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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC Chicago

An NBC 5 investigation revealed dozens of Illinois hospitals failed to properly treat victims of sexual assault.

An Illinois law known as the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency Treatment Act – or SASETA – was designed to ensure victims of rape and sexual assault get proper care. The law requires that hospitals offer forensic services including rape kits, and that they contact police, collect forensic photographs with the patients’ consent and provide them with things like access to a shower, calling a friend or a rape crisis counselor, among other services. […]

Between 2018 and 2024, NBC 5 Investigates found 88 hospitals failed to properly treat victims of sexual assault, according to our review of thousands of pages of state health department inspection reports.

In many cases, the hospitals were found to have poor recordkeeping – failing to document if a rape kit was collected or contact information for the victim.

But we also found more egregious errors, including Illinois hospitals that failed to contact police, left rape kits sitting on shelves for years or told victims they couldn’t offer them rape kits services and sent them home.

* Sun-Times

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Tuesday a conviction integrity unit within his office that will investigate claims of innocence. The unit will focus on whether new, credible evidence proves that individuals are serving prison time for crimes they did not commit. The unit has been in development since Raoul took office in 2019.

“Our (unit) has the opportunity to ensure that justice was received in these cases and redress wrongful convictions where mistakes may have been made,” Raoul said at a news conference.

To be considered for review by the unit, a person would need to have been convicted by an Illinois state court in a forcible felony case, which involves the threat or use of physical force.

In order for a case to be taken up by the unit, the applicant must show new evidence that wasn’t presented before. If the unit determines that person didn’t commit the crime, it will work with local state’s attorneys’ offices to seek relief for the applicant, and find the real offender.

The unit will be funded by the Illinois Attorney General’s office and a $1.5 million grant from the Justice Department.

* WNIJ

Dana Foltz says that’s exactly how the universal newborn support system is supposed to work. She’s with the Stephenson County Health Department, which has been running the program since it started in 2018.

Their team of nurses visits families within three weeks of the birth. They help moms with things like breastfeeding and C-section healing, and they’re also there to answer any questions and connect them with additional services. […]

The key word in Universal Newborn Support is “universal.” In Stephenson County, every single family has access to this. There aren’t many other communities in Illinois that offer universal home visiting support. But there’s a plan to bring it to Rockford and Winnebago County soon.

Emily Klonicki is the executive director of Alignment Rockford — which is helping lead the community initiative along with groups like Brightpoint & the Winnebago County Health Department. She says Winnebago County could particularly benefit from a universal system. […]

They still have to put together a funding structure to secure the grants to pay for the program and choose a lead agency to run it — like the health department does in Stephenson County.

* Press Release

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame®-inducted icons and rock music legends Def Leppard will bring their electrifying performance to the Illinois State Fair on Saturday, August 16, for an unforgettable night of rock ‘n’ roll. Known for their timeless hits and energetic live shows, the evening will include performances from Def Leppard’s legendary catalog, including chart-topping classics hits like “Pour Some Sugar on Me,” “Photograph,” and “Love Bites.”

“Our team has worked hard to elevate the quality of musical acts at the Grandstand during the Illinois State Fair,” said Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello II. “Def Leppard has a core memory tied to every one of their songs. For me, it’s “Photograph.” I’m looking forward to taking it all in at the Illinois State Fair.”

With over 110 million albums sold, two prestigious U.S. Diamond Awards, and a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame® induction, Def Leppard—Joe Elliott (vocals), Phil Collen (guitar), Rick Savage (bass), Vivian Campbell (guitar), and Rick Allen (drums)—are hailed as one of the greatest live rock bands of all time. Known for groundbreaking albums “Pyromania” and “Hysteria,” and an arsenal of hits like “Rock of Ages,” “Pour Some Sugar on Me,” and “Foolin’,” they bring unmatched energy and showmanship to the stage.

Since launching their catalog on streaming platforms in 2018, the band has gained 5.5 billion streams and continues to expand its global fanbase. The band’s critically acclaimed album Diamond Star Halos debuted in Billboard’s Top 10, while “Drastic Symphonies” with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra reached #4 in the UK, spending 15 weeks at #1 on Billboard’s Classical chart. After a recent collaboration with Tom Morello on “Just Like 73,” which soared to #1 on the Classic Rock chart, Def Leppard remains a dominant force, inspiring new generations with its electrifying live performances.

“Def Leppard’s catalog of hits is iconic. Songs like “Pour Some Sugar on Me,” “Foolin’” and “Rock of Ages” immediately have you singing along, maybe strumming an air guitar,” said Illinois State Fair Manager Rebecca Clark. “Their energy is infectious for fans of all ages.”

Tickets for Def Leppard will go on sale Saturday, November 16 at 10 a.m. via Ticketmaster.

Special holiday pricing makes tickets more affordable today through the end of the year. Until December 31, ticket prices are:
Tier 3 - $85 / Tier 2 - $90 / Tier 1 - $100 / SRO Track - $115 / Blue Ribbon Zone - $165

On January 1, 2025, the price of SRO Track and Tier 1 will increase by $10.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Defense in Madigan corruption trial confronts star government witness over jobs, favors: Seizing on a tactic strengthened by a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, defense attorneys in the Michael Madigan corruption trial began their cross-examination of a key witness Tuesday by trying to distinguish between exchanging jobs for official actions and simply currying favor with the formidable ex-House speaker. Fidel Marquez, the onetime head of ComEd’s governmental affairs team, spent nearly 15 hours over four days of direct examination telling the jury about a scheme to hire Madigan’s allies as consulting subcontractors and doing myriad other favors to bring the utility back into the speaker’s good graces. At the outset of his questioning, however, defense attorney Patrick Cotter sought to paint the effort as legal lobbying, not bribes.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Advocates seek pardons for five Illinois veterans currently living in exile: Immigration advocates are calling on Gov. JB Pritzker to pardon five Illinois military veterans who were deported and currently live in exile. The veterans are in exile all over the world, including Mexico, Guatemala and India. Some were deported more than 20 years ago, according to the League of United Latin American Citizens. The group called for their return during a news conference Monday afternoon in the Lower West Side. “Today we celebrate Veterans Day … by calling for the immediate return of deported green card veterans who served honorably in the U.S. military, only to be sent into exile after facing legal challenges,” said Cecilia Garcia, director of the Illinois chapter of the League of United Latin American Citizens.

* KHQA | 5th & 6th graders invited to compete in Illinois EPA poster, poetry, and prose contests: Teachers may display the submissions for voting and submit final entries to the Illinois EPA for further judging. Teachers may submit up to eight individual entries per school to the Illinois EPA by February 3, 2025. The creation of posters and written works gives students an opportunity to express and share what they have learned. The students whose works are chosen for the exhibit will receive a certificate and ribbon. The top twelve entries will be given special recognition and displayed on the Illinois EPA website.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | What a second Trump term could mean for housing in Chicago and Illinois: To discuss what some of those proposals could mean for Chicago and Illinois, WBEZ’s Esther Yoon-Ji Kang sat down with Daniel Kay Hertz, director of housing for Impact for Equity. Kay Hertz also served as policy director at the Chicago Department of Housing from 2019 to 2024.

* WGN | Chicago Housing Authority streamlines waitlist process in new website: The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) announce they have streamlined its waitlist application process as part of a new website redesign. The new website is located at www.thecha.org.

* Crain’s | Realtors group unveils new standards for conduct after sexual harassment scandal: Fifteen months after a sexual harassment scandal rocked the National Association of Realtors and quickly took down its president and its CEO, the influential Chicago-based trade association this week unveiled a new set of standards aimed at ensuring better conduct and culture in the workplace. The 11 policies include authoring a clear set of values that volunteers and employees should hew to, creating open pathways of accountability for any infractions, and regular “anti-retaliation” training for top leadership.

* Rick Kogan | An exhibition and a book revisit the life and death of Emmett Till: [T]here is a new book that devotes some of its nearly 300 pages to Till but also to the larger sham of American racism. Its title says a great deal, “Ghosts of Segregation: American Racism, Hidden in Plain Sight” (Celadon Books). It is the work of former Chicagoan Richard Frishman, who traveled more than 35,000 miles across America over five years capturing with his camera such things as once-segregated bathrooms, beaches, churches, hospitals, graves and hotels.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s largest accounting firms see decreasing headcounts among major players: The largest accounting firms in the Chicago area, which are ranked by local professional staff as of June 30, barely saw an increase in numbers from 2023 to 2024. These firms saw median growth of less than 1%. The top 25 firms didn’t see much of an increase in local certified public accountant, or CPA, headcounts either, with median growth hovering slightly above 0%.

* South Side Weekly | The Complicated History of the Globetrotters: Journalists and brothers Mark and Matthew Jacob’s book, Globetrotter: How Abe Saperstein Shook Up the World of Sports isn’t a hit piece. It’s also not sportswashing—the practice of utilizing sports to divert attention away from unethical behavior—even though Saperstein was himself guilty of it. Some of Saperstein’s players, budding hoops iconoclasts, and, perhaps most notably, the Black press including the Chicago Defender, often called Saperstein out for the minstrel vibes given off by the Globetrotters. Even as a kid who couldn’t quite formulate what I was watching at the time, I knew something wasn’t right.

* WBEZ | Pitchfork’s abrupt exit from Chicago seen as a ‘loss’ for music community: For nearly two decades, the July weekend was viewed as “a musical safe space for truly alternative people,” said Mike Bennett, a CHIRP Radio host. “It was a place they could really congregate and feel they were a part of something. That’s a loss for Chicago.” New York–based media giant Condé Nast, which owns Pitchfork Media, the longtime online music criticism website, broke the news on Instagram Monday that the festival would no longer take place in Chicago, where it originated 19 years ago. Condé Nast did not explain the decision.

* The Athletic | Bears fire OC Shane Waldron, Thomas Brown to call plays: The Chicago Bears have made a change at offensive coordinator. The team parted ways with Shane Waldron and tabbed passing game coordinator Thomas Brown to take over play-calling duties, the Bears announced Tuesday. The move comes after the Bears (4-5) scored only three points against the New England Patriots on Sunday. Chicago has tallied only 27 points in its last three games and hasn’t scored a touchdown since Week 8.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Three-way race emerges for Arlington Heights mayor: With longtime Mayor Tom Hayes opting not to seek a fourth term as the town’s top elected leader, the field to replace him includes two members of his village board — trustees Tom Schwingbeck and Jim Tinaglia. Filing alongside them Tuesday morning was Jon Ridler, executive director of the Arlington Heights Chamber of Commerce. Candidate filing remains open until Monday, so there’s still time for the field to grow larger.

* Tribune | Oak Park Democrats commiserate in wake of Trump victory: “This is tough,” said Democratic Party of Oak Park committeewoman Eileen Lynch, speaking to the standing room only crowd gathered Saturday at the group’s headquarters in Oak Park. “I’m finding it hardest to talk to my daughters who I infused with Democratic activism. This is a devastating setback and I don’t know what we’re going to do.” But some also took a longer view. State Sen. Don Harmon, president of the Illinois Senate and the Democratic committeeman for Oak Park, preached resiliency, saying that setbacks are inevitable in politics. Harmon recalled when he was a student at St. Chiles Catholic School in Oak Park and did some volunteer work for 1972 Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern, who lost in a landslide to Richard Nixon.

* Daily Herald | Motor Werks expansion debate moves to Barrington village board: A proposed expansion of the Barrington Motor Werks campus made its way before the village board Monday, as did neighbors complaining about the project. Motor Werks owner Mario Murgado wants to add a two-story, 110,000-square-foot, two-story building at the corner of Dundee Road and Grove Avenue for a Porsche dealership. But residential neighbors are opposed, complaining the campus is already too loud and busy.

* News-Sun | Lake County planning to double number of traffic roundabouts: ‘Illinois is coming around on them, no pun intended’: Lake County is looking for feedback on a proposed roundabout at Hunt Club and Stearns School roads in Warren Township as it moves to double the number of roundabout intersections within its system in the coming years. It won’t be the first roundabout in Lake County, although its only the second multi-lane roundabout built by Lake County, the first being River and Roberts roads in the village of Lake Barrington in 2015. The $15 million project, which includes drainage improvements and a bike path, is planned to be finished in 2027.

* Daily Southtown | Matteson police say teacher’s aide arrested after endangering a child at Marya Yates Elementary School: Matteson police said Friday charges were pending for battery and endangering the life and health of a child, but as of Tuesday a spokesman would not comment on the status of charges or whether the teacher’s aide was still in custody. Police said in a news release that just before the end of the school day Friday, the 8-year-old boy was running in the hall when a 26-year-old female teacher’s aide grabbed him. The teacher’s aide dragged the student about 20 feet into a classroom and dropped him partially in the doorway, police said.

*** Downstate ***

* Daily Journal | Iroquois to leave Illinois?: Iroquois County Board Chairman John Shure said a group known as New Illinois approached the county board about the ballot request. Shure said some residents have asked him in the county could secede from Illinois and join Indiana. “Obviously we don’t think this will go anywhere,” he said in reference to forming a new state. “But we want to send a message to Springfield that we are not satisfied.” He said the vote result is just about what he thought it might be for this Republican-dominated county. “I’m happy with the result,” Shure said. “It accomplished what we thought it would be.”

* WIFR | Winnebago Co. leaders prepare for potential mass deportations under Trump’s ‘border czar’: For decades, Sara Dady helped migrants in the Rockford area. While planning to oppose Trump’s policies, she learns from past immigration fights in Winnebago County. “We’ve been here before under a Trump administration,” concedes Dady. She references a 2017 incident where Winnebago County Sheriff Gary Caruana walked away from housing ICE detainees in the county jail; the attorney credits community pressure to stopping the planned center.

*** National ***

* Reaters | Kraft Heinz pulls Lunchables meals from US low-income lunch program: Chicago-based Kraft Heinz announced plans to sell to the school lunch program early last year at an industry conference, saying it would target the $25-billion educational market. But demand fell short of the packaged food manufacturer’s expectations, the company said, as it looks to revive its well-worn brands such as Lunchables, Jell-O and Crystal Light, and grow sales volumes, which have faltered after multiple price hikes.

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Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Quinn touts passage of non-binding tax referendum, Curran dismisses results

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for county results as of Nov. 10, according to Pat Quinn. And here’s a press release from the former governor…

On November 5, Illinois voters delivered a resounding 60% landslide victory for the Illinois Property Tax Relief Amendment Referendum marking the first time in state history that voters had a direct referendum chance to vote on a specific measure to fund property tax relief for over 3 million households in Illinois.

The advisory referendum which was placed on the ballot by the General Assembly and Governor asked “Should the Illinois Constitution be amended to create an additional 3% tax on income greater than $1,000,000 for the purpose of dedicating funds raised to property tax relief?”

The property tax burden is a major factor in the cost of living for more than 3 million Illinois homeowners who pay more than $23.2 billion in residential property taxes every year.

After New Jersey, Illinois has the second highest property taxes in the nation and eight Illinois counties - Cook, DuPage, Lake, Will, Kane, McHenry, Kendall, and DeKalb - are among the highest property tax counties in America.

Voters in each of these eight counties approved the property tax relief referendum by wide margins as well as voters in Champaign, Rock Island, Peoria, Winnebago, McLean, Madison, St. Clair, Sangamon, Vermilion, Macon, LaSalle, Kankakee, Jackson, and Saline counties. The referendum was approved in urban, suburban, and rural areas across the state.

“The people of Illinois have spoken in a language that every public official in the state should understand - it’s time for a constitutional amendment mandating relief from unfair and back-breaking property taxes,” said former Illinois Governor Pat Quinn.

The Illinois Department of Revenue has estimated that a millionaire surcharge of 3% on individual annual income over $1 million would generate $4.5 billion for property tax relief.

According to most recent data, Illinois has 77,323 millionaires who declare more than $1 million in net income on their annual income tax returns. Millionaires in Illinois currently have a lighter income tax rate burden than millionaires in 26 states and the District of Columbia. The Illinois tax code is considered one of the 10 most unfair codes in the country.

In 2019, the General Assembly and Governor enacted legislation creating the Illinois Property Tax Relief Fund as a special fund in the state treasury. The law calls for annual property tax rebates to be given to each of the state’s more than 3 million households eligible for the household exemption.

“The Property Tax Relief Fund law is an administratively simple and straightforward mechanism to distribute annual property tax rebates to more than 3 million Illinois households from the billions of dollars generated by a 3% income tax surcharge on the state’s 77,323 millionaires,” said Quinn.

“For too long, millionaires have been getting tax breaks and Illinois homeowners have been getting higher and higher property tax bills.”

The Property Tax Relief Amendment will need three-fifths approval from the members of the Illinois House and Senate by May 3, 2026 to go on the 2026 general election ballot for referendum approval by Illinois voters.

* Senate Republican Leader John Curran was asked about the referendum’s passage today…

Curran: I think the public spoke very forcefully and in favor of the current taxation process in the Constitution and rejected Governor Pritzker’s graduated income tax two years ago. I would not expect to see that come back.

Q: So you don’t think that the voters, even though they’ve said they support charging millionaires an additional 3% for property tax relief, you don’t think that they’re going to support an ultimate constitutional amendment?

Curran: There was no campaign around… Look, those three measures were put on the ballot to crowd out any citizen ballot initiative. Let’s be honest about what was going on there. There was a citizen ballot initiative going on in the state of Illinois. They didn’t want it to make it to the ballot, so they crowded it out with three spots. It’s great to get feedback from the public. That’s fantastic. But likely a different result when you actually put some campaigning and education behind it.

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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2.

The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider.

CTA: See how it works.

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McLean County was an outlier this year

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* After the 2016 election, the McLean county board had five Democrats and 15 Republicans. The Democrats slowly made gains over the years, tying it up in 2022. Now, they have a 12-8 majority

For the first time, McLean County’s board has more Democrats on it than Republicans.

After the 2024 election, the McLean County Board is split 12 to 8 in favor of Democrats.

Seven Democrats were elected to the board on Tuesday, joining the five who were not up for re-election. Four Republicans were elected to the board. Board members who were not up for re-election will be on the ballot in 2026.

* Interesting

”This is one of the few parts of the country where Kamala Harris actually did a little better than Biden did four years ago, and that is in McLean County. We certainly see some changes here,” said Tari Renner, a Political Science professor at Illinois Wesleyan and former mayor of Bloomington.

* Pantagraph

A total of 11 County Board seats were open this election cycle. However, board member Adam Reeves, who represents the county’s first district, and Democrat Alex Duffy, who was seeking the sixth district seat currently held by Jack Abraham, ran unopposed.

McLean County Democratic Party Chair Patrick Cortesi said if the results as they stand are certified, this will be the first time the party has held a majority since the county has had an elected board.

* Isabel talked to reelected Rep. Sharon Chung (D-Bloomington) today…

In terms of McLean County, I’m really proud of a lot of the work that we did. The fact that we were able to flip the board, which I was on the board from 2018 to 2022, and for us to flip it to majority Democrats was a really huge feat. I think it just really speaks to the quality of candidates, quality of our ground game, for the McLean County Democrats, the sort of energy and momentum we had. I’m just really proud of a lot of that work.

When I first ran for the county board in 2018 there were only five Democrats. For us to make those gains in that amount of time has been really extraordinary.

I think also the fact that we had people on top of the ticket to really sort of help drive that. McLean County was one of the few counties in Illinois that gained more Democratic voters. And I think that just really speaks to a lot of the work we’ve been doing down in McLean County. And you know, the work that we were doing on our campaign, the work that Senator Koehler was doing on his campaign, Congressman Sorensen, all of us, was a big team effort. So we’re really proud of that.

* Politico

McLean County Democratic Party Chair Patrick Cortesi credits hard work and keeping the messaging local. “We really talked about local issues,” he told Playbook. “When our candidates were going and knocking on doors, it wasn’t ‘Vote for me because I’m a Democrat,’ it was ‘Vote for me because I believe in women’s rights or promoting labor unions or fair wages or the environment.’ It depended on the district, and they all knew their districts well.” Cortesi also credits organized efforts by college students to get out to vote.

The ‘keeping-it-local’ strategy is something McLean Democrats modeled after campaigns by Stacy Abrams in Georgia and Anderson Clayton in North Carolina. “Of course, we’re proud to be Democrats, and we didn’t shy away from that,” Cortesi said. “But you gotta lead with the issues and then, once you find out they agree with you on the issues, you’re like, ‘Well, congratulations. You’re actually a Democrat.’”

* A view from the Republican side

“I think their campaigns are like major league campaigns and I think our campaigns are like single-A campaigns,” said [former McLean County Republican Party chair Chuck Erickson].

McLean County [Republican] Party chair Dennis Grundler agreed, in part. He said the party needs to do more in certain respects.

“And [State Representative] Sharon Chung had a machine there, man! Churning those people out. That’s what the Republicans need to start focusing on, ballot harvesting and getting people to register and go,” said Grundler. “Because if not, we’re going to be looking at some more of the same.”

Erickson said there’s a lack of candidate mentoring and support.

“I think their candidates are being coached extensively, and they’re being assisted extensively by their party. I’m not certain our candidates are getting the same coaching or some of the same benefits their candidates are getting,” he said.

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Please, LIS, don’t mess up your new site

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Legislative Information System’s General Assesmbly website may be old, but it works and its minimalism makes it fast and fairly easy to use. It’s new “beta” site looks nice and all, I suppose, but take a look at this

Javascript to slowly load the time of today’s session?

Click around yourself and give us some thoughts on the beta site.

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Energy Storage Can Minimize Major Price Spikes

Tuesday, Nov 12, 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 (which could be as high as $30 in 2026)—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.

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Bears float yet another stadium location idea (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

After publicly labeling the former Michael Reese hospital site as unsuitable for the new venue, the [Chicago Bears] team is said to be reconsidering the 49-acre property south of McCormick Place in hopes of jump-starting discussions with politicians to keep the team in Chicago, according to sources familiar with the talks. […]

While it’s unclear how far discussions have advanced, the softened stance on the property is the latest twist in the team’s stadium pursuit after previously announcing their intention to decamp to Arlington Heights before shifting their focus back to staying on Chicago’s lakefront. […]

The mayor’s office and local Ald. Lamont Robinson, 4th, said they are aware of the discussions. The potential development was also broached at a breakfast meeting between Pritzker and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle last week.

Pritzker’s office said a more palatable financial request has not been discussed but declined further comment. Preckwinkle’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Nothing in there about what sort of government money the team would seek. As far as I can tell, that’s still off the table in Springfield.

…Adding… Sun-Times

State Sen. Robert Peters, the South Side Democrat whose district includes both Soldier Field and the Michael Reese site, said he hasn’t gotten details on the latest proposal, but he suggested it could get a warmer reception from Springfield legislators who have flatly rejected publicly financing the Bears’ lakefront aspirations.

“If they’re bringing something to the table with broad economic development benefits and affordable housing, that sure beats what the Bears had been proposing before,” Peters said.

“They were asking for billions of dollars from the state to have their own little playground next to their current publicly funded stadium, with little economic benefit to the surrounding community. Here, there is at least an argument to be made around building a community center and bringing affordable senior housing to an area that has needed development for 20 to 30 years now.” […]

[Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson] noted the Reese site is eligible for tax increment financing subsidies “to accommodate — not only the stadium, but the building of a whole new economic anchor point that is the gateway to the South Side,” Ferguson said.

He added: “It could be done as an economic development project … that includes a stadium that keeps the Bears in Chicago that involves far more creative, less taxpayer-burdensome funding sources…It actually brings back online one of the most valuable pieces of urban property that, right now, is not performing at all from a tax perspective.”

…Adding… Senate Republican Leader John Curran was asked about the new Bears development today…

I think the public has expressed their frustration with the high cost of living. They’re looking for relief. So any entity, including Chicago Public Schools and the CTU, coming to Illinois looking for dollars or surplus dollars, they are not here. We have this $3 billion deficit in front of us, and that’s what we have to focus on.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chicago Magazine

Jim Kelly remembers how his 91-year-old father died: alone in a nursing home bathroom after a long, agonizing battle with prostate cancer. Kelly, a 77-year-old Oak Park retiree, is now dealing with the same disease himself. While his cancer is under control at the moment, if it worsens, if he’s given a terminal diagnosis and his pain can’t be relieved, he hopes Illinois lawmakers will let him choose another path. “I can’t think of any better way to die than at home surrounded by our wonderful friends and neighbors.”

If a pending Illinois Senate bill is enacted, Kelly could drink a lethal drug cocktail prescribed by doctors to allow patients to die quickly, painlessly, at a time of their own choosing,  as terminally ill patients in 10 states and Washington, D.C., are already able to do. Senate assistant majority leader Linda Holmes, a Democrat from Aurora who is cosponsoring the End-of-Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act, plans to bring it up for a vote as early as this month. “Many of us of boomer age have watched our parents die, and that’s when you become an advocate of this,” says Holmes, whose own mother and father died painfully of cancer. “It’s horrible to lose a parent, but seeing them suffer and not being able to do anything to alleviate that suffering is worse.”

Proponents call such legislation medical aid in dying, or MAID. Opponents call it physician-assisted suicide. And like such laws in other states, the Illinois bill would limit the option to adults 18 or older who have a prognosis of six months or less to live and who are mentally capable of making an informed health care decision, as confirmed by two physicians. No health care provider is required to participate, and the patient must be able to self-administer the medication. […]

Holmes, as well as House majority leader Robyn Gabel, a Democrat from Evanston, are guardedly optimistic that lawmakers will pass the bill in both houses this time — if not in the November veto session, then in 2025. The response to the bill among Democratic lawmakers and the public has been “overwhelmingly positive,” Holmes says. But would Governor JB Pritzker sign the bill? Gabel thinks he would. The governor did not respond to requests for comment for this story, but back in 2018, when he was running for office, he wrote this in a candidate questionnaire: “I am in favor of putting this very personal decision in the hands of patients to make in consultation with their doctors.”

* Sun-Times

In the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s reelection, advocates for transgender people in Illinois are scrambling to strengthen the state protections they’ve created, while some trans Midwesterners consider moving to states with shield laws for safe harbor.

State Rep. Kelly Cassidy told the Sun-Times there has been a coalition effort of state lawmakers to protect trans and reproductive health care access since the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade leaked in 2022. […]

One gap the coalition identified is medical data privacy and the use of geolocators to track people who visit health care facilities, which Cassidy said she’s confident will be fixed before the fall legislative session ends.

“There’s a hole in that [legislative] shield, and that’s data privacy, so that’s the top priority,” Cassidy said.

* WNIJ

It’s unclear what changes the next federal administration will make related to the environment. But in Illinois, there is proposed legislation to protect the state’s remaining wetlands. It comes after last year’s Supreme Court ruling that rolled back some of those protections. […]

The ruling changes which wetlands are federally protected. After the Supreme Court decision, the only protected wetlands are ones that have a continuous surface connection to a water body like a river, lake or ocean. This could mean nearly all of Illinois’s wetlands are left unprotected, according to experts. […]

Robert Hirschfield’s a senior water policy specialist with the [Prairie Rivers Network].

“But what we know, he said, “is that wetlands across the country, many wetlands, have likely lost federal protections. Prairie Rivers Network and many of our partners here in Illinois are trying to respond with state legislation in Illinois to basically recreate what was done at the federal level at the state level.” […]

Several groups have come out in opposition to the proposed bill. The Illinois Farm Bureau, and state corn and soybean associations cite the extra regulation that could fall on private landowners.

SB3669, Sponsored by Sen. Laura Ellman, was re-referred to the Illinois Senate Assignments Committee in April

V Creates the Wetlands and Small Streams Protection Act to restore protections for wetlands and small streams that were formerly protected from pollution and destruction by the Clean Water Act. Includes provisions concerning: exemptions; wetlands delineation, classification, notification, permits and veto; general permits; appeal of final decisions made by the Department of Natural Resources and judicial review; investigation and enforcement; and county authority. Creates the Wetlands and Small Streams Advisory Committee and establishes duties and rules for the Committee. Creates the Wetlands and Small Streams Protection Fund. Provides for permit review fees. Defines terms. Makes conforming changes in the State Finance Act and the Illinois Environmental Protection Act. Effective immediately.

* Daily Herald

Republican state Rep. Jeff Keicher of Sycamore introduced a bill to end the age-triggered tests early this year, after hearing complaints from constituents, many from Huntley’s Sun City active adult community.

The legislation passed a committee vote, but it was shelved in May. Despite gaining 48 bipartisan cosponsors, only a few top Democratic leaders signed on, and Speaker Chris Welch was not among them. […]

“Don’t hold out hope that something will happen in veto session,” Keicher said. “The measure will need to be reintroduced in spring when the new General Assembly is there.

“I think the best step forward will be to hand it to someone on the other side that can navigate the Democrat hurdles that I might be encountering a little bit more effectively,” Keicher said.

* FOX Chicago

Exonerated individuals and their advocates are pressing Illinois lawmakers to pass a bill aimed at increasing compensation for those who spent years, sometimes decades, wrongfully imprisoned.

Activists say the current compensation formula, which would pay just over $6,400 per year for wrongful imprisonment, falls far short of a fair amount.

The Illinois Innocence Project, a group focused on overturning wrongful convictions, is calling on lawmakers to act urgently during the current legislative veto session to pass the Exoneree Compensation Bill.

Stephanie Kamel, an advocate with the project, says the legislation — officially known as Senate Amendment 1 to HB 1015 — has bipartisan support across both chambers of the Illinois legislature.

* Sen. David Koehler introduced SB3974 last week

Amends the Property Tax Code. Provides that the fair cash value of commercial energy storage system improvements in counties with fewer than 3,000,000 inhabitants shall be determined by subtracting the allowance for physical depreciation from the commercial energy storage system trended real property cost basis. Provides that those commercial energy storage systems are not subject to equalization factors applied by the Department of Revenue or by any board of review, assessor, or chief county assessment officer. Provides that the owner of the commercial energy storage system shall commission a metes and bounds survey description of the land upon which the commercial energy storage system is located. Contains other provisions concerning the assessment of commercial energy storage systems. Effective immediately.

  15 Comments      


Dems seek to ‘Trump-proof’ Illinois, but they have their own problems to solve as well

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Back in 2018, about midway through President-elect Donald Trump’s first term, the Illinois Senate passed a bill that was designed to prevent “the weakening of Illinois environmental and labor regulations in response to a weakening of federal regulations,” according to an Illinois Environmental Council news release.

Some state rules are tied directly to federal rules, so if the feds had slashed regulations, the idea was to prevent that from happening here.

“This bill aims to preserve the status quo of Illinois’ current safeguards as the federal administration continues to roll back environmental standards,” the IEC claimed at the time. “The Illinois Baseline Protection Act would prevent the weakening of any current Illinois standard below the federal standard already in place.”

The bill, SB2213, went nowhere in the House, however.

As I’ve been telling my subscribers for a while now, some Democrats are looking at “Trump-proofing” state statutes going forward, perhaps as early as the November veto session, although no language is currently circulating, so it may have to wait.

Gov. JB Pritzker was asked about this topic last week and said he’d met with his senior staff about the concept. He also “talked to some other governors around the country about the things that they’re looking at doing.” California’s Democratic governor has already called a special legislative session.

Pritzker didn’t say if he’d come up with any ideas, but he listed “health care, reproductive rights” as possible topics.

Illinois’ trade unions, led by Local 150 of the Operating Engineers Union, have been looking at this topic since before the election. While no legislation has yet been drafted, they said they are gaming situations about what would happen if the feds repealed the Davis-Bacon Act, which sets the prevailing wage on government contracts.

They’re also looking at creating a state version of the National Labor Relations Act, which is the basis for all federal labor laws on organizing, collective bargaining and the right to strike. Some businesses, including Elon Musk’s Tesla, have challenged the constitutionality of the act.

I asked House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, for comment on what might happen in the near future.

“This week has proven that the work we’ve done in Illinois matters more than ever, and I’m grateful that we’ve taken steps to safeguard the rights and values that are now at extreme risk in many surrounding states. We’ll be heading into this veto session with a renewed determination to ensure our fundamental freedoms remain protected.”

But Illinois reality is also starting to intrude.

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget published its mandated five-year budget projection late last month, and it was bad news for the state, to the tune of a projected $3.16 billion deficit in the coming fiscal year, which begins July 1.

“The ability to fund new programs will be severely limited,” the budget office warned.

A caveat: The spending and most of the revenue projections are made using current laws and past trends. The economy can change, and laws and practices can be changed.

The budget office also issued a reminder of something we all learned during the budget impasse years ago: “(S)pending reductions cannot be implemented broadly across-the-board. Areas such as debt service on state general obligation bonds, pension payments, Medicaid, and areas that are covered by consent decrees reflect approximately 40% of the State’s General Funds spending. Education spending — primarily base school support (e.g. Evidence Based Funding and transportation reimbursements), state university operations, and need-based assistance — encompass another 24% of the budget.”

That would mean 16% cuts to what can be reduced, without taking other action.

Trump’s much-improved state election results here (halving his loss margin from his last two races) do not create the sort of political environment you want when facing a big deficit next fiscal year — especially if you’re a governor with his eyes on the White House.

Despite the fact that Illinois state and local Democrats appear to have held on to most every office they had, their earlier exuberance contrasted poorly with that final Trump number. And that can put the fear into legislators. Fearful legislators may not want to stick their necks out for a tax hike.

Pritzker himself downplayed his own budget office’s projection by saying the annual forecast has “been wrong every year.”

Yes, we have seen some wild projections. But the crazy pandemic-era fiscal swings have mostly ended, making projections a bit easier.

Pritzker told reporters that his administration had “defeated” dire predictions every year and pledged to introduce and pass a balanced budget next year.

* Related…

    * Tribune | Labor leaders, Illinois officials fear workers’ rights at risk under Trump, but vow to keep fighting: In an interview Wednesday, Raoul pointed to efforts that a Trump Labor Department might take to classify gig workers, such as delivery drivers for Uber or Doordash, as independent contractors, which would enable companies to avoid paying them overtime and giving them other benefits they would be entitled to if classified as employees. “We’ve dealt with a Trump Department of Labor in the past that has been less friendly in their interpretation to protecting workers from misclassification,” he said.

    * Sun-Times | Officials aim to bolster Illinois protections as trans Midwesterners consider moving before 2nd Trump term: One gap the coalition identified is medical data privacy and the use of geolocators to track people who visit health care facilities, which [Rep. Kelly Cassidy] said she’s confident will be fixed before the fall legislative session ends. “There’s a hole in that [legislative] shield, and that’s data privacy, so that’s the top priority,” Cassidy said.

    * WBEZ | How would a second Trump term affect the money flowing into Illinois?: Federal funding is the state of Illinois’ largest source of revenue. And the city of Chicago depends on it for various projects, including the current Red Line Extension and O’Hare Modernization. But President-Elect Donald Trump has a fraught relationship with the state’s prominent politicians, and has threatened to withhold federal funding from political opposition. How could a second Trump term affect the money that Illinois and Chicago receive from the federal government, and will projects like these stall during the next four years?

    * Fox 32 | Chicago, Illinois leaders prepare for fight over Trump’s immigration plans: Last week, a defiant Governor JB Pritzker vowed to sue the federal government if it decided to hold up federal public safety funding as punishment for not cooperating, saying he would protect the state’s status as a safe haven. “You come for my people, you come through me,” Pritzker said on Thursday. But House Republican leader Tony McCombie says undocumented immigrants are costing the state billions, and wants Pritzker to rethink his opposition.

    * Tribune | Democrats have Donald Trump’s second term in mind heading into Illinois legislature’s fall session: House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said last week that the session will be an opportunity to continue discussions on certain proposals but that larger issues would need more time to get settled. As for the effect Trump’s administration may have in coming years, the Hillside Democrat acknowledged Illinois has made good strides in recent years with certain laws it has put on the books, but that more could be done during the January lame duck session, held before a new legislature is sworn in. “We could call a lame duck session and do some things when it comes to workers’ rights, women’s rights, LGBTQ+ rights, we have an opportunity that we can do some things before Donald Trump takes the oath of office,” Welch said. “We’re going to be a check on Donald Trump. As a state, we have rights. And we did it in his first term and we’ll do it again.”

    * WGN | What Will a Second Trump Administration Mean for Illinois?: Congressman Mike Quigley joins WGN-TV Political Report.

    * ABC 7 | Chicago leaders prepare for President-elect Trump’s mass deportation plan: The deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights said Chicago will not be bullied because of its Welcoming City Ordinance. “We are not able to cooperate with ICE to assist in mass deportations; our mayor has made very clear that he will not flinch,” said Beatriz Ponce de Leon, deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights. “We will continue to maintain our ordinance in place and to comply with that.”

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago, Cook County, Illinois leaders gather at Soldier Field to honor veterans. CBS Chicago

    - Veterans who fought in every war since World War II filled the United Club at Soldier Field for the event Monday.
    -Mayor Brandon Johnson, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker were all present.
    - During the ceremony, Mayor Johnson gave a special resolution making Chicago a Purple Heart City for retired Illinois Air National Guard Lt. Col. Eldridge Johnson Jr.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | How Illinois will decide on spending $40M opioid settlement with Kroger: By 2038, Illinois’ Opioid Remediation Fund is projected to receive approximately $772.6 million in total from various opioid manufacturers and distributors, according to the settlement fund allocation dashboard operated by the Illinois Department of Human Services. Illinois was awarded more than $420 million from Johnson & Johnson, Walmart, Walgreens, Allergan, CVS, Teva, Mallinckrodt, and opioid distributors, such as AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson.

* Tribune | US Sen. Dick Durbin says Democrats’ minority status a consideration as he mulls reelection bid: The GOP victories undid a 50-50 tie in the Senate that gave Democrats control of the chamber because Vice President Kamala Harris was a tiebreaker as Senate president. “I’m going to watch and see what this means,” Durbin said in an interview after the city’s Veterans Day remembrance ceremony at Soldier Field. “I enjoy serving in the Senate. I’m a realist about the future. But I want to see how the relationship works.”

* Semafor | Gannett probes possible leak of bombshell Iowa poll: But roughly 45 minutes prior to the poll’s public release, a stray tweet predicted the poll’s findings. Its author said that Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, a Duke University alumnus, had mentioned the not-yet-released poll during a Duke Democrats meeting that day. (A spokesperson for Pritzker did not respond to an inquiry about the apparent leak.)

*** Statehouse News ***

* WICS | AG Raoul announces $11.25 mil settlement agreement with DoorDash: Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced a $11.25 million settlement agreement with DoorDash. If approved by a judge, the settlement will resolve allegations that the company violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act by misrepresenting to customers that tipping would increase drivers’ pay.

* Center Square | Illinois files notice of appeal after district court strikes down gun ban: The state filed a notice of appeal late Friday. Federal courts were closed Monday for Veterans Day. “I believe the Court of Appeals will almost certainly extend the stay until the outcome of the appeal,” [John Schmidt, G-PAC Executive Board Member,] said. “Nothing in McGlynn’s opinion suggests any reason to anticipate that the Court of Appeals will not again reverse his injunction.”


*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Illinois investing over $2 million to improve tourism: Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) announced that over $2 million in tourism funding will be available through two different grants. The Tourism Attractions Grant Program has $1.7 million in funding, and the Tourism Private Sector Grant Program will give out $600,000.

* WCIA | Illinois allows veterans to adopt pets with no fees: An Illinois law that went into effect Jan. 1 2024 requires animal shelters in the state to provide complete fee waivers to veterans who meet the requirements to adopt a dog or a cat. The law passed both chambers unanimously. […] All licensed animal shelters and animal controls are required to provide the fee waiver, according to the Illinois Department of Agriculture. Fee waivers for pet adoptions in Illinois can cost more than $250.

* Sun-Times | Illinois is holding $5 billion of lost, forgotten money and property: Is any of it yours?: Louise Bohannon got to wondering if she was owed any money after seeing an ad in September about unclaimed property held by the Illinois Treasurer’s office. Two weeks later, the 32-year-old Matteson resident received a check for nearly $500, the bulk of it an insurance reimbursement for a 2016 health care visit. She never got that reimbursement because the insurance company didn’t know she had moved.

* WGN | Illinois Women’s Institute for Leadership Training Academy works to get more women involved in politics: An organization in Illinois has a mission to get more women involved in politics. The Illinois Women’s Institute for Leadership (IWIL) Training Academy works to prepare and propel women to pursue elected and appointed positions to advance progressive, Democratic ideals.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Johnson’s $300M property tax increase will be ’significantly decreased,’ top mayoral aide says: Twenty-two of the City Council’s 50 members met Saturday with top mayoral aides, including Johnson’s budget team, to begin negotiations that, some alderpersons said, should have started long before Johnson belatedly introduced his $17.3 billion budget. […] Ideas ranged from increasing the $9.50-a-month garbage collection fee by varying levels, to raising taxes on items including cigarettes, parking, bottled water, gasoline and liquor, to raising the amusement tax from 9% to 14% — but only on streaming services. One of the biggest-ticket items — bringing in nearly $100 million — involves raising the personal property lease tax on cloud computing from 9% to 10.25%.

* Crain’s | Negotiations underway to cut Johnson’s proposed $300 million property tax in half: Johnson himself has met with the leaders of the 19-member Progressive Caucus, stressing he is open to all options to reduce the property tax plan without tipping his hand on what measures he favored. The mayor hopes to block a vote on the property tax at a special City Council meeting this week by securing at least 17 votes against a procedural motion to suspend the body’s regular rules of order to take up the property tax levy. While Johnson staffers have expressed confidence they have the votes, members of the council say it’s unlikely. “There’s nothing wrong with voting down this property tax levy, so I’ll be voting it down,” said Ald. Maria Hadden, 49th, who co-chairs the Progressive Caucus.

* Tribune | No Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago for summer 2025: Pitchfork Music Festival has been held annually in Union Park in Chicago since 2006, except for a year off in 2020 due to the pandemic. Before that, it was the 2005 Intonation Music Festival, curated by Pitchfork Media. This summer’s festival July 19-21 had headliners Alanis Morissette, Carly Rae Jepsen and Black Pumas, among others.

* WTTW | Turf Grass Is America’s Default Lawn Setting. Chicago Researchers Are Rethinking the Possibilities: While turf has long been the country’s default landscape setting, there’s a growing push for a shift away from a monoculture of, say, Kentucky bluegrass to more environmentally friendly lawn alternatives. Ecologists argue that diverse plantings would be better for pollinators, better for stormwater absorption and better for soil than turf, among other benefits. Conservation-minded homeowners have responded by smothering their lawns with cardboard, tarps or other turf killers and replacing the grass with perennials — in Chicago, “prairie” plantings are a popular choice (“prairie” being a catch-all descriptor for a curated selection of native plants).

* Dan Wiederer | Call failed? Matt Eberflus’ indecisiveness on changes to the offense another sign of Chicago Bears being disconnected: Now it’s Eberflus’ duty — for as long as general manager Ryan Poles and President/CEO Kevin Warren allow him to keep his job — to find solutions for all that’s going wrong. That’s particularly important for an offense that has gone 23 possessions since its last visit to the end zone and 29 days and counting since rookie quarterback Caleb Williams last threw a touchdown pass. Yet on Monday, first with that morning radio call and 3½ hours later during a 10-minute news conference at Halas Hall, Eberflus struggled to provide clarity on what specific “changes and adjustments” he was promising to make.

* Sun-Times | Ella Jenkins, Chicago’s first lady of children’s music, dies at 100: From her home in Lincoln Park Ella Jenkins traveled the world, performing for generations of kids who never forgot listening to and performing with her. She has a Grammy Award, and her music is in the Library of Congress.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Furtive GOP votes, blue-state security blanket: What were suburbanites thinking this election?: “The story here is turnout,” College of DuPage Political Science Professor Melissa Mouritsen said. Although she lost the election, Democrat Harris won Illinois with over 2.85 million votes to Republican Trump’s nearly 2.4 million, according to unofficial results. In suburban Cook and DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties, Harris garnered about 1.38 million votes, a drop from President Joe Biden’s 1.66 million four years ago, Friday tallies showed.

* Tribune | Oak Park becomes second suburb to OK ranked choice voting: Initial results from the Nov. 5 election indicate 79.21% of voters voted in favor of switching to ranked choice voting for those offices. The switch goes into effect in 2027 so next April’s village election will be held under the current first past the post system. Under ranked choice voting voters list all the candidates for an office in order of preference. A candidate who gets 50% of first preference votes plus one is elected. If no candidate reaches the 50% plus one benchmark, the last place finisher is eliminated and then the votes of those who voted for the eliminated candidate as their first choice are reallocated to those voters’ second choices. The process continues until a candidate has a majority of the votes.

* Shaw Local | Voter turnout comes up short of predictions in La Salle, Bureau, Putnam counties: Voter turnout was strong throughout the Illinois Valley, but county clerks guessed a bit high when predicting voter participation. La Salle County recorded 70.1% turnout. Bureau County was 69.7%. Putnam County led the pack with 82.2%. Each figure fell short of what clerks had anticipated, though Bureau County Clerk and Recorder Matt Eggers, who’d projected 70% to 75% turnout, pointed out stray votes still are being counted.

* Daily Southtown | South suburban casino opens to huge crowds, patrons ‘blown away’ by first look: As part of its license application, Wind Creek has promised to establish the Southland Public Benefit Fund. Initially, Wind Creek plans to distribute $150,000 annually during the first five years of operation, with the money providing scholarships to disadvantaged students in the south suburbs and helping bolster access to health care. Wind Creek said it intends to create a fund of $20 million after five years to boost yearly disbursements to $1 million.

* Daily Herald | ‘Never, never give up’: Former POW Jessica Lynch honored at Aurora Veterans Day ceremony: Vietnam War Army veteran Bob Royce of Schaumburg said it’s very important for every village to have a Veterans Day ceremony. “There are so many veterans that have been forgotten about,” he said. “The young generation doesn’t know a lot about what has happened in the past for our country, what they (the veterans) have given and done, the ones that haven’t come home.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County GOP looks for improvement in next election cycle: A prominent McLean County Republican thinks Democrats took control of the county board because, right now, they’re better at the process of politics than the Central Illinois GOP. Some observers have said changing demographics have helped make Bloomington-Normal a blue dot in the red sea of Central Illinois. Former McLean County Party chair Chuck Erickson said population shifts may matter a little, but there’s a bigger reason several Republican candidates lost to Democrats.

* Sun-Times | 7 downstate counties vote to consider seceding from Illinois to form new state: The likelihood of any county seceding from Illinois is extremely low. Any formal request to secede would require approval from the Illinois General Assembly and the U.S. Congress. The idea to form a new state apart from Chicago has been a recurring proposal made by downstate Republicans in the state Legislature for many years.

* KWQC | Real Estate groups disagree on Galena housing growth: In their fall 2024 report, Ruhl & Ruhl Realtors claim the number of homes for sale in Galena has increased by 76% since last year. […] But local officials disagree, with Ruhl & Ruhl’s analysis of the market. “Since the past year, it’s still a seller’s market, we’re about two months out in sales of homes,” said the Director of the Galena Chamber of Commerce, Barbara Hocker.

* 25News Now | Pekin City Council to consider local 1% tax on groceries: The staff’s report to the council said the city’s share of the state’s tax boosts local revenue by an estimated $1.5 to $1.7 million a year, which is spent on public services. The local tax would go into effect in January of 2026, which is when the state tax expires.

* News-Gazette | Settlement reached with Danville chemical plant over alleged pollution: The Illinois Attorney General’s Office has filed a consent order with Brainerd Chemical Midwest LLC to resolve a lawsuit alleging the company failed to properly control emissions of hydrogen fluoride from its chemical distribution facility in Danville. As part of the settlement, the company is required to pay a $124,000 civil penalty and $1,000 in avoided construction permit fees. Hydrogen fluoride is a corrosive chemical that is harmful to human health. Low levels of exposure can cause eye, nose and respiratory-tract irritation, with high levels of exposure potentially leading to death.

* Illinois Times | Rail project receives final piece of federal funding: Construction on the only overpass in Springfield’s rail improvements project is expected to commence in early 2025 after federal officials announced $157 million in final grant funds. The federal allocation, announced by U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski, D-Springfield, and by U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Springfield, and Tammy Duckworth, D-Hoffman Estates, also will help pay for construction of the transportation center known as The Hub – with train and bus access – immediately north of the Sangamon County Building.

* WCIA | Purple Heart returned to daughter of WWII veteran in Decatur: Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs said he returned U.S. Marine Corps Private First-Class Delbert Tuttle’s medal to Carolyn Peckham. Tuttle earned the medal and a Silver Star after he was injured during the Battle of Saipan in the Pacific Theater on June 15, 1944.

*** National ***

* AP | Harriet Tubman posthumously named a general in Veterans Day ceremony: Tubman escaped slavery herself in 1849 and settled in Philadelphia. Intent on helping others achieve freedom, she established the Underground Railroad network and led other enslaved Black women and men to freedom. She then channeled those experiences as a scout, spy and nurse for the Union Army during the Civil War, helping guide 150 Black soldiers on a gunboat raid in South Carolina.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Nov 12, 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.

  Comment      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Weekend update: Election reports and gun decision

Saturday, Nov 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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