Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Shaboozey… I’ve been driving for miles and miles and miles
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * It’s just a bill. CBS Chicago…
* Sen. Robert Peters and Rep. Justin Slaughter…
* ABC Chicago…
* Sun-Times | Johnson accused of picking another police-related fight with City Council: Gov. JB Pritzker has authorized selling a former Illinois National Guard armory to the city for $1 for the “express purpose” of creating a new police district. But Mayor Brandon Johnson now wants to use the building for “storage, maintenance and operation of police vehicles, equipment and aircraft.” * Sun-Times | Chicago developer completes first phase of affordable housing project in North Lawndale: The first phase of apartments at a North Lawndale development is already 50% leased, and the amenity-heavy project will bring additional housing units to the community as it starts phase two. Project and city leaders gathered at OC Living, the residential portion of the Ogden Commons development, on Thursday to mark the grand opening of phase one and kickstart phase two of the more than $200 million project. The Habitat Co. will build about 300 units at the former Chicago Housing Authority site.
* Tribune | New inclusive dental clinic at UIC an ‘oasis’ for patients with special needs: Burman said the Inclusive Care Clinic solves a problem not many dentist offices are thinking about: being a place that anybody can access. “Some people can’t get through the doorways, some people can’t even make it to the front door because there’s no ramp, or they won’t take somebody because of behavioral issues,” Burman said. “That’s not right. Everybody needs to have the medicine and dentistry that they’re entitled to.” * Block Club | As Riot Fest Kicks Off, West Siders Debate Its Place In Douglass Park: Grassroots group Únete La Villita organized a press conference last week outside the Park District’s headquarters while the agency’s board members voted to grant Riot Fest’s permit, just nine days before its kickoff. There’s a lack of transparency behind the permit process, protesters said. Anton Adkins, a lifelong North Lawndale resident and an organizer for Únete La Villita, said the group is calling for an in-person public meeting with Riot Fest and Park District officials and neighborhood Ald. Monique Scott (24th) to address the community’s concerns, like losing access to the public park. * WGN | Riot Fest features ‘world’s largest’ butter statue of John Stamos: This year’s butter statue comes after a yearslong love affair between Riot Fest and Stamos. A love affair that may very one-sided. According to the festival, it all started with a tweet to Stamos in 2013 asking him to reunite Jesse & The Rippers at Riot Fest — but unfortunately, they had no luck. Then in 2016, the fest attempted to get Stamos’ attention again and had an artist create a sculpture of his head out of butter. Again, no luck with having him perform, but he did respond to their post of the butter sculpture and said, “Riot Fest I’m certainly flattered & pretty frightened by #ButterStamos. Does this come with toast? Funny comments?” * Tribune | Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark enforces decorum at City Council meetings; is it too restrictive?: At the most recent council meeting Sept. 9, several residents raised concerns about what they believe was an increased police presence, noting about 10 officers were stationed inside the council chambers. “That is very intimidating to have officers actually surround people as they give their speeches,” said the Rev. Johnathan Johnson, a pastor at the Holy Bible Missionary Baptist Church in Harvey, who has been a vocal critic of a city ordinance requiring churches to obtain business licenses. * Daily Herald | ‘Only the beginning’: Lake County government building powered by solar : Soon, electricity to run the Central Permit Facility on the government campus in Libertyville will be generated by more than 2,000 ground-mounted photovoltaic panels covering two acres nearby. What is considered a medium-sized solar field was built by Maryland-based Standard Solar Inc., under a 25-year lease agreement that has the county paying a monthly rate for all the power generated. * WGN | St. Charles officer who retired 3 years ago dies from ALS: Police officer Chris Grove was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease, shortly after retiring from the department in 2021. According to St. Charles police, Grove died Tuesday at the age of 51. * Sun-Times | In ‘bird city’ Homewood, toxic chemicals found at nature preserve: The source of the color as well as an oily film is a stormwater outflow owned by Homewood that collects water from nearby businesses including Homewood Disposal, a garbage and recycling business that referred questions to Homewood officials. The outflow is the responsibility of the Homewood village government. * Crain’s | Empty Skokie tech park building heading to auction block: Skokie-based American Landmark Properties has hired real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle to seek a buyer for the building at 8030 Lamon Ave. in the northern suburb, according to a marketing flyer. The developer spent nearly $21 million in recent years redeveloping the 1970s-built, 135,851-square-foot building with space suitable for life sciences research, the flyer said, betting that biotechnology, pharmaceutical and other types of companies hunting for wet lab space would fill it. * WCIA | ‘I am not here to divide our board’: Champaign Co. Board Chair defends position: “The chaos that the chair inserts into regular board functions makes it difficult to perform basic government tasks. I just want to point out that, despite consultation with the State Attorney’s Office and extensive mentoring by various board members, the Chair continues to misunderstand and misuse the role of board chair,” [board member Emily Rodriguez] said * WCIA | Clifton students walk out after teacher’s arrest: Brett Sorensen was arrested Tuesday following an investigation by the Illinois State Police. While he teaches at a high school in Iroquois County, Sorensen lives in Paxton and was arrested at his home. He remains in the Ford County Jail pending a detention hearing scheduled for next week. Central High School administrators said they cannot comment on personnel matters, but did say Sorensen has been placed on paid administrative leave. Students aren’t satisfied, however, with the actions taken by the school. They want Sorensen fired. * AP | Hotter summers are making high school football a fatal game for some players: At least 58 players have died from exertional heat stroke between 1992 and 2024, according to the Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticut, and thousands more are sickened each year. This summer has been especially bad, with five high school players dying since July of suspected heat-related illnesses, including 14-year-old Semaj Wilkins who collapsed during drills last month at his Alabama high school practice.
|
More Chicago drama as mayor reportedly tries to force out CPS CEO (Updated x2)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
…Adding… Sigh…
…Adding… Hmm…
|
Illinois Supreme Court slams “absurd” premise of appellate court ruling on pretrial detention
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Unanimous decision with Justice Mary K. O’Brien authoring the opinion…
|
This story triggered me
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * One of my earliest intense memories is getting yelled at by my Aunt Marsha for venturing into a fully grown cornfield with a neighbor kid. Marsha was a teenager at the time and she was babysitting me. I was four or five years old and thought it was fun. We were pretending to be monsters while we knocked down corn stalks. Marsha was worried that I’d get lost or attacked by a wild dog, and I never blamed her for being angry with me because I instantly realized what a stupid thing that was and that the neighbor kid was bad news. Once you get deep into those fields, you lose your perspective, particularly when you’re so young. Case in point…
Thanks, Marsha!
|
Caption contest!
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You’ve probably heard the news about North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson. Well, there’s an Illinois angle… The Tenth Congressional District Republicans have devoted an entire page to promote the event. But click here in case they delete it. I reached out to several Republican organizations yesterday about whether the event was still moving forward and have yet to hear back. * And I know I’m kinda asking the impossible, but please do your utmost to keep it clean in comments. Thanks.
|
CPD superintendent, ATF chief criticized for spreading false information about SAFE-T Act
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling and special agent in charge for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives’ Chicago Field Division Christopher Amon penned a Tribune op-ed yesterday…
* ACLU Illinois Communications Director Ed Yohnka responded…
* But wait, it gets better. I had all the above by late yesterday afternoon and decided to hold it until this morning. Last night, I received this email from the ACLU…
*facepalm.emoji* * Meanwhile, St. Louis Public Radio interviewed the chief judge of St. Clair County about one year without cash bail…
|
Open thread
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: With jury stuck 11-1, judge declares mistrial in case of ex-AT&T boss accused of bribing Speaker Madigan. Tribune…
* Related stories… ∙ Sun-Times: AT&T jury hangs up — mistrial declared in case of former exec accused of bribing Madigan, weeks before ex-speaker’s own trial ∙ Capitol News Illinois: Jury deadlocks, mistrial declared in case of ex-AT&T boss accused of bribing Madigan ∙ * Sun-Times | Questions on Illinois officials’ oversight of state-funded South Side center for troubled kids: The center, run by Aunt Martha’s Health and Wellness, was closed by the state in June after a care provider and a guard were charged with sexual assault of young residents. But problems, including thousands of reports of violence and years of lax oversight, had gone on for years. * Press Release | Illinois Payroll Jobs, Unemployment Rate Up in August: The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that nonfarm payrolls were up +800 while the unemployment rate increased +0.1 percentage point to 5.3 percent in August, based on preliminary data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and released by IDES. The July monthly change in payrolls was revised from the preliminary report, from +12,900 to +10,300 jobs, while the revised unemployment rate was 5.2 percent, unchanged from the preliminary July unemployment rate. The August payroll jobs estimate and unemployment rate reflect activity for the week including the 12th. * Crain’s | Christy George named CEO of an increasingly active Intersect Illinois: Fresh off her role leading day-to-day efforts to prepare to host the Democratic National Convention, Christy George is taking over as CEO of Intersect Illinois, the state’s private-sector partner in recruiting and retaining businesses. It’s a homecoming of sorts for George, 38, who previously was part of J.B. Pritzker’s economic team, working on deals such as the Gotion battery plant in Manteno and Lion Electric electric-bus factory in Joliet. She replaces Dan Seals, who left in July. * Capitol News Illinois | State wraps up case in challenge to assault weapons ban: A federal judge invoked images from the 1917 race riots in East St. Louis, Illinois, on Thursday at the end of a trial in a case challenging the constitutionality of the state’s ban on assault-style weapons and large-capacity magazines. Judge Steven McGlynn, who has presided over the trial, called attention to the neighborhood just outside the courthouse, much of which was destroyed during a series of deadly attacks by a white mob against the city’s Black population. […] “I wonder what would have happened,” he said in a possible indication of how he intends to rule. “I wonder what would have happened if they (the Black population) had had some of the weapons we’re talking about today.” * WAND | Illinois state dental society, IDFPR raise awareness about unlicensed dentists: “I want Illinois to understand that unregulated and unlicensed dental care is a huge problem and it is a dangerous risk,” said Dr. Sherece Thompson. “You are gambling with a person’s oral health and there is no procedure that is safe when done by someone who does not have proper training in oral health.” * NBC Chicago | What is an advisory question? What Illinois voters will decide on this November: While these questions will certainly provoke a measure of debate and discussion, they do not come with any guarantee of future legislation or amending the state’s Constitution, according to officials. * Tribune | Bed supply should remain constant as city seeks to merge homeless, migrant shelter systems, social service leaders say: Advocates for both asylum-seekers and homeless Chicagoans have supported the move toward a unified shelter network, saying it will boost resources for the unhoused population in the city. Others warn it will overwhelm an already overstretched system, as the groups have very distinct mental health, language, legal and other needs. * Sun-Times | Deadbeat Chicago city workers owe $18 million in unpaid fines, fees: About $16.5 million of the debt is owed by employees of sister agencies like the CTA, where about one of every four workers is carrying an outstanding debt — by far the highest rate of any of the agencies. * Crain’s | Amazon closing Goose Island fulfillment center, one of the first it opened in Chicago: Amazon is closing its fulfillment center in Goose Island, nearly 10 years after it opened as part of the e-commerce titan’s expansion efforts in Illinois. The company says it will not renew its lease at 1111 N. Cherry Ave. According to a WARN notice filed with the state, 211 employees are set to receive layoff notices effective Nov. 13. However, Amazon says these workers will have the option to relocate to “nearby operations sites.” * Crain’s | The future of the hybrid office? It could look like this: Relativity is one of the few companies tying itself to the future of LaSalle Street after a series of departures of big-name tenants. Roughly one-third of office space along LaSalle in the Loop is empty, according to a recent analysis of the street by the Urban Land Institute, largely a result of banking giants BMO and Bank of America decamping for new towers in the West Loop. […] To foster this environment, the company put in stadium-style communal seating and a large video wall for broadcasting company-wide meetings. The office also features other amenities such as a library, a juice bar and an arcade with a sports simulator, all designed to attract employees to work at the office. * Tribune | Amtrak salutes Latino workers who kept the trains running on time: When train travel expanded into Illinois in the 1800s, it was the lowest ranking employees who laid the rails, which could weigh close to half a ton. To keep the trains running on time through the winter, they’d light fires to thaw the tracks. Called “traqueros,” a term derived from the Spanglish word traque, which means track, these Latino workers were honored by Amtrak on Wednesday in Union Station. * Sun-Times | Worst team ever plans 2025 payroll cut, seeks money for new ballpark. Wanna be a White Sox fan?: The current public discussion is about the Sox’ intention to decrease its payroll next season because they’ve had such a rotten year financially. It’s something the Sun-Times has written about several times this season. Whenever they get around to openly discussing the payroll, the Sox surely will talk about sticking to “The Plan,’’ which means nurturing young, talented and inexpensive players. But it’s also about profit. I very well might be brain-addled, but it seems to me that the solution to what ails the team is better baseball players, which means spending more money. * Daily Herald | Foster cites lying politicians as top issue; challenger Evans says it’s immigration: Foster, a scientist and former entrepreneur who has served the 11th District since 2013, warned about politicians who lie repeatedly because “they expect that there’ll be political benefit from it.” In scientific fields, saying something you know isn’t true will end your career, Foster said. But that’s not the case in politics today, he added. * Daily Herald | Hanover Park parks president speaking out on citation for verbal assault of teen referee: According to the police report, the 17-year-old boy was escorted to his vehicle after the game by adults who had witnessed the altercation. The referee reported he felt scared Elkins was going to hit him, according to the police report. Elkins Thursday said he was inspired to speak out further because of the response news coverage of the police report was generating. * Daily Heral d| Hoffman Estates native uses archaeology training in search for Americans missing in combat worldwide: Friday is National POW/MIA Recognition Day, but bringing missing Americans home is a year-round focus for Hoffman Estates native and professional archaeologist David Brown. He now employs the same techniques to find and identify U.S. military personnel from World War II and later for the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency within the Department of Defense as he previously did to unearth the culture of ancient civilizations. * SJ-R | New sheriff in town: County board officially approves Crouch nomination: Crouch, 51, was sworn in by Seventh Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow as her husband, Robert, the police chief of Riverton, and her two sons looked on. […] Crouch was also assigned to the Child Advocacy Center before her retirement, where she investigated cases of child abuse. Board chairman Andy Van Meter cited her “incredible breadth of experience with almost every aspect of policing and managing.” * WCIA | Champaign Co. organizations aid low-income families: Two groups in Champaign County are partnering together to help low-income families. The Housing Authority of Champaign County and VOLO are eliminating the cost of Wi-Fi. They’re starting a new project called VCHAP it’ll provide free wi-fi for 355 homes in six Housing Authority of Champaign County properties. * CBS Chicago | Hours before Freddie Owens’ execution, friend who testified against him says he lied: “Freddie was not there”: Owens is set to die at 6 p.m. Friday at a Columbia prison for the killing of a Greenville convenience store clerk in 1997. It will be South Carolina’s first execution in 13 years. But Owens’ lawyers on Wednesday filed a sworn statement from the friend and co-defendant, Steven Golden, late Wednesday to try to stop South Carolina from carrying out the execution. Prosecutors reiterated that several other witnesses testified that Owens told them he pulled the trigger. And the state Supreme Court refused to stop Owens’ execution last week after Golden, in a sworn statement, said that he had a secret deal with prosecutors that he never told the jury about.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Live coverage
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to keep up with the La Schiazza trial. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
« NEWER POSTS | PREVIOUS POSTS » |