Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Banks file lawsuit challenging Illinois credit card fee law. Tribune…
- Illinois earlier this year became the first state in the nation to enact such a law, prompting outrage and an oppositional ad campaign backed by some of the largest financial institutions in the country. - The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago, argues the law should not be enacted in part because it is preempted by federal law for national banks. Other existing laws say it shouldn’t be applied to Illinois or out-of-state banks, the complaint argues. Click here to view the lawsuit. * Related stories… ∙ Law360: Banking Groups Sue To Thwart New Ill. Swipe Fee Restrictions ∙ Bloomberg: Bank, Credit Union Groups Sue Over Illinois Swipe Fee Law ∙ Credit Union Times: Bank & Credit Union Groups File Lawsuit Challenging New Illinois Law * SJ-R | Days of continued licensing delays in Illinois could be coming to an end: With goals to modernize and streamline an archaic system, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation recently announced it had reached an agreement to secure a new professional online licensing system. The state agency, in charge of licensing for health care, occupational professionals and more than 100 other professions, will partner with NIC Licensing Solutions, LLC to create the new online system. The $9 million investment will be paid over the next three years, IDFPR said in a news release. * Tribune | Parking meter payoff for NASCAR cost Chicago $600K over two years: Parking spot closures tied to the race cost Chicago $348,306 in 2023 and another $273,665 in 2024, a Tribune records request revealed. The over $600,000 in so-called true-up costs covered by the city and owed to the parking meter system’s private owner further complicates the cost-benefit analysis of the race as the city and racing authority weigh its long-term future. * Crain’s | Another Illinois university stares down a huge deficit: Northern Illinois University reported a $31.8 million deficit for fiscal year 2024 and now faculty and staff brace for what’s next as the school year approaches. “Who is not going to be scared about that big of a deficit?” said Kerry Ferris, a member of the tenure-track faculty union who previously served as the unit president. “There is some anxiety among the faculty and probably also among the students about how the school will reduce that deficit.” * Crain’s | Illinois bans legacy admissions at public universities: Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a law banning legacy admissions at state universities and colleges, making Illinois the most recent state to pass legislation prohibiting the admissions policy. The law capitalizes on recent backlash against the preferential treatment of legacy admissions, a movement that picked up momentum following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down the use of race as a factor in university admissions. * SJ-R | Illinois Republicans see Harris’ polling surge as ‘honeymoon period’ that’s destined to end: But Republicans at the fair insisted Harris’ surge in popularity will be short-lived. Among them was the keynote speaker at the rally, Matthew Whitaker, an Iowa native who served briefly as acting attorney general during the first Trump administration. “We’re in a honeymoon period with Kamala Harris,” Whitaker said. “The left is so excited that they have a candidate with a pulse. That’s a fairly low bar. I mean, we have a president in Donald Trump that not only has a pulse, he has a fire inside of him to save this country.” * Tribune | Illinois GOP urges focus on policies, not personalities during party’s day at State Fair: “So, taxes, cost of living, crime, corruption. The most corrupt state in the nation,” Illinois Senate Republican leader John Curran of Downers Grove said in an interview before the GOP’s afternoon programming at the state fairgrounds. “This is what Gov. Pritzker’s Democratic allies have brought to Illinois.” * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Republicans see Harris’ polling surge as ‘honeymoon period’ that’s destined to end: Several people attending the Republican Day festivities at the fair acknowledged the dynamics of the 2024 race have changed markedly since the GOP convention. At that time, former President Donald Trump was leading in most national polls and in key battleground states, and Republicans were euphoric after he survived an assassination attempt just two days earlier. Meanwhile, many Democrats were openly questioning whether their presumptive nominee, 81-year-old President Joe Biden, was capable of serving another term in light of his weak debate performance against Trump in June. * Capitol News Illinois | Notes & Quotes: Illinois GOP needs ‘a little mothering’ as new chair walks familiar Trump tightrope: Kathy Salvi, the GOP’s new chair, took over position last month after former chair Don Tracy resigned. The mother of six and unsuccessful candidate for U.S. Senate in 2022 once again referred to the ILGOP as her “165-year-old seventh child.” […] She takes over a GOP that holds no statewide elected offices and is relegated to superminorities in each chamber of the General Assembly. Her message has been one of healing from the party infighting cited in her predecessor’s resignation letter. * Sun-Times | Republicans admit ‘we got lazy’ in blue Illinois — but vow at State Fair to boost GOP turnout: Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, argued the party could snag several seats back from Democrats in November. But first, she said, Republicans need to acknowledge how they’ve ceded control to Democrats in recent years. “We are dealing with a party who wants to destroy small business, hurt our most vulnerable and make families feel that they need to be reliant on government for everything,” McCombie said of Democrats. “How did they do that? We let them. We got lazy. We believed the lie that our voice and our vote does not matter, but it matters.” * Sun-Times | Mayor says he wants a CPS leader who will fight for more funding as fate of current CEO hangs in the balance: A day after the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ reported that plans are afoot to push out Chicago schools chief Pedro Martinez, Mayor Brandon Johnson stressed that he wants a leader who will fight for more funding for the school district so it can hire more staff, such as librarians and art and music teachers. The mayor declined to comment specifically on Martinez, calling it a “personnel issue.” Johnson credited Martinez with implementing some of his agenda, including a more equitable formula to distribute money to schools. * Sun-Times | Under pressure from city’s watchdog, CPD reopens probe of cop who wore extremist symbol during racial justice protest: Officer Kyle Mingari was on duty and assigned to the protest when he was photographed wearing a face mask bearing the logo of the Three Percenters, a group allied with the anti-government militia movement. […] As the police department’s Bureau of Internal Affairs was investigating Mingari, reputed Three Percenters were charged in both the riot at the U.S. Capitol in January 2021 and a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s deadbeat migrant landlords get millions from City Hall despite tax troubles, other government debts: Remo Polselli went to prison for cheating on his federal taxes and then has had more tax problems with the IRS. Yet City Hall has spent $28 million to shelter migrants at two buildings owned by the Michigan landlord, the Sun-Times found. He’s one of two shelter landlords getting tax money despite owing the government. * Sun-Times | Traffic may ‘grind to a halt’ after transit COVID-19 grants run out, RTA warns: Commuters could be spending a lot more time in cars starting in 2026 when the federal COVID-19 dollars propping up Chicago-area transit agencies run dry, according to a dire assessment from the Regional Transportation Authority. “The dense North Side of the city … is likely going to grind to a halt because more people [will] rely on cars to make trips,” the RTA’s program manager Peter Kersten said Thursday at the agency’s board meeting. * Tribune | Dearborn Homes residents say their buildings are in disrepair; CHA says it is fixing the issues: Residents said at a news conference that tenants often get stuck in their units, unable to get groceries and attend doctor appointments, because the elevators are consistently broken. They also spoke about a rat infestation at the development, overflowing and inaccessible trash bins and safety concerns due to crime. […] The concerns from housing advocates and public housing tenants Thursday echo long-standing complaints from residents and their supporters for CHA to improve conditions at its properties and create more housing, as well as enduring calls for the agency’s CEO to step down or be fired by Mayor Brandon Johnson. Meanwhile, CHA said it is addressing the issues at Dearborn Homes. * Tribune | CTA Red Line extension price tag jumps as project takes a major step forward: The contract also offers a window into how the costs of the massive project are shaping up. The latest estimates put the project at $4.8 billion before financing costs, about $1.16 billion over earlier estimates. Some of the project costs are expected to be covered by a large federal grant, and Chicago aldermen previously approved a special tax district that enabled the grant and will raise additional money. But the CTA wasn’t awarded as much federal funding as the agency initially sought, and will have to finance significantly more through bonds than initially planned. * Daily Southtown | Illinois comptroller stops some state payouts to Dolton, threatens fines: Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza said Thursday she is immediately suspending what are called “offset” fund payments to Dolton for the village’s failure to turn over annual financial reports to her office. The money this year is on pace to total $135,000, and Mendoza said she is also threatening fines if Dolton doesn’t file the required reports. Those fines could total $78,600. * Daily Herald | Elgin officials suspect illegal dumping caused fuel slicks on Fox River: [Elgin Fire Chief Robb Cagann] said authorities are investigating, but it will be a challenge, saying the source could be someone dumping in the middle of the night or pouring something down a floor drain in the vicinity. “This is not going to end tomorrow,” he said. “If the source is stopped, then we still have residual all over the system in those pipes. And the only way for that to get out is over time as it flushes out with the rainwater.” * Daily Herald | After nurse scandal, District 25 implements new rules for how students get medication: Arlington Heights Elementary District 25 officials announced new procedures for how medication will be administered during the school day, after a nurse was fired for dispensing the wrong meds to students. Namely, prescription controlled substances that are dropped off at schools by parents must be verified not only by the school nurse, but by a witness. * Daily Herald | How police are using virtual training to handle real-world challenges: The department’s new Operator XR System will transform how the department prepares its officers, Chief Tom Stefanson said, especially when it comes to meeting state requirements for de-escalation training, or responding to active-shooter situations. To use the system, officers wear a VR headset that immerses them in a 360-degree environment — unlike older training simulations where they instead faced a large display screen. * NBC Chicago | Years-old attendance record broken at Illinois State Fair thanks to one artist: According to organizers, the record was previously set in 2011, when Jason Aldean packed 15,329 seats at the annual summer event. Aldean was followed by Florida Georgia Line, with 15,204 in 2014 and Reba McEntire with 14,823 in 2019. But in 2024, a new genre took the top spot as Lil Wayne brought 15,427 people to the fair Wednesday. * Rockford Register Star | Rockford leaders object to county solar farm proposal. Here’s why: At Monday’s Code and Regulation Committee meeting, Rockford City Council members voted unanimously to file a legal objection against the proposed 5-megawatt solar farm north of Rote Road. The solar farm would stand in the way of the city’s long-term land use and annexation goals as outlined in the city’s 2024 Comprehensive Plan, argued Scott Capovilla, the city’s planning and zoning manager. * Daily Herald | Stein out, Bocek, Richards in for Buffalo Grove trustee race: Buffalo Grove Trustee Andrew Stein said he will not run for re-election. Meanwhile, Kevin Richards, vice chair of the village’s planning and zoning commission, said he is running for a two-year seat on the board, to fill out the unexpired term of Gregory Pike. Pike stepped down and was replaced by Denice Bocek. * SJ-R | Chatham Township supervisor appointed to county board seat, will run in special election: The supervisor of Chatham Township was selected to serve on the Sangamon County Board. Justin Davsko, a Republican, will fill the District 26 seat vacated when John H. O’Neill III died on July 6. O’Neill served on the board 22 years. * Rockford Register Star | Five fun facts about that giant Hard Rock Casino Rockford guitar: The giant marquee guitar is a replica of Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Nielsen’s famous checkerboard Hamer electric guitar. A similar checkerboard Hamer 1978 Explorer guitar he used as a backup instrument was on display at the temporary casino. Although the Cheap Trick rocker is known for sometimes using a five-neck custom job, the replica guitar is more traditional looking. * WCIA | Springfield man reaches finals for national mullet competition: Here’s how to vote: Patrick Sosman started growing his mullet hairdo half-a-decade ago when he became a Twitch streamer. He said he wanted to stand out from the crowd. According to Sosman’s contestant profile, he believes the mullet “should be the official haircut of the USA,” and that “there is nothing more American than a mullet.” * Herald-Tribune | New College of Florida tosses hundreds of library books, empties gender diversity library: A dumpster in the parking lot of Jane Bancroft Cook Library on the campus of New College overflowed with books and collections from the now-defunct Gender and Diversity Center on Tuesday afternoon. Video captured in the afternoon showed a vehicle driving away with the books before students were notified. In the past, students were given an opportunity to purchase books that were leaving the college’s library collection. Some discarded books included “Nine and Counting: The Women of the Senate”, “The War of the Worlds” and “When I Knew,” which is a collection of stories from LGBTQ+ people recounting when they knew they were gay. Several books from the GDC were retrieved by local activists from the SEE Alliance and a few students before they could be taken for disposal.
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- OneMan - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 8:03 am:
== The giant marquee guitar is a replica of Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Nielsen’s famous checkerboard Hamer electric guitar. –
You have to have that guitar look like a Rick Nielsen guitar. Since the band has its own day every year in Illinois, a question about Cheap Trick should be on the state constitution test.
- Anyone Remember - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 8:51 am:
IDFPR - Will they be funded so the necessary headcount will be employed to use the new software?
- Donnie Elgin - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 9:29 am:
=Will they be funded so the necessary headcount will be employed to use the new software?=
Enterprise software upgrades are sold with efficiency return on capital, or break even calculations - generally based on needing less staff to do the work of the old inefficient systems.
- TinyDancer(FKASue) - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 10:43 am:
=Parking spot closures tied to the race cost Chicago $348,306 in 2023 and another $273,665 in 2024…=
Slowly I turned … step by step … inch by inch…..
This parking meter stuff makes my blood boil.
I just don’t get why these guys cannot be successfully sued by the citizens of the city of Chicago.
How is it possible that a mayor can essentially sell the streets of a city? That citizens are prohibited from using their own streets unless they pay a ransom?
- Google Is Your Friend - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 11:16 am:
== That citizens are prohibited from using their own streets unless they pay a ransom?==
They aren’t your streets or my streets, they are the public’s streets at large. Furthermore, when it comes to parking on the side of a street, “free parking” is one of the most anti-business policies one can implement. People grab a prime spot and sit and sit and sit. The truth is that there should be more metered spots with even higher rates. The city was unwilling to confront this fact when directly managing meters and that’s why it got fleeced in the meter deal.
- Rich Miller - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 11:19 am:
===The city was unwilling to confront this fact when directly managing meters and that’s why it got fleeced in the meter deal. ===
Fact.
- DuPage Saint - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 11:24 am:
If you can’t run for mayor in Chicago if you have a delinquent water bill I don’t think you should be able to enter into a contract with the city or county or an agent of city or county if you have delinquent real estate taxes or obligations to city county or state. It is foolish to pay millions of dollars to tax cheats
- H-W - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 12:32 pm:
Re: Crain’s Another Illinois University
It doesn’t seem state leaders understand that the solution to declining enrollment is making Illinois Universities competitive across the board. Not just “U of I” and Illinois State which have the economies of scale to weather continuous shifts in students population over the long run. Population trends always go up, then down, then up, etc. It’s what we call “Generations” (the boomers, Gen-X, etc.
But long term commitments to providing public regionals require the state to assist them in weathering these inevitable storms, by balancing state appropriations with tuition revenues over the long run. To do otherwise is a fool’s game.
The current model seems to be spend hundreds of millions over decades creating public regionals, and then when the population temporarily declines, allow the public regionals to decline and fail.
The problem with this model is that when the population rebounds, we will not have the infrastructure in place, and will have to spend billions rebuilding what we should have maintained as a state institution all along - the promise of a strong education to all children in all regions of the state; a system that serves regional needs.
The problem is a macroeconomic problem, not 7 different regional problems. Sending a greater proportion of state appropriations to the regionals at the expense of the flagships will not hurt the flagships. They will be fine. But ignoring the regionals in an inevitable time of need will in fact diminish higher education in Illinois at the macro-level, and divorce the state from one of its primary obligations - the full education and preparation of its citizenry for the future needs of Illinois.
- Proud Sucker - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 12:32 pm:
“Harris’ polling surge as ‘honeymoon period’ that’s destined to end”
True but, isn’t the traditional honeymoon period the week after the convention? So, Harris’ high point should be around August 29th. We can recalculate the race then.
- Huh? - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 12:58 pm:
“The republican’t party is so excited that they have a candidate with a pulse. That’s a fairly low bar. I mean, Donald Trump not only has a pulse, he has trouble stringing two sentences together that make sense.”
Fixed it for ya.
- Anyone Remember - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 2:12 pm:
===Enterprise software upgrades are sold with efficiency return on capital, or break even calculations - generally based on needing less staff to do the work of the old inefficient systems.===
That might happen in the private sector, but in the government sector it rarely, if ever, happens. Rauner’s people started the financial ERP, yet it still isn’t totally implemented, and they more or less acknowledged they wouldn’t be able to use the payroll component. (Illinois connection) The Air Force used to “manage” their financial ERP out of an office in Fairview Heights, they’ve been at it for over 10 years, and it still isn’t completely working. Past is Prologue, IDFPR’s ERP is going to have a bumpy implementation. Or additional staff.
- TinyDancer(FKASue) - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 3:40 pm:
=they are the public’s streets at large=
Exactly. There must be some little twist or turn or loop in some law somewhere that would allow the “public at large” to sue for the return of the use of their own streets to them(banned punctuation)
I know they’ve tried. But, evidently, they didn’t try hard enough.
- Scamp640 - Friday, Aug 16, 24 @ 3:57 pm:
@ H-W- This is an excellent take on the budget issues confronting directional universities.
In addition, the lack of state funding for directional universities means that many Illinois teenagers are leaving Illinois to attend lower-cost universities in other states. If we want to reverse the brain drain, we need to make tuition in Illinois cost-competitive.