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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois labor leaders said today they’ll continue to push for public funding for sports stadiums despite resistance from Gov. J.B. Pritzker and state legislators.

“I don’t know that it’s a matter of changing (Pritzker’s) mind, it’s continuing to work on the legislation to make the case,” said Bob Reiter, head of the Chicago Federation of Labor.

Tim Drea, president of the Illinois AFL-CIO, noted Pritzker “hasn’t said no.”

“Nothing is immutable,” Reiter added.

* And water is wet


* Governor Pritzker hosted a panel on abortion ballot initiatives in 2024 organized by Think Big USA this morning


* Shriver Center on Poverty Law

Crime-free nuisance ordinances (CFNOs) are municipal laws and policies that single out properties where alleged nuisance occurs. These activities can be noise disturbances or emergency service calls. CFNOs hold tenants responsible through fines and evictions, among other penalties. If a crime is being committed, the landlord is obligated to evict the tenant, or risk being fined or losing their rental property license.

The problem, in practice, is the far too broad nature of the ordinance language. It classifies any law enforcement or emergency contact as nuisance behavior. Tenants can be evicted for calls they have made to the police or emergency services, or if they are the victim of a crime at the property. This puts at risk domestic violence victims and people with disabilities, who often seek emergency services and police assistance.

Municipalities also use these ordinances to directly and indirectly encourage landlords to deny housing to people who have encountered the criminal legal system. For example, if the police are called because of domestic violence, a strict liability standard is held. That means all tenants in the home — even the victim — are threatened with eviction.

Although the Violence Against Women Act protects survivors and other people calling the police or emergency services for help, municipalities continue to enforce CFNOs. Systemic barriers lead to a higher impact on some communities. Research shows that over 40% of Black people will experience domestic violence in their lifetimes, resulting in these communities disproportionately harmed and rendered homeless by CFNOs. Distrust in government from decades of discrimination and abuse causes added challenges in getting support.

*** DNC ***

* Think Big America Message Analysis: As Think Big America takes the fight to right-wing extremists across the country, this research project aimed to discover the most effective ways to build off the success of the abortion debate and further elevate the threat of Republican extremism up-and-down the ballot ahead of this November’s critical election.

* Capitol News Illinois | Amid a ‘really, really big week for labor,’ Illinois unions, Democrats held up as model: Organized labor has been everywhere at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago this week, from the main stage to the Illinois delegation’s morning breakfast gatherings. “This has been a really, really big week for labor and very, very much appreciated, and it’s heartwarming,” Illinois labor mainstay and state AFL-CIO President Tim Drea told attendees to the Illinois breakfast on Wednesday.

* Sun-Times | Democrats united despite tide of pro-Palestinian protests, Illinois delegates say: A small but vocal contingent of delegates have withheld support for Vice President Kamala Harris unless she commits to cutting off U.S. weapon supplies to Israel, leading Illinois members of Congress to warn boycotting the polls could tip the scale toward GOP former President Donald Trump.

* Tribune | Naperville, DuPage represented at Democratic National Convention: ‘It’s really the experience of a lifetime’: From behind the scenes to the floor of Chicago’s United Center, volunteers, delegates and elected officials representing Naperville and DuPage County made the rounds on the first day of the Democratic National Convention. They basked in the fervor, helped the hubbub run and exuded local pride. Oh, and there was some wonder, too. At the experience itself and the company they found themselves in.

* South Side Weekly | CPD Agreement with Outside Agencies Reveals Security Approach: Officers assigned to police the DNC must have been on the job for at least two years and be “in good standing” with their home department. They cannot have been personally sued in the past three years and found liable for First Amendment violations, or have “any sustained complains for excessive, unreasonable or unnecessary force” in the last five years.

* Tribune | ‘Enough is enough’: Chicago’s top cop says DNC demonstrators at Israeli consulate there to wreak havoc: Snelling told reporters there were between 55 and 60 arrests — including three journalists — during the pro-Palestinian demonstration. There were only two minor injuries, a testament, he said, to his officers’ restraint and readiness for the DNC. “Once we call the mass arrest, then it was at that point we needed to take people into custody for public safety,” Snelling said. “We attempted to avoid the clash, to no avail. But CPD is not going to run away. We will not stand by and allow our officers to be attacked, because an officer who cannot protect himself cannot protect this city.”

* WGN | Police and FBI investigate maggot incident at DNC breakfast in Chicago: Chicago Police and the FBI is investigating whether maggots were intentionally slipped into a breakfast prepared for delegates attending the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, a law enforcement source tells WGN Investigates. It’s unclear if the contamination was discovered before any delegates consumed the food. Delegates were buzzing about the insect attack as Chicago police officers and Illinois state troopers gathered in the lobby of the Fairmont Hotel near meeting rooms.

* Capitol News Illinois | Obama legacy continues with Harris nomination, DNC speech in Chicago: “It’s been 16 years since I had the honor of accepting this party’s nomination for president,” Obama said, sporting his now-gray hair while joking that he had “not aged a bit” since that time. “And looking back, I can say without question that my first big decision as your nominee turned out to be one of my best, and that was asking Joe Biden to serve by my side as vice president.”

* The Triibe | Inside EAT’s preparation process for their DNC march for reparations: Gregory Mann serves as the hype man of the action. Mann is the minister of organizing for the West Side-based nonprofit Equity and Transformation (EAT), which is led by formerly incarcerated people. The organization leads the “Keep it 1000 Campaign,” a demand for reparations for Black Americans during the third day of the DNC. Mann guides participants from the group’s West Side Center to a spot near the United Center, specifically with the goal of commanding President Joe Biden to create a federal Reparations Commission before leaving office. According to the EAT’s news release, a federal commission “would develop proposals for how the U.S. government will deliver full reparations for Black Americans.” The action also is a call to push action on the H.R. 40 Bill, the “Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act,” that has stalled in the House of Representatives for years.

* WBEZ | ‘Kamala is brat’: Chicago is ground zero for the most clever T-shirts of the season: The Democratic National Convention has been a boon for T-shirt makers. Vendors have traveled to Chicago from across the country to sell their unofficial, unsanctioned and wildly creative merch. Shirts featuring Harris’ face, along with funny quips and slogans are suddenly a common sight on Chicago’s streets. Among those moving merch this week, The T-Shirt Deli is definitely the established veteran in the game. They’ve been in business for more than 20 years and know a thing or two about designing eye-catching Ts.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s small businesses stay on theme at DNC fair with Kamala Harris-inspired nails and clothing: More than 75 Chicago area vendors — from candlemakers and coffee shops to the Shedd Aquarium and the American Writers Museum — were at McCormick Place Tuesday to showcase the city’s diverse economic and cultural offerings. The four-day vendor fair called “DemPalooza” is free and open to the public until Thursday. It includes training sessions, discussion panels and other programming as part of the Democratic National Convention.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Township trustees put lid on Supervisor Tiffany Henyard’s event spending: The actions came during a township board meeting Tuesday that actually started out as two meetings, both held in the township’s South Holland offices but in different rooms on different floors. An ordinance regulating spending for township sponsored events gives township department chiefs a spending cap of $1,000 per week or $10,000 per month, and requires the board to sign off on event budgets before money is committed or spent.

* Daily Herald | Controversial housing plan moves forward in Arlington Heights: A controversial plan for an apartment building for people with disabilities who otherwise could face homelessness is moving forward in Arlington Heights — but at two stories instead of three. At the end of a roughly five-hour meeting that began the night before, a divided village board early Tuesday voted to direct village staffers to prepare the final documents for the proposed Grace Terrace development at 1519 S. Arlington Heights Road. The 4-acre site is vacant now.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | $30 Million Oasis Sports Complex to be Built on Abandoned Coal Mine in Marion : A sports complex, recently announced in Marion, is expected to bring more economic opportunities to the area and will be at the site of an old coal mine. The Prairie Rivers Network made the announcement, stating federal funding will be used to restore land, aiming the a new $30 million sports complex to be constructed on the site of an abandoned coal mine in Marion.

* WCIA | Central Illinois pipefitter launches labor union chapter for women: In August, WCIA is featuring blue-collar workers in Central Illinois. It’s commonly known as a male-dominated industry, but now, a group of women is coming together to show girls can get the job done too. When Laura Abbott graduated from the U of I, she was excited to start her teaching career. She taught for five years in Urbana, then decided to make a career switch after volunteering at “Career Day.”

* WCIA | Champaign School District undergoing audit of special education programs: The Board of Education approved of its authorization at their special meeting Tuesday night, with four members voting for the settlement including the audit and three members abstaining. “Thank you to the families and advocates who have tirelessly sacrificed for these students and who have been the voices for those who cannot speak for themselves,” Betsy Holder said in a post on her Facebook page. “Change won’t happen overnight, but we are finally on the right path with taking accountability and moving forward as a district and community to best serve our most marginalized children.”

* WCIA | Gibson City Mayor responds to future RhinoAg layoffs: Gibson City mayor Dan Dickey is expressing his sadness after RhinoAg announced Tuesday they will let 80 employees go from their manufacturing facility by the end of next March. The mayor said he already has reached out to Congressman Darin LaHood, IL Senator Tom Bennett, and IL Representative Jason Bunting, along with other agencies to help the transition. “Over the years, RhinoAg has contributed to our community by providing jobs, supporting our local economy as well as assisting with numerous local events, organizations and projects,” Dickey said. “We appreciate RhinoAg and our long-standing partnership, but now must focus on assisting employees and their families with avenues and solutions to help them move forward.”

*** National ***

* WGEM | Clashing campaigns: Two sides duel for voter support on Missouri abortion referendum: Now that their proposed constitutional amendment is officially on the November ballot, Missourians for Constitutional Freedom are campaigning like crazy to get the word out. But they’re not the only ones; Missouri Right to Life is campaigning against Amendment Three. The two clashing campaigns started as soon as Amendment Three was officially on the ballot. On November 5, Missourians will vote on whether or not to restore abortion access to the state. If passed, access to abortion and other forms of birth control would be enshrined in the Missouri constitution.

  6 Comments      


Another dire, headline-grabbing convention prediction that didn’t come true

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Late last month

City officials are bracing for up to 25,000 new migrants arriving between now and the Democratic National Convention after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said he would keep busing people here.

Why it matters: The city struggled to accommodate just 15,000 last winter, and the potential deluge could double that number if it materializes.

Catch up quick: On the third night of the Republican National Convention last week, Abbott told supporters: “We have continued busing migrants to sanctuary cities across the entire country, and those buses will continue to roll until we finally secure our border.”

What they’re saying: “We’ve looked at estimates of 20,000 to 25,000 people arriving,” deputy mayor for immigration Beatriz Ponce de León tells Axios.

The logistics of such a huge push seemed rather implausible at the time. Also, the fact that the city has impounded at least one bus used to transport migrants may have added to the deterrence.

* Sun-Times this afternoon

But two days into the convention that has drawn thousands to Chicago, there’s been no evidence of any buses transporting migrants to the city, according to city officials. In fact, the last time a bus arrived in the Chicagoland area was June 17, according to the city’s Department of Family and Support Services.

On Tuesday, the city’s designated area for buses to arrive, 800 S. Desplaines St., remained quiet. The area, which previously housed the Maxwell Street Market, contained a row of portable toilets, police barriers and CTA buses on standby for any arrivals.

City officials said Texas does not provide advance notice about the buses, but it now seems unlikely there will be an increase in newly arrived immigrants.

  5 Comments      


Caption contest!

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Heh…


  28 Comments      


Handful of street fighters achieved their fashion goal, but two journalists also arrested

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ last week

In contrast to the pro-Palestinian protesters who are planning what they call a “family-friendly march” during next week’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago, another group of demonstrators here promises a “militant” approach to the DNC — and expects police to clash violently with protesters.

In one post on social media, that group urges “students and youth” to come to Chicago during the DNC to “take police beatings and arrests” in an effort to “shut down the DNC for Gaza.”

The group, which calls itself Behind Enemy Lines, wrote recently, “Make bruises from Chicago police batons the 2024 back to school Fall fashion.”

Behind Enemy Lines says pro-Palestinian activists have faced repression. “But have you thrown down with the Chicago police yet?” the group wrote in a post on its website.

* Same group

Chicago’s run of peaceful rallies outside the Democratic National Convention came to an end Tuesday night when a group of protesters marched into a line of police, setting off a violent scrum on Madison Street outside one of the city’s major commuter rail stations.

The protesters walked directly into a large group of police officials, four officers deep, around 7:30 p.m. The officers began to push them the other way and yelled, “Move back, move back.” Scuffles began to break out, and officers wearing helmets moved into the crowd.

This was a protest targeting the Israeli consulate.

* The Sun-Times had eight (8) reporters assigned to the protests last night. Check out the huge number of reporters in this video as the scrum began…


The Tribune has lots of photos here.

* Maybe I missed it, but I didn’t see any reporters posting videos last night of this behavior

After the protesters had dispersed, Snelling addressed his officers, mentioning in particular the “vulgar things” some protesters had screamed at women officers.

“There are women on this job being berated by these male protestors, saying some of the most vulgar things,” Snelling said.

That would seem to be valuable news context.

* Tribune

Tribune reporters witnessed multiple protesters being taken into custody, including two independent journalists. A spokesman for the National Lawyers’ Guild put the number at 67, including those journalists.

By 9 p.m. the crowd had mostly disbanded.

Another large protest of Israel’s military action in Gaza also is expected to step off with a rally in Union Park at 3 p.m. followed by a march toward the United Center that will follow the same path as Monday’s demonstration, which brought out some 3,000 attendees.

  27 Comments      


Roundup: Illinois delegation breakfast day three

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Bob Reiter, president of the Chicago Federation of Labor, kicked of the Illinois delegation’s Wednesday breakfast. He’s the latest in a long line of union leaders to have addressed the delegation.

“All eyes are on our state this week. So what do we have to show them?” he said. “We’ll show them how labor and Democrats work together to improve the lives of working people. We’ll show them how we passed the constitutional amendment protecting workers’ rights. We’ll show them how we banned captive audience meetings in this state, and we’ll show we’ll show them how we raised the minimum wage, expanded paid leave, and put an end to last minute schedule changes.” […]

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a progressive Democrat and former teacher, praised the fact that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is a former social studies teacher in addition to being Kamala Harris’ running mate. And he spent time discussing what it means to be a Democrat.

“We got to get the politics right,” he said. “That’s why the investments that we’re making in the state of Illinois and the transformation that’s happening in Chicago is because we’re getting the politics right. We’re not just simply beholding ourselves to this sort of arbitrary definition of what it means to be a Democrat.”  […]

Illinois AFL/CIO President Tim Drea told the delegation the DNC thus far “has been a really, really big week for labor.” Union speakers have had spots on the convention floor and especially at Illinois’ breakfasts.

Click here for CNI’s live DNC updates.

* Mayor Johnson after his speech


* US Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg spoke to the delegates


* They booked some heavy hitters today

* More from the app formally known as Twitter…

  9 Comments      


Pritzker speech and react (Updated)

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker’s convention speech as prepared for delivery…

Fellow Democrats, welcome to Chicago!

We’re a great American city in a proud blue state. Our patriotism was formed in frost and in fire, and in the steel we forged to survive both.

Our love of country has been a tapestry of faith that weaves from Abraham Lincoln reuniting a house divided to Barack Obama declaring blue states and red states make one United States.

Illinois’ presidential pedigree is unmatched. And given that Vice President Kamala Harris spent some of her early life right here – I speak for the entire Illinois delegation when I say we claim her too!

Now, one president we will never claim is the con artist the Republicans nominated in Milwaukee last month.

Donald Trump once called Chicago “embarrassing.” To quote a great Chicagoan who won six world championships on these very grounds: “We take that personally.”

I had to govern for two years while Trump was President. Let me tell you what’s embarrassing.

In Illinois, we passed a massive bill to fix our roads and bridges. When Donald proposed his own plan, he turned right around and called it “stupid.”

We eliminated the grocery tax. Donald hasn’t been in a grocery store since his first bankruptcy.

Illinois invested in clean energy and the jobs it brings. Donald claimed that windmills in the ocean made the whales “a little batty.”

During COVID we supported small businesses and jobs. And Donald, well Donald told us to inject bleach.

Donald Trump thinks we should trust him on the economy because he claims to be very rich.

Take it from an actual billionaire, Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity.

I meet with business leaders all the time, and there is one universal thing they all need: people. They need more workers to fill all the jobs they have – but the anti-freedom, anti-family policies of MAGA Republicans are driving workers away.

Here’s the thing, Americans don’t want to be forced to drive 100 miles to deliver a baby because draconian abortion laws shut down the maternity ward.

Americans want the hope of giving birth through IVF – not the fear it might be taken away.

Americans with LGBTQ kids don’t want them facing discrimination at school because the state sanctioned it.

Americans want to go to their neighborhood grocery store and not have to worry about some random guy open carrying an AR-15.

Americans don’t want their kids to be taught in history class that slavery was a jobs program.

And if Americans are Black or brown, they want to get promoted at work without being derided as a DEI hire for the sin of being successful while not white.

Let’s be clear, it’s not woke that limits economic growth – it’s weird. These guys aren’t just weird, they’re dangerous.

Democrats are for lower taxes and higher wages, less inflation and more business growth. We just think it’s wrong to craft those policies for Elon Musk - and not for everyday working people. That includes a secure retirement and good healthcare. We think the government should help you prosper, not police who you’re sleeping with.

More than anything Democrats want economic policies that are kind, not cruel.

But Trump chooses cruelty every time. After all, everything he’s achieved in his own life has been by hurting - someone else.

Kamala Harris and Tim Walz? Well, they’ve spent their lives lifting people up rather than pushing them down. They know that a White House that leads with kindness looks at someone who is struggling and sees not what they might cost society but what they might create for it.

They want policies that give every American a chance to make it to the middle class.

They want to grow small businesses and cut taxes for everyday people.

More than anything – Kamala Harris and Tim Walz want a country where we can all live with a little serenity. The serenity that comes with a balanced checkbook, an affordable grocery bill, and a housing market that has room for everyone.

And if there’s one thing I know about Donald Trump – he’s not bringing anyone any kind of serenity.

We have a choice, America. Between the man who left our country a total mess -and the woman who has spent four years cleaning it up. And I think it’s time we stop expecting women to clean up messes without the authority and the title to match the job.

Vice President was a good title for Kamala Harris. You know an even better one?

President of the United States of America!

Let’s go get ‘em!

* Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

Gov. Pritzker’s DNC speech and his actual record in Illinois could not be more starkly disconnected. He contends to be for lower taxes just months after imposing $1 billion in tax increases on Illinois families and businesses, while presiding over a state with the second-highest property taxes in the country. He boasts of support for low-income families in the same year that he proposed a regressive tax increase that would only raise taxes on low- and middle-income earners. He says he supports policies for working people while overseeing the state with the second-highest unemployment rate in the nation. It’s time for Gov. Pritzker to take a break from his national campaigning and focus on the job he was elected to, and Think Illinois

…Adding… ILGOP…

Wow, the circus is in town this week! Where is the joy they promised us? All we heard last night were negative, false attacks. JB Pritzker is a shill for his ringmaster Kamala Harris amid his own preparations for a presidential run in 2028. Instead of telling Illinois families why they should raise their families here, as thousands flee the state amid billions in new taxes and out-of-control crime, JB Pritzker further divided our state with divisive rhetoric and bad-faith arguments. See for yourself:

    • JB Pritzker bragged about being a billionaire, while taking the toilets out of his mansion to defraud Illinois from property taxes.
    • Pritzker claims to be a champion for lower taxes, but in reality, he has proposed BILLIONS in new taxes that will hurt Illinois families.
    • 85,000 fewer Illinoisans are working than in 2019, and Illinois has the second worst unemployment rate in the country - despite Pritzker’s claims that he is a champion for working families.

“Last night, JB Pritzker not only claimed Kamala Harris as an Illinoisan, but also claimed her horrid record on immigration, the economy and failures for families across the Prairie State,” said ILGOP Chair Kathy Salvi. “Pritzker is a failure for Illinois and families are worse off under his far-left policies that have raised taxes and forced families to flee the state. One thing is clear from Democrats’ divisive agenda and Pritzker’s prime-time speaking spot - the need to vote Republican in November.”

* More from Isabel…

    * Block Club | Obamas, Pritzker Bring The Energy — And Clap Back At Trump: Pritzker, who was in contention to be Harris’ running mate earlier this summer, received thunderous cheers for one of his comments. “Donald Trump thinks that we should trust him on the economy, because he claims to be very rich,” Pritzker said. “But take it from an actual billionaire. Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity.”

    * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker hammers Donald Trump in DNC speech: ‘Take it from an actual billionaire, Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity’: In a bit of awkward programming, Pritzker’s speech was preceded by Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, who railed against the “billionaire class” and “the need to get big money out of our political process.” “Billionaires in both parties should not be able to buy elections, including primary elections,” said Sanders, who received a more enthusiastic reaction than Pritzker from the United Center crowd. Pritzker spent more than $300 million of his own money to win two elections as governor in Illinois and gave at least $27 million to the Democratic Governors Association two years ago to spend on boosting his preferred opponent in the 2022 GOP primary for governor.

    * Capitol News Illinois | In primetime DNC speech, Pritzker leans into role of benevolent billionaire: “Donald Trump thinks that we should trust him on the economy, because he claims to be very rich,” the second-term governor said during a primetime speech at the Democratic National Convention. “But take it from an actual billionaire – Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity.” Pritzker, who is worth an estimated $3.4 billion thanks in large part to inherited family wealth from Hyatt Hotels, is the wealthiest current elected official in the U.S. And in the more than seven years since he declared his candidacy for governor, Pritzker has not shied away from pouring cash into not only his own election bids but campaigns up and down the ballot.

    * Crain’s | After years of prep, Pritzker finally gets his DNC star turn: “We have a choice America, between the man who left our country a total mess and the woman who has spent four years cleaning it up,” Pritzker told the delegates gathered at the United Center during his prime-time speaking slot. “I think it’s time we stop expecting women to clean up messes without the authority and the title to match the job.”

    * SJ-R | Obama’s 2004 DNC speech kickstarted national rise. Could the same hold true for Pritzker?: Pritzker and Obama took the stage separately Tuesday evening during day two of the Democratic National Convention. U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Springfield, and Tammy Duckworth, D-Hoffman Estates, in addition to former First Lady Michelle Obama have also delivered speeches. The vision the 59-year-old governor shared including bolstering support for Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris and touting what is possible under Democratic leadership as seen in Illinois.

  42 Comments      


Pritzker on the future

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor was interviewed by Jonathan Martin yesterday and was asked about what’s left to do in Illinois

Well, there’s a lot. If you haven’t lived here in Illinois, and I don’t think you have, then you may not pay attention to the fact that we had decades of financial mismanagement in the state. Decades of challenge with the pensions, with school funding and so on. And it’s had real lasting impact, negative impact on the state.

And so, for over the last six years, we’ve been steadily dealing with that. It’s been good. I mean, we’ve balanced the budget, and we’ve paid a lot of debt down, more than $11 billion at this point of debt. We’ve reduced the impact of the pension liability for people. And so, you know, those are just a few things I’m mentioning…

And to be clear, these are not things that, I mean probably, when I’m done, even if you said Pritzker serves a third term, right, you still have a lot of work to do. And just one thing to put in everybody’s mind, that the school funding issue is a massive issue, because people talk about the high property taxes in the state of Illinois, which is a huge problem, right? We can manage everything else but high property taxes, it’s a local issue, but it’s a schools issue. 70 percent of your property tax bill that comes in the mail is your local schools. And if we’re under-funding, and we are, at the state level, we can only afford what we can afford. Then it’s got to be made up for at the property tax level, at the local level.

Now I’ve gone, we’ve taken this from 24 percent of school funding, which is about half of the rest of the country. The average in the United States of funding from the state for education is about 48percent, 46, seven, 8 percent right? We were at 24 percent state funding. You’ve got to make up for that with property taxes.

So how do you fix that? The state’s got to get in the business of funding education better. We’re now up in the mid-high 30s, and that’s good, but we’re not even average in the United States, right? And you got to get all the locals to stop raising property taxes while you’re funding them, right? Because everybody wants more and more and more money. But at some point, you’ve got to start bringing down the pressure on the upward trajectory of property taxes.

So I’m just giving you an example of a long-term issue. We’re dealing with it, but it isn’t going to be fixed tomorrow or next year. It’s going to take us, like persistence. We’ve got to go after this every single year.

  11 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like the Ervins, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Aug 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: It’s the third day of the DNC…

* Sun-Times | ‘Shut down the DNC’: Protesters clash with police leading to dozens of arrests in West Loop: The protesters walked directly into a large group of police officials, four officers deep, around 7:30 p.m. The officers began to push them the other way and yelled, “Move back, move back.” Scuffles began to break out, and officers wearing helmets moved into the crowd. Video showed officers overwhelming some of the protesters, pushing them to the ground in an effort to secure the chaotic scene. Afterward, the demonstrators began to move east on Madison toward Canal Street, where hundreds of additional officers were waiting.


* Tribune | The DNC action is at the United Center. But the randomness and behind-the-scenes stuff is at McCormick Place.: Carter, of Chicago’s Busy Beaver Button Co., received personalized requests for a Harris/Walz button. He placed the request on an oval sticker, placed the sticker inside a metal whatzit, watched a blunt lever slam down, then stamped out a new DNC pin: “Very Demure for Harris” and “Crazy Cat Lady for Harris” and “People Who Believe in Science for Harris” and “Keeping My Black Job — Harris 2024.” In the first hours of the convention, he’d already made a few hundred. “Beep! Beep!” shouted an older woman in a red, white and blue cowboy hat, steering her electric wheelchair through the crush of people waiting for their own political pins. She was headed to a DNC merch area, toward $30 mugs decorated with presidential heads, hats with donkeys in sunglasses and shirts reading “Trust Democratic Women.”

* WBEZ | A 70-year-old doctor criticizes authorities for his ‘totally unjustified, ridiculous arrest’ at DNC: A 70-year-old retired doctor from the North Side says he was subjected to a “totally unjustified, ridiculous arrest” while on a bike ride among protesters marching near the Democratic National Convention on Monday. Hours after spending a rough night at a Chicago police station, Dr. Charles Steinbruegge told WBEZ on Tuesday he was not a protester himself and had merely taken his bicycle out to see what was happening near the DNC when a federal agent detained him and Chicago officers arrested him a few blocks from the United Center.

* Tribune | U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who struggled with infertility, says IVF in danger if Donald Trump is elected: “Trump’s anti-woman crusade has put other Americans’ right to have their own families at risk,” she said. “Cause if they win, Republicans will not stop at banning abortion. They will come for IVF next. They’ll prosecute doctors. They’ll shame and spy on women.” The crowd erupted into cheers as Duckworth told Trump to “stay out of our doctor’s offices … and out of the Oval Office, too.”

* Crain’s | Duckworth gets some jabs in during DNC speech: Illinois’ junior senator delivered rebukes to former President Donald Trump before the Democratic National Convention tonight on two fronts: first, his disparagement of veterans and, second, his party’s opposition to in vitro fertilization. “Every American deserves the right to be called ‘mommy’ or ‘daddy’ without being treated like a criminal,” U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth said in a prime time speech before delegates assembled at the United Center.

* Daily Herald | Obamas close DNC’s second night with a rousing Harris endorsement: Warning of a difficult fight ahead, former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama on Tuesday called on the nation to embrace Kamala Harris in urgent messages to the Democratic National Convention that were at times both hopeful and combative. “America, hope is making a comeback,” the former first lady declared. She then tore into Republican Donald Trump, a sharp shift from the 2016 convention speech in which she told her party, “When they go low, we go high.”

* Sun-Times | Loyola’s Sister Jean talks DNC, Israel-Hamas war and connecting with students as she turns 105: Heading into her 105th year of life, Loyola University Chicago’s Sister Jean Dolores Bertha Schmidt has a simple goal. “I still want to remain a happy person,” she said. Sister Jean turns 105 on Wednesday, making her just 11 years younger than the oldest person alive.

* Block Club | Brown Sugar Bakery’s Kamala Cake Honors Presidential Nominee’s ‘New And Exciting Energy’: The South Side bakery put a presidential spin on a traditional German chocolate cake recipe with dark chocolate cake, caramel and chocolate whipped cream and cream cheese drippings.

Click here and here to read former President Barack Obama’s and former First Lady Michelle Obama’s DNC speeches.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Illinois bans corporal punishment in all schools: State Rep. Margaret Croke, a Chicago Democrat, was inspired to take up the issue after an updated call by the American Association of Pediatrics to end the practice, which it says can increase behavioral or mental health problems and impair cognitive development. The association found that it’s disproportionately administered to Black males and students with disabilities. “It was an easy thing to do. I don’t want a child, whether they are in private school or public school, to have a situation in which corporal punishment is being used,” Croke said.

* AP | Democrats are dwindling in Wyoming. A primary election law further reduces their influence: Meanwhile, as Wyoming Democrats face difficulty fielding viable candidates at all levels, many Democrats have been switching their registration to vote in more competitive Republican primaries, then changing back for the general election. […] Republicans decided they’d had enough. The Wyoming Legislature, where the GOP controls over 90% of the seats, passed legislation last year banning voters from changing their party registration in the three months before the August primary.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | It’s getting too hot for old Chicago homes to handle, study finds: Elevate, a national nonprofit advocating for equity through climate action, has authored a report about the health dangers of indoor air temperatures during increasingly hot summers.

* Crain’s | Goose Island development site hits the market: Real estate services firm CBRE is seeking a buyer for the 2.1-acre site at 1017 W. Division St., according to a flyer. The brokerage is marketing the former lumberyard on behalf of the Ciral family, which closed its Big Bay Lumber business on the property in 2015 but still owns the site.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘Great idea, wrong location’: Fixed shelter for homeless adults nixed in Gurnee: A proposal to convert the FairBridge Inn on Grand Avenue in Gurnee to a fixed-site homeless shelter was derailed Monday. Actually, a $7 million investment by PADS Lake County was eliminated from consideration before an official vote, and a proposed zoning change to allow emergency shelters as a special use in that district was rejected, which made PADS’ request moot.

* Daily Herald | Accused of stench, business offers to leave Mount Prospect — but at a price: Prestige Feed Products, a Mount Prospect animal feed manufacturer that has outraged neighbors in the village and neighboring Des Plaines over noxious odors and noise, has offered to move out. But officials of the company located at 431 Lakeview Ct. are asking for a large cash settlement that was initially met coldly by village officials. In a court hearing Tuesday, attorneys for Prestige and Mount Prospect discussed a potential settlement.

* Tribune | Vine Street BBQ Fest returns to Park Ridge Aug. 24 to raise charity funds: The sound of sizzling meat and wafts of cooking smoke will return to Park Ridge starting early on Saturday, Aug. 24 for the eighth annual Vine Street BBQ festival and competition. Amateur chefs and pit masters will compete to see who can offer the best BBQ. Proceeds from the event will go to local charities. Jamie Rubin, the event’s coordinator and co-founder, said this year’s competition will consist of 41 amateur teams with about four people on each team. The competition is part of the Kansas City Barbecue Society, and judges will decide who has the best chicken, ribs, sauce, and dish in Park Ridge before it’s all over.

*** Downstate ***

* Inside Higher Ed | Library Faculty Eliminated Amid ‘Fiscal Insanity’ at Western Illinois: The university laid off all its library faculty as part of massive cuts, leaving employees and supporters to wonder how the library will serve campus constituents.

* SJ-R | Black Lives Matter SPI street signs back up in downtown Springfield: Ward 2 Ald. Shawn Gregory said he felt good that honorary Black Lives Matter SPI Way signs were reinstalled by Office of Public Works crews around the Governor’s Mansion last week. It symbolized, he said, a group needed more than ever in the city. “I’m really proud of them and I’m proud of our community,” Gregory told the SJ-R. “We’ll continue to fight for equality and justice and all that comes with that.”

* WCIA | Champaign synagogue cleared after receiving bomb threat: Lieutenant Aaron Lack said staff at the Sinai Temple, located a 3104 West Windsor Road, received an email Thursday morning from someone claiming a bomb had been planted there. Officers were dispatched at 7:38 a.m. that morning in response to the threat. Lack said it was quickly determined that the email was sent to multiple houses of worship across Illinois and Iowa. Regardless, Champaign Police searched the synagogue and found no evidence that an explosive device was present. They also could not determine that there was a local connection to the threat.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Rivian manufacturing chief leaving for Stellantis: Tim Fallon, Rivian’s vice president of manufacturing, is leaving the electric vehicle maker to become head of manufacturing in North America at Stellantis. Fallon led manufacturing at Rivian for two years, according to an internal memo from CEO RJ Scaringe. He spent 16 years at Nissan Motor Co. before joining Rivian.

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