretched back to the administration of former Mayor Richard M. Daley. He has been replaced by Cristina Pacione-Zayas, a former state senator who was Johnson’s deputy chief of staff since the beginning of his term in office. Guidice led the Office of Emergency Management and Communications before he joined Johnson’s cabinet last spring. Blue Star portrayed Guidice’s city government-heavy resume as unique expertise.

    * Sun-Times | Johnson’s failed Bring Chicago Home referendum gets boost from unlikely source: Developer Quintin Primo III sounded almost like a cheerleader for the $100 million-a-year tax increase during a news conference called to announce $151.2 million in tax increment financing subsidies to help adapt four Loop office buildings for residential and commercial use.

    * Crain’s | Why private-equity investors see a target-rich environment in Chicago’s accounting biz: In 2021, private equity made a notable push into the accounting industry, buying national firms like EisnerAmper and Schellman & Co., among others. The trend continued this year with Chicago-based players Grant Thornton and Baker Tilly opening their doors to private equity. “It’s definitely a new trend,” said Michael Minnis, an accounting professor at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. “There’s certainly been a lot of interest and activity in the accounting space by private equity.”

    * Sun-Times | Janitors union rallies in Loop for better pay as contract deadline looms: The unionized workers, represented by the Service Employees International Union Local 1, will decide Saturday whether to ratify an agreement or vote to strike before their three-year contract expires on Sunday. The negotiations affect 8,000 janitors in the Chicago area who clean buildings including Willis Tower, Hancock Tower, Merchandise Mart and other iconic sites.

    * Crain’s | United CEO’s pay soared last year from COVID lows: Kirby received $6.6 million in “non-equity” incentive or cash bonus last year, the biggest factor in his overall compensation climbing to an estimated $18.6 million from $9.8 million in 2022. His $2.9 million bonus from 2022 and $3.7 million bonus from 2023 were both paid out last year, the proxy shows.

    * Sun-Times | Inside the Chicago court fight on Black hair care: In October 2022, the first of several thousand lawsuits was filed at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in the Loop by a woman from St. Louis claiming that chemicals in hair relaxer products she used — such as Soft Sheen, Just for Me and Dark & Lovely — caused her cancer. Near-identical lawsuits began piling up in state and federal courts across the U.S. The federal cases — now counting 8,500 plaintiffs, with more added every week — were consolidated last year in front of a single federal judge in Chicago. Dozens of cases have been filed in Cook County, and dozens more are in front of judges in local jurisdictions across the country. Love filed a lawsuit of her own in June.

    * The Hollywood Reporter | Iowa-LSU NCAA Rematch Sets All-Time Record for Women’s Basketball: Iowa’s 94-87 victory over LSU averaged 12.3 million viewers for ESPN, the largest TV audience ever for a women’s basketball game in the United States. The previous record was set more than 40 years ago, when CBS’ broadcast of the 1983 title game — featuring USC legend Cheryl Miller — drew 11.83 million people. LSU’s 102-85 win in last year’s championship game was the previous ESPN record, drawing 9.9 million viewers across ABC and ESPN2.

    * CBS | Former Gov. Pat Quinn has warning for White Sox, Bears after Kansas City stadium tax referendum fails: “I think the people of Chicago should have the same opportunity as the people of Kansas City,” Quinn said. “In Kansas City, the voters were clear for not raising a sales tax.” Last week, Quinn filed an ordinance with the Chicago city clerk that would ask the City Council to put a referendum on the November ballot allowing voters to decide if their tax dollars should support new stadiums.

    * TNC | Georgie Geraghty Named Illinois Executive Director of The Nature Conservancy: “Leading The Nature Conservancy in Illinois, alongside committed colleagues and partners in the Midwest and around the world, is a full-circle moment,” said Geraghty, who began her career with General Electric (GE). “We are all seeing and feeling the impacts of climate change and the loss of nature. But I am as hopeful as ever because local communities, decision-makers and influential businesses are pushing for much-needed change.”

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Illinois Is Top Ten In The Nation For Reported Gas Leaks, Fix Illinois’ Aging Natural Gas Lines Now

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois ranks #9 in the U.S. for reported gas leaks, shows a study conducted in June 2022 on methane gas leaks. Frequent leaks are resulting in death, injury, and other damage to our health and environment. Pausing critical replacement of our aging natural gas lines is dangerous for everyone.

When Governor Pritzker’s appointees on the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) shut down the natural gas line Safety Modernization Program in Chicago, it not only wiped out 1,000 jobs, but also subjected residents and business owners to the unnecessary danger of aged gas infrastructure that is no longer allowed to be replaced.

Tell Gov. Pritzker and the ICC to restart the program, lives are at risk. Transitioning to electric without a plan will cost homeowners thousands of dollars. We need to fix our dangerous natural gas lines for our safety.

Click on the links to view our ads: Ticking Time Bomb & Real Change.
To learn more and help fight back, visit us online at Fight Back Fund.

Paid for by Fight Back Fund

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Apr 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* APM Reports

The girl’s mother and grandmother brought the child to their local emergency room in Jacksonville, Illinois. (The girl and her family are not being identified because she is a victim of sexual assault.)

At Jacksonville Memorial Hospital, a doctor noted trauma to her vaginal area, records show. “My daddy touches me there,” she said during the exam, according to police records and an interview with the girl’s grandmother.

A state law enacted 48 years ago required the hospital to offer a forensic exam, often called a rape kit. A revision passed in 2018 also required the hospital to notify a sexual assault advocate on the girl’s behalf.

But neither of those things happened, state inspectors found when they arrived two weeks later in response to a complaint.

Instead, the doctor sent the girl home.

When faced with the inspectors’ findings, hospital leaders could have apologized and redoubled their efforts to treat sexual assault victims as the law intended.

Instead, they shut down services for sexual assault survivors. Today the hospital sends these patients 40 miles away to another hospital. A spokeswoman for Jacksonville Memorial Hospital declined to comment. […]

An investigation by APM Reports shows that what happened at the hospital in Jacksonville is not an isolated incident. Roughly two dozen hospitals have violated Illinois’ landmark sexual assault survivor law with few consequences.

Lawmakers also added a critical exception that undercut the premise of the law: Hospitals that found the requirements too onerous could send patients elsewhere.

In the 17 years since lawmakers created that exception, the number of hospitals transferring patients instead of treating them has more than tripled.

* Chalkbeat

Today is the first day people can collect signatures to get on the ballot for Chicago’s first school board elections. […]

Candidates must live in Chicago in the district they plan to run for at least one year. They must be a U.S. citizen, registered to vote, and cannot be a child sex offender. In order to get on the ballot, candidates have to collect at least 1,000 and no more than 3,000 valid signatures from voters in the district they’ll represent.

Signatures must be filed with the Chicago Board of Elections between June 17 and June 24.

* Sun-Times

A small number of tuberculosis cases have been detected among migrants at city shelters, the Chicago Department of Public Health confirmed.

The health department would not share exactly how many cases were found or identify shelters. But the department said there haven’t been any reports of TB in the city from an exposure to migrants positive for the infection.

TB is curable with antibiotics, and transmitting the infection to others typically requires hours of contact between individuals.

A spokesperson said about 10% to 20% of Central and South American residents have latent TB infections, meaning they’re positive for the infection but are asymptomatic and can’t pass it to others. But the spokesperson did not say which of these cases, if any, are latent infections.

* Alton Telegraph

A referendum dealing with the separation of downstate Illinois from Cook County and Chicago was approved by the Madison County Board’s Government Relations Committee.

The resolution, which is likely to have some amendments when it goes before the full County Board, would ask residents if the county “should correspond with the boards of other counties … about the possibility of separating from Cook County to form a new state and to seek admission to the Union” and would appear on the Nov. 5 ballot.

The committee approved the resolution 6-1, with Alison Lamothe, D-Edwardsville, who has been critical of the idea, the only “no” vote. […]

For the separation to happen, it would have to be approved by the Illinois General Assembly, signed by the governor, then approved by both Houses of the U.S. Congress, and signed by the president.

* Click here to vote. WREX

The finalists for “The Coolest Thing Made in Illinois” contest have been selected. The competition began with over 200 nominees and has been narrowed down to the top 4 contenders. These finalists are:

    - Komatsu Mining Truck manufactured by Komatsu in Peoria
    - Mullen’s Imitation French Dressing produced by Mullen’s in Palestine
    - The MQ-25 Stingray (Drone Refueler) built by Boeing in Mascoutah
    - Mod Box by Enviro Buildings made by Craig Industries in Quincy

* Here’s the rest…

    * WICS | Other cities in Central Illinois feeling impact of ambulance shortage: The Jacksonville Fire Department relies on a private ambulance company and has had situations where mutual aid partners had to come and assist, but the city is working to change that. “Echo ambulance has applied to the City of Jacksonville, the City of Jacksonville is entertaining the possibility of allowing another private entity to provide service,” said Phil McCarty, the director of Jacksonville Emergency Management.

    * WMAY | Sangamon County Historical Society slated to have ACLU’s Ken Page discuss Springfield’s historic Black Firehouse No. Five in the middle of April: The event is free and open to the public. Ken Page of the Springfield ACLU will share the history of the site and discuss the work that has been done to restore the building and acquire old log books and photos; he is also slated to lead a tour of the site.

    * Blue Star Security | Rich Guidice jones Blue Star Security as director of business development: With three decades of experience in municipal government, Rich has extensive knowledge of the City’s management and operations, and Chicago’s vibrantly diverse communities. Previously, Rich Guidice served as Executive Director of the City of Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications(OEMC) from March 2019 – April 2023. In his role as Executive Director, Mr. Guidice oversaw a wide array of public safety programming.

    * SJ-R | Petition claims new evidence exonerates 3 suspects in 1996 murder case: “Junk science” was used in forensic comparison of cinders and concrete, clothing fasteners and dog hair, the petition claimed. “It was not, in fact, based on any real or existing science. This comparison evidence was unproven, unprecedented, and unreliable, and should have never been allowed in a court of law,” the petition stated.

    * WMBD | Tazewell County finalizes votes in contested Third District Board race : Ballots postmarked by the March 19 primary contest proved to be the difference in the Republican contest for the three representatives from the Third District for the Tazewell County Board. In final tabulations on Monday, the top vote-getters were newcomer Eric Schmidgall at 2,312 and Board Parliamentarian William “Bill” Atkins at 1,987.

    * WCIA | ‘We do not make this decision lightly’: Quaker Oats says reason behind Danville factory closure: WCIA obtained a letter from the company’s HR department saying the facility located on Voorhees Street in Danville will close June 8. The letter estimates more than 510 employees will be laid off due to the closure.

    * WBEZ | Chicago Public Media lays off 14 staffers, citing financial troubles: The job cuts coincide with the debut of a $6.4 million, state-of-the-art studio at WBEZ’s Navy Pier office and follows a double-digit-percentage pay increase for Chicago Public Media’s top executive. Additionally, other high-level executives departed the not-for-profit news organization in December.

    * Tribune | Johnson greenlights four ‘LaSalle Reimagined’ sites to build downtown residences: Together, the projects would cost roughly $520 million and create 1,000 more living units. Of those, 319 would be rented at affordable rates, if they are approved by various city panels.

    * Tribune | Attorney General Garland in Chicago, announces $78 million in new anti-violence funding: Garland, a Chicago-area native, made the announcement at the second annual summit for the Community-Based Violence Intervention and Prevention Initiative, a federal grant program started by the Biden administration to provide resources to local agencies and groups in tune with the needs of specific communities. Garland told the gathering of several hundred stakeholders at the Hyatt Regency hotel on East Wacker Drive that solicitations for the $78 million in grants were “going live today,” prompting applause and murmurs of excitement in the crowd.

    * Sun-Times | City officials and NASCAR unveil traffic plans for July 2024 street race: The NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series are scheduled for July 6-7, but setup and breakdown of the race course mean some road closures will begin as early as June 10 and last through July 18. The closures for setup and teardown are set to last 19 days compared with 25 days last year, according to a news release from the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications.

    * Crain’s | Forbes billionaires list dotted with new names — some familiar to Chicago: Newcomers to the billionaire club with business ties to Illinois include Steve Lavin, the CEO of Aurora-based meat-packing company OSI Group who ranked 809th with $3.9 billion, tying with Joseph Grendys, CEO of Kosh Foods. Don Levin, CEO of Republic Brands paper rolling company in Glenview, is new to the list with a net worth of $1.7 billion coming in at No. 1851 alongside newcomer Matthew Pritzker, who sued his family for a piece of the Hyatt fortune back in 2005. Liesel Pritzker Simmons, who sued the empire along with her brother, joins the list this year with a 2046th ranking at $1.5 billion.

    * Gizmodo | Amazon Ditches ‘Just Walk Out’ Checkouts at Its Grocery Stores: Just over half of Amazon Fresh stores are equipped with Just Walk Out. The technology allows customers to skip checkout altogether by scanning a QR code when they enter the store. Though it seemed completely automated, Just Walk Out relied on more than 1,000 people in India watching and labeling videos to ensure accurate checkouts. The cashiers were simply moved off-site, and they watched you as you shopped.

  17 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My super-talented brother Devin (Isabel’s dad) is being featured in an eclipse art show this month


We have curated an Eclipse Art Show this month at Booby's Carbondale with paintings by The Art of Timothy Thomas and…

Posted by Chris McKinley on Monday, April 1, 2024

I've been brushing up on my eclipse photo knowledge and getting my gear ready for the upcoming event. I shot a drone,…

Posted by Devin Miller on Sunday, March 10, 2024

Devin and I went to the Ozzy Osbourne show during the last full eclipse.

* The Atlantic

Eclipses are not particularly rare in the universe. One occurs every time a planet, its orbiting moon, and its sun line up. Nearly every planet has a sun, and astronomers have reason to believe that many of them have moons, so shadows are bound to be cast on one world or another as the years pass.

But solar eclipses like the one that millions of Americans will watch on April 8—in which a blood-red ring and shimmering corona emerge to surround a blackened sun—are a cosmic fluke. They’re an unlikely confluence of time, space, and planetary dynamics, the result of chance events that happened billions of years ago. And, as far as we know, Earth’s magnificent eclipses are unique in their frequency, an extraordinary case of habitual stellar spectacle. On April 8, anyone who watches in wonder as the moon silently glides over the sun will be witnessing the planetary version of a lightning strike. […]

Relative to the diameter of the Earth, our moon is unusually big for a satellite, at least in our solar system. If you were an alien astronomer visiting our corner of space, you’d probably think the Earth-moon system was two planets orbiting each other. And yet, rotund as it may be, our moon is still 400 times smaller in diameter than the sun—but it also just so happens to be roughly 400 times closer to Earth. And even that coincidence of space and size is, in truth, an accident of time. Today, the moon orbits about 240,000 miles from Earth. But 4.5 billion years ago, when it was first born from an apocalyptic collision between Earth and a Mars-size planet, it was only 14,000 or so miles away, and therefore would have looked about 17 times bigger in the sky than it does today. Since then, the moon has been slowly drifting away from Earth; currently, it’s moving at about 1.5 inches a year. As the size of its orbit increased, its apparent size in Earth’s sky decreased. That means the eclipses we see today were likely not possible until about 1 billion years ago, and will no longer be possible 1 billion years from now. Humanity has the luck of living in the brief cosmic window of stunning eclipses.

* The Question: Any special eclipse plans Monday?

  27 Comments      


Lightfoot’s only major legislative achievement may be tottering on the brink

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Chicago’s casino bet on Bally’s could go bust if the company goes private, according to a pair of high-profile investors trying to block a takeover effort by the debt-laden corporation’s chairman, Soo Kim.

As Bally’s scrambles to secure $800 million to build its permanent casino in River West, Kim’s bid “jeopardizes the completion of the Chicago project, putting at further risk gainful employment and tax generation in Illinois,” investors from K&F Growth Capital wrote in a letter to Bally’s board of directors Tuesday.

Shareholders — and Chicago taxpayers — would be better served if Bally’s “immediately” partnered with a more experienced, high-end gambling company to execute the remainder of the $1.7 billion project, according to K&F managing partners Dan Fetters and Edward King. […]

Kim announced his takeover bid last month at $15 per share — less than half the $38-per-share buyout he offered in 2022 shortly before former Mayor Lori Lightfoot picked Bally’s for the coveted Chicago casino license. […]

Meanwhile, early returns from their temporary casino inside the historic Medinah Temple have been underwhelming since opening in September 2023. While it’s quickly proven to be one of Illinois’ biggest casino draws, it’s only generated about $4.3 million for Chicago police and firefighter pension funds — far short of projections by both Lightfoot and Mayor Brandon Johnson.

Lightfoot’s decision was puzzling from the very beginning. And now it’s in danger of ending up on the large, steaming junk heap that was the four years of Lori Lightfoot.

Heckuva job.

* From what I’ve read so far, Gregory Royal Pratt’s “The City is Up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost a City in Crisis” is the best political book out of Chicago in a very long time. Go buy a copy today. Pratt finished his book before the temporary downtown casino showed signs of weakness and even possible failure. But here’s his take

And now “the only true major legislative victory for Lightfoot of her administration” ain’t turning out so well. At least for now.

Greg is clearly one of the best political reporters we have in Chicago. The spin coming out of the Lightfoot camp today against his book is just plain ridiculous. Again, go buy the book.

  38 Comments      


Rate the new “Pause to heal” radio ads

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTAX

A new partnership to raise awareness about the lifesaving potential of Firearm Restraining Orders (FROs), or “red flag laws,” is launching today during National Public Health Week involving the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), Brady: United Against Gun Violence, and the Ad Council.

The Illinois effort is the first phase of a planned multi-state campaign called “Pause to Heal.” It is designed to prevent firearm suicides and other shootings by educating the public about the state’s FRO law, and the power that family and household members have to ask a court to temporarily restrict access to guns and ammunition when a person poses a threat to themselves or others.

Though FROs can be highly effective, a recent study from the Ad Council Research Institute (ACRI) and Joyce Foundation found that only 10% of Illinoisans are familiar with these potentially life-saving tools and know how to use them if needed. The new campaign aims to bolster awareness of these interventions, featuring a new website PauseToHeal and ads that will launch today across radio, digital, print, and outdoor with video PSAs to come starting later this year.

* From Mike Claffey at IDPH yesterday…

For this first phase of the campaign, IDPH is partnering with the Ad Council and Brady, who have funded the new “Pause to Heal” campaign focused on educating people in Illinois about FROs. Assets for the new campaign roll out statewide today across digital, radio, print and outdoor. The Ad Council works within a donated media model, meaning media partners provide space and time at no cost to the nonprofit, helping to spread awareness about critical social issues, like this lifesaving firearm restraining order education program.

* I’ve combined both the 15-second and 30-second ads into one file


  4 Comments      


Listen To Servers – Vote No On House Bill 5345

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

“As a single parent and head of household, I am concerned about this legislation because the removal of the tip credit could change the way I am able to provide for my family. It could reduce the amount of money I can earn each night and eliminate my ability to have a schedule that allows me to be there for the ones I love.” - Dominique Juarez, Alexander’s Steakhouse, Peoria

Dominique with some of her regular customers at Alexander’s Steakhouse in Peoria, IL


Tell your state legislators to VOTE NO on House Bill 5345 and Protect Illinois Hospitality

  Comments Off      


Voters clobber KC stadium plan

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The referendum simply asked voters to weigh in on extending an existing three-eights of a cent sales tax by 40 years. Proponents were clobbered. AP

The future of the Royals and Chiefs in Kansas City was thrown into question Tuesday night when residents of Jackson County, Missouri, resoundingly voted down a sales tax measure that would have helped to fund a new downtown ballpark along with major renovations to Arrowhead Stadium.

Royals owner John Sherman and Chiefs president Mark Donovan acknowledged long before the final tally that the initiative would fail. More than 58% of voters ultimately rejected the plan, which would have replaced an existing three-eighths of a cent sales tax that has been paying for the upkeep of Truman Sports Complex — the home for more than 50 years to Kauffman and Arrowhead Stadiums — with a similar tax that would have been in place for the next 40 years.

The Royals, who had pledged at least $1 billion from ownership for their project, wanted to use their share of the tax revenue to help fund a $2 billion-plus ballpark district. The Super Bowl champion Chiefs, who had committed $300 million in private money, would have used their share as part of an $800 million overhaul of Arrowhead Stadium. […]

The tax — or, more accurately, the stadium plans — received significant public pushback almost from the start, when the teams struggled to put concrete plans before voters and were accused of lacking transparency throughout the process.

* Fox

The Royals sought to use their share of the tax revenue to help fund a $2 billion-plus ballpark district. The team had pledged $1 billion from ownership.

The Chiefs sought to use their share of the tax revenue to help fund $800 million in renovations to Arrowhead Stadium. Ownership committed $300 million to the plan.

* Kansas City Star sports columnist Sam McDowell

In the coming days, weeks and perhaps even months, you’ll hear that Jackson County rebuffed downtown baseball, or rebuffed the Chiefs’ and Royals’ respective futures within the county’s boundaries.

Don’t buy it.

The voters of Jackson County did not reject simply the concept of sending taxes to billionaires to fund shiny new objects. This is not a cozy fit into a national narrative. They rejected a haphazard, moving target of a campaign that asked voters to trust what would come after the vote rather than what had come before it.

In fact, this mess of a campaign, the Royals’ 16-month crusade for a sweeping change in particular, could be defined in two words: Trust us.

Sounds kinda like Bring Chicago Home.

* Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas

Maybe the Sox and Bears should pay attention to both messages from voters.

  26 Comments      


Improve Support For Relatives Caring For Youth In DCFS Care

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

  Comments Off      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGEM

Illinois state lawmakers took a step to essentially ban what’s commonly known as “gas station heroin” Tuesday.

The state House Judiciary-Criminal Committee passed a bill designating tianeptine as a Schedule III controlled substance. If it becomes law, it would make it illegal to posses the drug without a prescription.

Despite acting like an opioid, the drug is currently regulated as a dietary supplement. People can purchase it over-the-counter in gas stations and smoke shops […]

llinois state lawmakers took a step to essentially ban what’s commonly known as “gas station heroin” Tuesday.

The state House Judiciary-Criminal Committee passed a bill designating tianeptine as a Schedule III controlled substance. If it becomes law, it would make it illegal to posses the drug without a prescription.

Despite acting like an opioid, the drug is currently regulated as a dietary supplement. People can purchase it over-the-counter in gas stations and smoke shops. […]

The committee also passed a bill designated the animal tranquilizer xylazine a Schedule III controlled substance. The bill would exempt veterinarians allowing them to use the drug.

* Here’s more on tianeptine from USA Today

Tianeptine is prescribed as an antidepressant in some European, Asian and Latin American countries, but it’s not approved for any medical use in the U.S. Still, companies are marketing and selling tianeptine products as dietary supplements typically in pill and powder form, claiming it can improve brain function and treat depression, anxiety, pain and even opioid use disorder.

Tianeptine has been banned in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee. […]

Poison control cases involving tianeptine have increased nationwide, from 11 total cases between 2000 and 2013 to 151 cases in 2020, the FDA says. Many poison control calls often involve severe withdrawal symptoms, such as agitation, vomiting and diarrhea, because people typically consume higher doses than those prescribed in other countries, according to a 2018 CDC report.

* Press release

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today announced his office is introducing legislation to clarify that Illinois’ child pornography laws apply to images and videos created by artificial intelligence (AI) technology. The measure builds on the work being done by Attorney General Raoul’s office, in collaboration with state and federal law enforcement agencies, to crack down on child pornography throughout Illinois.

Attorney General Raoul initiated House Bill (HB) 4623, which is sponsored by Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, to address the use of AI-generated child pornography. The legislation prohibits the use of AI technology to create child pornography that either involves real children or obscene imagery. The bill also separately prohibits the nonconsensual dissemination of certain AI-generated sexual images. Raoul’s legislation was heard today in the House of Representatives’ Judiciary - Criminal Committee where it was passed unanimously.

“Now more than ever, we must address the challenges of AI-generated images and videos in child pornography,” Raoul said. “Any and all child exploitation can be a devastating crime that leaves survivors and their families dealing with a lifetime of trauma. We must hold predators accountable so survivors can receive justice to support their healing.”

Experts from the Attorney General’s office testified before the committee to explain that technological advances have enabled the creation of realistic, computer-generated images and videos of children, and to highlight the ways in which AI-generated child pornography is harmful. When AI technology uses images of real children to generate child pornography, the children who are depicted experience real reputational, emotional and privacy injuries. However, even when the technology does not use images of real children, the resulting child pornography nonetheless perpetuates abusive and predatory behavior.

“Generative AI - the kind that can create realistic images and even videos - is already cheap or free,” said Gong-Gershowitz. “Disgustingly, this technology is being used to create explicit images depicting children. HB4623 is a vital piece of legislation that will help bring our existing sex offender laws up to speed with this rapidly evolving technology. I thank the Attorney General and his staff for their hard work on this legislation.”

HB 4623 will now be considered by the full House of Representatives.

* WGEM

The state House Insurance Committee passed a bill banning car insurance companies from discriminating based on age, race, color, national or ethnic origin, immigration or citizenship status, sex, sexual orientation, disability, gender identity or gender expression when setting premiums. The bill is an initiative of Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, a Democrat. […]

“We know that there is discrimination particularly in certain zip codes. We talk about safe drivers, we talk about seniors, we talk about law enforcement but you’re balancing those discounts on the backs of the poor and I have a problem with that,” said state Rep. Rita Mayfield, D-Waukegan.

“Illinois has a rich, decades-long history of allowing insurance companies open and competitive market places and that is working tremendously well right now,” said state Rep. Jeff Keicher, R-Sycamore.

In addition to being a lawmaker, Keicher is an insurance agent.

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City, said he plans to meet with the representatives from both Secretary of State’s Office and the insurance industry to craft an amendment with compromise language to improve the bill. He then plans to bring the bill back to the committee once the amendment is written.

* Center Square

State Rep. Laura Faver Dias, D-Grayslake, is optimistic that her House Bill 5295, which would expand hormone therapy treatments for women experiencing menopause, will make it out of committee.

In Illinois currently, “we require insurance to cover hormone replacement therapy if you have had a hysterectomy. But the latest research shows we really need to expand it for all people who go through menopause,” said Dias.

State Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, touted a bill she got out of committee two weeks ago. Moeller said House Bill 5395 would prevent insurance companies from unfairly increasing rates on Illinoisans. […]

State Rep. Jeff Keicher, R-Sycamore, said he has three bills he hopes to get out of committee this week, but said there are a disproportionate amount of Republican bills that don’t make it out of committee.

* WAND

House Bill 545 states that DHS would have to provide sufficient funds to child care providers to buy 50 diapers per month for children under participating in full-day programs and 25 diapers per month for kids in part-day child care.

Sponsors believe this would cost roughly $6 million. Although, Republicans are concerned it would cost much more. […]

However, families would need to show proof that they qualify for the state’s child care assistance program in order to get help with diapers. Rep. Joyce Mason (D-Gurnee) also noted that her bill could coordinate well with Gov. JB Pritzker’s Smart Start Illinois program. […]

This plan passed unanimously out of the House Adoption & Child Welfare Committee. House Bill 545 now heads to the House floor for further consideration.

* WAND

A new plan in Springfield could require DCFS caseworkers to develop hair care plans with youth in care and their parents.

The DCFS Youth Advisory Board worked with Rep. Kimberly Du Buclet (D-Chicago) to make their recommendation into legislation. […]

The legislation would allow DCFS to adopt rules to facilitate implementation of the changes, including responsibilities of caseworkers and placement plan specialists in developing the hair care plan, engaging parents regarding the hair care needs of youth and procedures to follow if the parents cannot be contacted, and factors to consider in granting children increased autonomy over hair care decisions. […]

House Bill 5097 passed unanimously out of the House Adoption & Child Welfare Committee. The proposal now heads to the House floor for further consideration.

* ABC Chicago

Lawmakers in Springfield are discussing pay for tipped workers.[…]

Currently, tipped workers earn a sub-minimum wage of $8.40 an hour, and supplement income with tips.

Under the proposal, all tipped workers in Illinois would be paid the state’s minimum wage of $14 an hour, with tips put on top of that. […]

A House committee will take up the issue in Springfield Wednesday.

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Senate Republicans push for a Illinois Prisoner Review Board overhaul. Sun-Times

    -The governor’s office said much of what Republicans are proposing is already “standard practice,” noting that anyone can sign up to receive victim notifications, the board is already made up of members with significant experience in the criminal justice system, and the prisoner review board’s decisions are accessible via a Freedom of Information Act request.

    - Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran is pushing for immediate notifications to victims when inmates have been released — and also requiring all board members to complete yearly training on domestic violence and sexual assault.

    - “Governor Pritzker has already instructed the PRB and Illinois Department of Corrections to conduct a review of current procedures and make any necessary changes in the reporting process for domestic violence cases,” Pritzker spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh said.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Tribune | House speaker’s top lawyer leaves post after being behind ban on lawmakers answering Tribune questions: Instead, in an email delivered to Driscoll in the evening of March 21 with the subject line, “Not what you were hoping for,” Hartmann wrote, “The more I think about it, the more I don’t want to justify or even discuss my ethical guidance publicly.” In that same email, Hartmann wrote, “In retrospect I probably shouldn’t have said anything to Jeremy (Gorner, the Tribune reporter) in the first place, but further explaining isn’t going to help given their response.”

    * Rockford Register Star | Rockford state rep: $165 million available to communities willing to help asylum seekers: “Illinois believes in the morality of all human lives. That’s what it means for us to be a welcoming state,” said state Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford. In the first round of Supporting Municipalities for Asylum Seeker Services Grants, Chicago received $30.25 million; Elgin, $1.27 million; Lake County, $1 million; Urbana, $250,000; and the Village of Oak Park, $400,000.

    * BND | Lawmakers asked CDC to assess IL city’s health after sewage exposure. What’s the holdup?: U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin and U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski said Monday during a visit to Cahokia Heights they haven’t gotten a commitment from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that it will conduct the assessment. The lawmakers said they continue to follow up to make sure it happens. […] The full process for it to conduct a public health assessment typically takes five years on average, but the lawmakers are pushing for a faster timeline for Cahokia Heights, according to Congresswoman Budzinski’s office.

* Here’s the rest…

  5 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Feds, Illinois partner to bring DARPA quantum-testing facility to the Chicago area
* Pritzker, Durbin talk about Trump, Vance
* Napo's campaign spending questioned
* Illinois react: Trump’s VP pick J.D. Vance
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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