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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Nov 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker…

Far too often, people with disabilities still endure barriers to employment and discrimination in the workplace. Many are paid subminimum wages that devalue their contributions and diminish their likelihood to secure meaningful work and participate in other life enhancing activities.

The Dignity in Pay Act is an unprecedented, crucial leap forward to a future where all individuals, regardless of ability, can maximize their talents and contributions to our workforce—and earn a fair wage. Thank you to Chief Bill Sponsors Representative Teresa Mah, Senator Cristina Castro, bipartisan partners in the Illinois General Assembly, and all of the civil rights, human rights, organized labor, anti-poverty, and trade associations who worked together to achieve a more equitable and inclusive Illinois.

With the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS), the Illinois Council on Developmental Disabilities, and the Illinois Department of Labor, we will join more than a dozen states in phasing out this practice over the next five years. This law will create employment opportunities for people with disabilities by providing a five-year transition period for employers and employees, establishing a support program to provide resources and assistance to service providers, raising the Personal Needs Allowance for group home residents, and increasing Supported Employment Rates to expand competitive, integrated work opportunities statewide.”

* Capitol News Illinois

A conservative Catholic legal group is suing Illinois over a landmark state law enshrining a “fundamental right” to abortion care and requiring insurance companies to cover abortion and other reproductive health care.

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in federal court in Chicago by the Thomas More Society, seeks to prevent the state from requiring insurers to cover abortion coverage by arguing that doing so violates the First Amendment and 14th Amendment rights of its plaintiffs.

It also argues that the state is in violation of the Comstock Act, which criminalizes mailing abortion-related materials, because it requires health insurers to cover providers who send abortion medication in the mail. […]

The lawsuit also relies on the Coats-Snowe Amendment and the Weldon Amendment, which prevent states that receive federal funding from discriminating against health care entities because they don’t provide abortions.

* Daily Southtown

Will County Board member reelected to his position spent this month sowing doubts into the integrity of the election via several now-deleted Facebook posts.

Vince Logan, a Republican from Joliet, was the second highest vote-getter among four candidates in the County Board’s 7th District based on results posted both on Election Day and after provisional ballots and all remaining mail-in ballots were counted Tuesday. Voters select two county board members per district, which reelected Logan for a four-year term. Newcomer Dawn Bullock, a Democrat, received the most votes in the District 7 race.

Between Election Day and Tuesday, Logan posted several messages on social media alleging the county clerk’s office may have been cheating. Posts, which have since been deleted from his campaign Facebook page, stated, “Opportunity to cheat is huge,” and “Alarm bells ringing.”

Logan claimed via the posts that the Democrat county clerk knew the exact votes needed for him to lose and questioned his motivation to incorrectly count the ballots, which included to tilt the balance of the board or elect the county executive’s attorney a judge. Some of his posts were shared on Facebook more than 100 times each, further spreading the allegations.

County Clerk Chuck Pelkie said the allegations were false.

* Illinois Department of Employment Security…

Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in eight metropolitan areas and decreased in six for the year ending October 2024, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over-the-year, the unemployment rate decreased in six areas, increased in six, and was unchanged in two.

“Illinois continues to benefit from job growth and positive economic trends in every corner of the state,” said Deputy Governor Andy Manar. “As payroll expansion continues to motivate eager jobseekers, IDES and its local area workforce partners remain focused on providing the necessary services and tools to get workers matched with employers.”

The metro areas which had the largest over-the-year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Springfield MSA (+1.9%, +2,000), the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+1.7%, +2,100) and the Carbondale-Marion MSA (+1.3%, +800). The metro areas which posted the largest over-the-year decreases in total nonfarm jobs were the Danville MSA (-1.8%, -500) and the Peoria MSA (-1.1%, -1,900). Total nonfarm jobs in the Chicago Metro Division were nearly unchanged (0.0%, -600). Industries that saw job growth in most of the metro areas included: Government (twelve areas); Private Education and Health Services (eleven areas); Other Services (nine areas); and Mining and Construction (eight areas).

The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate decreases were the Rockford MSA (-0.7 percentage point to 5.4%), the Decatur MSA (-0.3 percentage point to 5.8%) and the Kankakee MSA (-0.3 percentage point to 5.4%). The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate increases were the Chicago Metro (+1.2 points to 5.5%), the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island IA-IL MSA (+0.7 point to 5.4%), the Danville MSA (+0.4 point to 6.2%), and the Bloomington MSA (+0.4 point to 4.3%). There was no unemployment rate change in the Carbondale-Marion MSA and Elgin Metropolitan Division.

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | Illinois hydrogen project gets initial federal funding: The Midwest Alliance for Clean Hydrogen has inked a contract with the Department of Energy for $22.2 million to start planning a Midwest hydrogen hub. The multi-state hydrogen project called MachH2 could involve up to a $1 billion investment over a dozen years and create more than 12,000 jobs. The goal is to demonstrate how hydrogen fuel cells might work at commercial scale. Illinois plays a central role in the regional project, which also includes Iowa, Indiana and Michigan.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Woman Dead After Judge Declines To Jail Her Alleged Abuser: ‘The System Failed Her’ : Amanda Pyron, president of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence, called for Nowinski to be reassigned from the domestic violence division and to no longer preside over any domestic violence cases. “Judge Nowinski’s failure to protect the community has now resulted in two tragic, preventable murders,” Pyron said in a statement. “When survivors go to the courts for protection, that protection must be effective. Judge Nowinski has failed in that duty, and allowing him to continue to hear domestic violence cases sends the wrong message to survivors across Chicagoland.”

* Block Club | ‘Pretty Impressive’: More Than 50% Of Voters Cast Ballots In Chicago’s First School Board Election: Out of a total 1,498,873 registered voters, 801,878 cast ballots for the city’s 10 school board districts, according to Max Bever, spokesperson for the Chicago Board of Elections. That means 53 percent of the city’s registered voters showed up and picked candidates for school board races. According to one estimate from the National School Boards Association, just 5-10 percent of registered voters vote in school board races.

* Tribune | Lake Michigan water levels drop to lowest in years amid warmth and lack of rain: “It’s a complicated picture,” said Lauren Fry, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory A few inches might not seem like a lot, but Fry said “it’s noteworthy” that October was the first time since 2014 that the monthly average was below the long-term average for any month. The lake’s all-time record low was in January 2013.

* Borderless | Sensitive Migrant Data Mishandled, Former Chicago Shelter Contractors Allege: In a complaint submitted to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) this month, two former Favorite Healthcare Staffing case managers contracted by Favorite alleged that Chicago’s shelters violated health information privacy laws by allowing shelter staff to access and download sensitive information on their own personal devices. The complaint notes that Favorite, the staffing company the City of Chicago hired to manage the migrant shelters, did not require data to be encrypted and allowed employees and independent contractors to share medical and other personal information over insecure communication channels.

* Crain’s | Johnson’s proposed alcohol tax hike likely dead amid pushback from Chicago’s hospitality industry: The proposal would raise the tax on beer 10 cents to $0.39 per gallon and the tax on spirits almost $1 to $3.62 per gallon. Other alcoholic beverages would also see taxes rise. At the liquor store, that would look like a 3-cent increase on a bottle of wine, a 6-cent increase on a six-pack of beer and a 19-cent increase on a bottle of liquor, according to the mayor’s office. The increase would result in an estimated $10.6 million in annual revenue.


*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBEZ | Cook County Board unanimously approves nearly $10 billion budget for 2025: Democratic Commissioner Bridget Degnen spearheaded the effort to amend the budget to provide $2 million in grants to community organizations that provide wraparound reproductive health services. These organizations help cover the cost of everything from hotel stays and travel to medical bills for people seeking abortions.

* Coalition to End Money Bond | Cook County Board approves sunsetting the sheriff’s electronic monitoring program: After years of community pressure, Cook County will begin the process of sunsetting the Sheriff’s electronic monitoring program. Today, the Cook County Board of Commissioners passed a budget amendment that will reduce funding for the Sheriff’s electronic monitoring program and increase funding for the Office of the Chief Judge in preparation for unifying the county’s duplicative pretrial electronic monitoring programs. The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice celebrates this historic announcement. For years, our coalition has called for the dismantling of the Sheriff’s electronic monitoring program, which expanded mass incarceration and harmed tens of thousands of people subjected to pretrial surveillance as well as their families.

* Sun-Times | Crystal Lake man pleads guilty in Jan. 6 case: Giacchetti was part of a group of rioters who made their way into the U.S. Senate Gallery, where he yelled “Where’d you go?” — as senators had evacuated the building — and “Treason” using the same bullhorn, authorities said. After leaving the gallery, he allegedly confronted journalists, broke Associated Press-owned equipment and pushed over a camera on a tripod, striking a reporter.

* Daily Herald | Wheeling Township to decide on funding for mental health board: Wheeling Township Supervisor Kathy Penner is recommending the township board approve the Wheeling Township Community Mental Health Board’s request of $809,550 for the upcoming fiscal year beginning March 1, 2025. Penner made the recommendation at Tuesday’s township board meeting. The mental health board made the request at its Nov. 13 meeting. The township board will vote on the recommendation in December. She said the township would use funds from available township fund balances, instead of increasing property taxes for township residents.

* WBEZ | West Suburban hospital abruptly cuts ties with midwives and family medicine doctors: Citing the risk of losing liability insurance, West Suburban Medical Center will no longer allow midwives and family medicine physicians to deliver babies at the hospital, abruptly severing ties with a popular group of providers effective next week. The sudden announcement on Monday prompted anger from the midwives and family medicine providers at PCC Community Wellness Center, who have delivered at West Suburban in Oak Park for at least 20 years. The hospital and these providers have become a destination for pregnant people who want a more holistic birth with little medical intervention. PCC mostly treats low-income Black and Latino patients on the West Side, but women from across the region have sought out PCC’s midwifery care.

*** Downstate ***


* WIFR | University of Illinois Chicago-Rockford adds nursing program for non-RNs: Referred to as a direct-entry program, the Master of Science in Nursing Program for non-RNs is designed for students who already have a bachelor’s degree in a different subject and want to become a registered nurse. Students will take six semesters of hybrid courses, with on-campus requirements and clinical site placements.

* WTVO | Historic Winnebago landmark is saved from demolition: The Winnebago County Forest Preserve Board voted against tearing the historic landmark down on Wednesday. An early settler built the home using 400-million-year-old limestone on land that is now considered the Severson Dells Forest Preserve. The aging home is facing major repairs to keep it standing, but one supporter said the building was built to last.

* Riverbender | Former Southern Illinois Police Chief Facing Federal Charges, Accused of Public Corruption: A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging the former Wayne City police chief with selling forfeited items confiscated by the department for his personal benefit. Anson Fenton, 46, of Belle Rive, is facing one count of misapplication of property from federally funded programs and one count of interstate transportation of stolen property.

*** National ***

* Columbia Journalism Review | Journalists Are Leaving X for Bluesky. Will They Stay There?: While X hit a yearly traffic peak on Election Day, that was followed by the highest exit numbers since Musk acquired the platform, then known as Twitter, in 2022: over a hundred and fifteen thousand users in the US deactivated their accounts the day after the election, according to The Independent. The exodus has translated, at least in part, into a surge of new users joining Bluesky, a social network launched by Jack Dorsey in 2019, while he was still the chief executive of Twitter.

       

3 Comments
  1. - Carpe GM - Thursday, Nov 21, 24 @ 2:52 pm:

    Dignity for the disabled workers. Very good step forward for Illinois. Great to see this. Kudos to Governor JB and the lawmakers who supported it.


  2. - Just a guy - Thursday, Nov 21, 24 @ 3:58 pm:

    I still can’t believe the same judge who released Crosetti Brand also released another domestic abuser who apparently killed his wife - after she repeatedly asked for protection. At what point are we going to listen to these victims and actually protect them here in Chicago?


  3. - West Side the Best Side - Thursday, Nov 21, 24 @ 5:36 pm:

    I agree with Logan from Will County, there must have been fraud. The only solution is not to let him take his seat for another term because the election was obviously stolen. (Also obviously total snark.)


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