Sign, sign, everywhere a sign
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Republican candidate for DuPage County Forest Preserve commissioner has a life-sized sign… What are the sign wars looking like by you? [Headline explained here.]
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Illinois Department of Human Services…
* Crain’s | Telling the “Why Illinois” story on the global stage: With Illinois now on stronger financial footing, the state is able to prioritize economic growth and development in ways that it couldn’t before — and telling the “Why Illinois” story on the global stage is a key component of that strategy. The Gubernatorial Trade Mission to Japan this October is one such example, in addition to recent trips to Canada and the United Kingdom. John Atkinson, Chairman of Intersect Illinois, outlines how the state is building connections and driving increased investment through these delegations. * IPM | Illinois is the nation’s pumpkin producer. Here’s why: Mohammed Babadoost, a plant pathology professor at the College of Aces, said the significance of pumpkins in Illinois is measurable. “We grow almost all, at least 90% of canned pumpkins, meaning that if Illinois fails in pumpkin production there would be no pumpkin pie,” Babadoost said. Other states, such as Indiana, Ohio, New York and California, produce seasonal pumpkins for decoration, but not for processing, he said. * Tribune | ComEd’s former top lawyer takes stand in Madigan corruption trial after state Rep. Bob Rita’s testimony derailed: In 2011, as Thomas O’Neill was in Springfield pushing for legislation on behalf of utility giant ComEd, he heard one question over and over: What did Michael Madigan think of the bill? “Everyone – I think without fail, but most everyone – was interested in where the speaker stood on this,” O’Neill, formerly ComEd’s general counsel, testified Monday in Madigan’s corruption trial. “House, Senate, Rs, Ds.” * WTTW | Ex-ComEd Lawyer Tells Jurors Madigan’s Support Was Critical for Legislative Success in Speaker’s Ongoing Corruption Trial: O’Neill testified that while working on that bill, both Hooker and McClain told him that they had a relationship with Madigan and that, if they could secure the necessary legislative votes for Smart Grid, then “the speaker will run this bill.” Jurors saw a December 2010 email from then-ComEd CEO Frank Clark who wrote that Madigan had informed Hooker “to put the formula rate proposal in bill format, (and) that he would take it up in January. * Center Square | Prosecutors lay foundation in Madigan corruption trial: Prosecutors spent several hours with O’Neill on the stand as they worked to establish a foundation for their case against Madigan. O’Neill also testified that a representative from the speaker’s office clarified that any utility legislation would carry an expiration date or sunset clause when it would automatically end. * Sun-Times | Pepsi closes only Chicago plant without warning employees, union alleges: Pepsi shuttered its South Side plant without notice Monday morning and laid off at least 79 employees. Workers showed up at the plant as usual early Monday only to learn they had been let go and the facility would be closed, according to their union, Teamsters Local 727. They were sent home at 5:45 a.m., and deliveries to the plant at 650 W. 51st St. were being rerouted shortly after, according to a union spokesperson. * WTTW | Pay $4M to Family of Man Who Spent 33 Years in Prison After Being Wrongfully Convicted, City Lawyers Recommend: Lee Harris was 36 when he was convicted in 1992 and sentenced to 90 years in prison for murdering 24-year-old Dana Feitler, who was forced to withdraw $400 from an ATM after being kidnapped from the lobby of her apartment building in the city’s most affluent neighborhood. Eight months after Harris was exonerated in March 2023, he died of natural causes, records show. * Sun-Times | Pilsen ’serial polluter,’ shouldn’t get new permit for shredding metal, residents say: “Sims has been in violation, not once or twice but many, many, many times,” Theresa McNamara, chairwoman of the Southwest Environmental Alliance, told the Sun-Times. “This is what the mayor needs to look at. He needs to see that this is a serial polluter.” Under an agreement with the state, Sims is building new equipment to contain emissions from the site. “They should not get a permit [from the city] until they put in the equipment,” McNamara added. “We need the mayor to stop giving Sims special treatment by overlooking their history in our community.” * Crain’s | Quantum park adds two more U of I leaders to senior team: Two more senior University of Illinois staffers have signed on to help turn the quantum-computing park on the South Side into reality. Laura Appenzeller, executive director of the University of Illinois Research Park in Champaign, will be an associate director and chief operating officer. Brian DeMarco, a physics professor and quantum technology researcher in Urbana, will be associate director and chief technology officer. They’ll also continue to serve in their campus roles. * Crain’s | Chicago’s oldest steakhouse isn’t shying away from change anymore: Founded in 1941, Gene & Georgetti is Chicago’s oldest steakhouse. The restaurant has been resistant to change for most of its existence. The decor went untouched for decades. The owners repeatedly turned down proposals to expand because they did not want to dilute the brand. […] Michelle Durpetti said she consulted with her father on her vision for the future of the restaurant. “I sat down with my parents and said, ‘Look, if it’s my turn . . . I’d like to make a few modifications to how we do things,’ ” she told Manilow. “If I was going to do it, and I was going to give it 100% and put my heart and soul into it, I had to believe in what I was doing.”
* Daily Southtown | Flossmoor settles lawsuit with fired police Chief Jerel Jones, who alleged racial discrimination: The village agreed to pay Jones nearly $60,000 “to avoid the cost and distraction of prolonged litigation,” Mayor Michelle Nelson said in a statement Friday. “Our priority has always been to serve the best interests of our community, and we believe that this resolution will allow us to focus our resources on continuing to provide high-quality services and fostering a positive and inclusive environment for all residents,” Nelson said. “I look forward to continuing to work together, with residents and staff, toward our shared goals.” * News-Sun | Lake County state’s attorney candidates trade accusations as election nears: Incumbent Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart will be seeking a second term in office on Nov. 5, with a challenge coming from Republican candidate Mary Cole. […] Their responses occasionally sparked some sharp remarks, with Cole alleging that crime is up due to Rinehart’s policies. Rinehart said Cole was running “the most dishonest and cynical campaign imaginable.” * Fox 2 Now | Illinois Eaton workers strike enters week two, demand fair wages: The International Association of Machinists local 660 is going on strike against Eaton and it’s B-line business. Workers at the Eaton facility here in Troy as well as the location in Highland are taking part in the walkout. There are a total of about 400 workers walking the picket lines. * WSIL | Free aviation program coming to Cairo: A local organization is bringing the new program to Cairo to educate and help prepare students for a career in aviation. The Harold S Jones Fine Arts Center is introducing their Aviation Industry Workshop. This workshop is designed to introduce high school students to jobs in the airline industry, which includes pilots for helicopters, aircrafts, drones, also jobs for flight attendants, aircraft and airport maintenance and more. * SJ-R | Springfield could set record high temperature on Tuesday: A high of 83 degrees is predicted for Tuesday, but if temperatures reach 84 degrees in Springfield, it’d be a new record high for Oct. 29. Daryl Onton, a meteorologist at the NWS in Lincoln, said there is a strong chance of Springfield breaking that record. * The Atlantic | A Touch Revolution Could Transform Pitching: Mariano Rivera was never secretive about the grip on his signature pitch. He’d show it to teammates, coaches, even reporters. He placed his index and middle fingers together along the seams. He pulled down with his middle finger upon release. The ball would whiz arrow-straight before veering sharply a few inches from where the hitter expected it. When teaching pitchers how it should feel coming out of their hand, however, Rivera could be frustratingly vague. Put pressure on the middle finger, he would say. This can be a moneymaker for you. * AP | Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool used in hospitals invents things no one ever said: Tech behemoth OpenAI has touted its artificial intelligence-powered transcription tool Whisper as having near “human level robustness and accuracy.” But Whisper has a major flaw: It is prone to making up chunks of text or even entire sentences, according to interviews with more than a dozen software engineers, developers and academic researchers. Those experts said some of the invented text — known in the industry as hallucinations — can include racial commentary, violent rhetoric and even imagined medical treatments.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Monday, Oct 28, 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 Dana, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Pritzker faced a tough crowd
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicagoans will boo anybody…
* Aftermath… Hilarious.
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Energy Storage Can Minimize Price Spikes
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Each month, families and businesses pay a capacity charge through their energy bill. It’s essentially an insurance policy that pays energy resources (or “capacity”) to be available for when the grid needs them most. Grid operators project a possible shortage of capacity in the coming years, which means the charge for this insurance policy will rise next year for many Illinoisans. Batteries, or energy storage, are currently the best solution to minimize this price spike—but building them at the pace we need will require legislation. The added benefit is the ability to store cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day—lowering energy bills and making the grid more reliable. Learn more about legislation that builds urgently needed energy storage here. Paid for by Counterspark.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Question of the day
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Chicago Tribune Editorial Board…
During my time in Springfield, I’ve heard “why don’t you return ___’s contribution” many times. I never did get why. See: If you can’t take their money and vote against ‘em anyway, you don’t belong in the Legislature. …Adding… During a press conference last week, the Republican candidate for House District 97, Gabby Shanahan, called on Rep. Harry Benton to return campaign contributions from ex-speaker Mike Madigan…
* The Tribune in 2022…
The Question: What do you think pols should do with controversial campaign donations?
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Illinois Statehouse gets spooky for Halloween
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * It’s that time of year again! The Senate and House staff held their annual Capitol Trick-or-Treat event on Friday. This year, Monique Garcia of Mac Strategies, is our wonderful guest judge…
2nd place: Dracula’s Lair Senate Dems Legal 3rd place: Leader McCombie’s Office 4th place: LRB * Pics!… Illinois really does have the best Statehouse staffers. A big thank you to all involved! * A little more…
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Polling shows public open to concept of consolidation, but lots of hard work remains (Updated)
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
…Adding… I get letters…
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Open thread
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Madigan Trial Week in Review. Capitol News Illinois…
- Tuesday, October 22: Feds ‘turned over heaven and earth’ in Madigan probe but found no real bribes, co-defendant says - Wednesday, October 23: ComEd exec testifies utility prepared for bankruptcy before 2011 law threw it a lifeline - Thursday, October 24: ‘My client is the speaker’: Jury hears wiretapped calls of Madigan co-defendant, longtime friend * Related stories… At 2:30 pm Governor Pritzker will give remarks at Award Ceremony for Major Chase Wilhelm. Click here to watch. * ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker, first lady dress up as Shrek, Fiona for Halloween: ‘What are you doing in my swamp?’: Illinois Governor JB Pritzker and First Lady Mary Kathryn Muenster celebrated Halloween dressed as Shrek and Fiona this year. “What are you doing in my swamp?” the governor joked on social media. “Thanks for coming out early to celebrate Halloween with MK and I!” The couple passed out candy to trick-or-treaters on Saturday at the Governor’s mansion. * Daily Herald | ‘It’s got to be a fair deal’: Arlington Heights legislators open to Bears funding if the team comes back to town: “The deal will not have substantial state funding,” said Democratic state Sen. Mark Walker, whose 27th District includes the former 326-acre racetrack the Bears purchased in 2023. “And if there is tax relief available for the corporate enterprise, we can work that out, provided in the end it balances out to an advantaged situation for the community.” * QC Times | Johnson faces challenger Rodriguez to represent IL-72 District: The incumbent Democrat representative, Gregg Johnson, said his priorities are improving opportunities for the future generations by increasing investment in local schools, improving access to mental health care, and focusing on local economic growth opportunities. His Republican opponent, Charlie Helmick, said that his top priority is the well-being of residents in the area. To achieve this goal he proposes curbing illegal immigration and increasing spending on law enforcement to improve safety, and expanding incentives for businesses. * WSPD | Paid voting leave to assist voters who work on election day: Eligible voters in Illinois can take up to two hours off from work on election day, anytime between the opening and closing of the polls. Any employer found in violation will receive a written letter from the Illinois Board of Elections detailing the allegations but will not face criminal penalties, according to Matt Dietrich with the Illinois Board of Elections. * Tribune | Illinois has the most public bodies in the nation, multiplying opportunities for graft: Most infamous is the case of Rita Crundwell, who, as comptroller and treasurer of the small north central Illinois town of Dixon, perpetrated the largest municipal fraud in U.S. history. Crundwell embezzled $54 million in city funds to pay for a lifestyle that included expensive quarter horses, jewelry, vehicles and properties while city services went lacking. * Capitol News Illinois | State, Cook County use similar arguments to defend assault weapon bans: Attorneys in the offices of Attorney General Kwame Raoul and Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx made similar arguments in recent court filings as both defend bans on assault weapons and large-capacity magazines against constitutional challenges. In separate cases at different levels of the federal court system, both offices are trying to make the case that the laws under challenge – a state law enacted in 2023 and a county ordinance that dates to 1993 –fall within the bounds of the U.S. Supreme Court’s most recent interpretation of the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms. * Tribune | What happens if Chicago can’t pass a budget? ‘Murky waters,’ ‘dire situation.’: Experts say failing to pass a budget in time could quickly threaten the city government’s ability to carry out many services and pay its workers. It could harm the city’s credit rating and jack up costs for borrowing money while deeply shaking the faith Chicagoans have in their elected officials. Those pricey pitfalls should serve as a warning as the mayor and aldermen start to work out a budget in earnest, said Ralph Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, a nonpartisan fiscal policy think tank. * In These Times | Chicago Teachers Have an Ally As Mayor—Now They’re Fighting for a Historic Contract: “He only understands austerity,” Davis Gates says of Martinez, who was appointed by previous Mayor Lori Lightfoot. “What you see is a struggle between what was and what will be. Pedro came of age at a time when Arne Duncan was ‘turning schools around,’ where he would fire every worker in the building from the faculty to administration to the janitor to the lunchroom. It’s a struggle against what was once good enough versus the transformative power of a fully-resourced, fully-staffed school community.” * Crain’s | New CPS board president won’t say if board will fire CEO, calls question ’silly’: Rev. Johnson said it was “politicized” and a “loaded question” to ask whether he and the new board would fire Martinez. “If the city is on fire, don’t talk to me about anyone else other than putting the fire out,” he said. “And the fire that we have now is inequity when it comes to every group of people in this community, and Black students in particular.” * ABC Chicago | After School Matters breaks ground on 36K square foot facility in Chicago’s Cabrini-Green: The nonprofit’s meaningful mission is to provide after school and summer opportunities for nearly 20,000 students across Chicago. The organization broke ground Saturday on the start of renovations on a 36,000 square-foot facility located at North Orleans and West Hill Streets in the city’s Cabrini-Green neighborhood dedicated to teen programming. * Sun-Times | Former Ald. William Beavers dies at 89: “Bill Beavers will go down in history as one of the most progressive African American Alderman in the Chicago City Council,” Sean Howard, the family’s representative, said in a statement. “He was unapologetically Black and proved so by his countless efforts to propel Black businesspersons to engage in city business and contracts.” * Sun-Times | Illinois Black Panthers heritage trail sets record straight about its history: The Black Panther Heritage Trail will mark 13 historical sites important to the Illinois chapter of the civil rights organization in the Chicago area in an effort to reveal long-buried truths about its work in the community. * Tribune | ‘A mutual combat situation’: Trial for former Cook County assistant state’s attorneys gets contentious as prosecutors allege wrongdoing: The defendant was Jackie Wilson, whose infamous case was critical to unveiling systemic practices of torture within the Chicago Police Department, and he was being tried for a third time for murder in the slayings of Chicago police Officers William Fahey and Richard O’Brien. The certificate showed that Nicholas Trutenko, a former Cook County assistant state’s attorney who prosecuted Wilson during his second trial in 1989, flew to the United Kingdom a few years later to serve as godfather for the daughter of one of the key witnesses against Wilson — a jailhouse informant with a long rap sheet. * Naperville Sun | Naperville Central High School’s new ‘tiny forest’ meant to pack big environmental punch: Together, they planted some 276 trees on just under 1,100 square feet of the campus. Just saplings to start, it will be a while before the forest is fully matured. But the hope, Tse says, is to eventually have the hub of greenery grow to be a self-sufficient ecosystem like any other forest you’d find across the state — just a lot smaller. * Daily Southtown | Lemont fire district seeks voter OK for $46 million bond sale, aims to drop response times: For the owner of a home in Cook County with a value of $400,000, the bond issue would mean an extra $185 in property taxes, according to the district. For the owner of a home with the same value in DuPage or Will, the extra tax cost would be $209 a year, according to the district. * Daily Herald | ‘This gives us more tools’: Why Libertyville wants historical designation for its downtown: To expand the availability of state and federal tax credits and incentives, Libertyville officials are now taking steps to have the entire area in and around the village’s downtown designated as a National Register district. “This just gives us some more tools to move forward (with historic preservation) and it gives property owners incentives to upgrade in a historically acceptable way,” said Mike Kollman, a local architect and member of the village’s historic preservation commission. * WCIA | Fallen IL State Trooper Thompsen remembered by loved ones: Thompsen’s middle school teacher remembered him as someone that “you just want your own children to be.” Hilton is a 7th grade social studies teacher at St. Joseph Middle School. She taught Thompsen about 15 years ago. “Corey was strong and definitely showed that in his running abilities on the track, in his academics and overall, just a kid to admire,” Hilton said. * Illinois Answers | He attempted suicide. Peoria Jail restrained him in a chair for five days.: Clark and Fenderson were strapped down for the next four days. They spent Christmas together – restrained. Their treatment is not unique at Peoria County Jail, which has the distinction, in recent years, of restraining its charges in chairs for longer durations than other jails in the state and far past industry recommendations. * NBC | Elon Musk’s X is boosting election conspiracy theories with AI-powered trending topics: The dubious content is spreading in the app’s “explore” section, which says it uses Musk’s AI software, named Grok, to aggregate trending social media topics. The information does not appear to be fact-checked by humans, and in several recent examples it seemed to repeat false or unsubstantiated claims as if they were true.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/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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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Oct 28, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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