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Let’s build on this wave of kindness

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Wow! What an incredible day so far. We started off with just over $26,000 in donations, and as of 4 PM, we’ve hit just over $31,000 for Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids—that’s amazing progress!

A heartfelt thank you to all our donors. A special shoutout to one incredibly generous donor who gave $3,000—thank you so much for your kindness!

Your support is making a huge difference. Thanks to your generosity, we’ve raised enough to provide 1,272 children in foster care with a Christmas gift. But here’s the thing—LSSI serves nearly twice that many kids.

We need your help to ensure every child in foster care feels the joy and normalcy they deserve this holiday season.

Let’s make this happen!

Click here to contribute today. Together, we can make a difference. Thank you!!

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Don’t forget about LSSI’s annual Christmas toy drive! We’ve raised $28,535 so far, enough to buy 1,141 gifts for the children served by LSSI. That’s amazing—but with 2,530 kids counting on us, we’re not done yet. Click here to donate.

* Scott Holland

On Monday, the Illinois Flag Commission met to select 10 finalists from almost 5,000 submissions for consideration as our new state flag. Tuesday, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias released images of those finalists, posted along with all the other details at https://apps.ilsos.gov/stateflag/.

Bookmark that website, because it’s where online voting will take place, a key component for the commission’s recommendations to lawmakers, which are due by April 1. In addition to the new designs, we’ll be able to choose to keep the current design or adopt the 1918 centennial or 1968 sesquicentennial flags.

In October, I suggested the flag contest provides an excellent opportunity to give Illinoisans experience with ranked choice voting: “The idea is consensus. It’s impossible for everyone to have their favorite win, but ranked choice allows a broadly acceptable compromise at the expense of more extreme and polarizing options.”

While that concept remains true in practice, it struggles in theory because – at least behind this keyboard – there isn’t a “favorite” among the entire group.

Despite a long-held agreement the current flag is lacking because it’s simply the state seal on a white sheet, and with no offense intended toward the artists, the finalists don’t inspire much of anything beyond a desire to see the few thousand other options out of irascible curiosity.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Pritzker calls for crackdown on delta-8, but hemp entrepreneurs decry ban: ‘We’re not the bad guys’: The bill sponsored by state Sen. Kimberly Lightford, D-Hillside, would limit sales of most hemp-derived products to licensed cannabis dispensaries. The goal is keeping psychoactive products packaged like candy away from kids. But merchants of other hemp products worry it would criminalize a massive Illinois industry.

* The Journalist’s Resource | Pharmacy benefit managers: What journalists need to know about the prescription drug middleman industry: What’s drawing widespread criticism and concern about PBMs are the strategies they employ to maximize the profit they can make as middlemen, as well as their dominance in the marketplace. Consumers can benefit from lower prices of medicines. But PBMs themselves can benefit more than consumers do in cases where drugmakers start their negotiations with a high initial offer, or list price. PBMs then, eventually, whittle down the actual payment, often by getting pharmaceutical companies to give back some of the money through payments known as rebates. It’s unclear how much of the rebated funds flow back to health plans this way and how much is kept by the PBMs.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Affordable housing advocates demand action on vacant CHA properties during Las Posadas rally in Logan Square: The demonstration was part of a reenactment of Las Posadas, a 400-year-old Christian tradition of a dayslong prayer that recreates the story of Mary and Joseph’s search for shelter before Jesus was born. The annual protests at Lathrop Homes started in 2013 but have extended over the years to other CHA properties like the one held Saturday in Logan Square.

* Block Club | Citing Trump, CTU Cranks Up Pressure On School District To Settle Contract Before 2025: During nearly two-and-a-half hours of public comment during Thursday’s Board of Education meeting that sometimes featured boos and chants, several union members and CTU President Stacy Davis Gates called for a swift deal. The union also held a rally before the meeting to argue that although the district approved a resolution reaffirming its welcoming status to immigrants, Donald Trump’s mass deportation plans made it crucial to settle the contract and avoid disruptions to students and families.

* Sun-Times | Commanders’ win over Saints eliminates Bears from NFL playoff picture: They are 4-9 and have four games remaining. The best they can finish is 8-9, and in that case they would still be unable to catch any of the current wild-card teams, and the Lions lead the NFC North at 12-1. The Bears’ place in the standings is much more significant as it pertains to the NFL Draft. At 4-9, they went into Sunday holding the No. 9 pick and still had a shot at the No. 1 spot. There were two 2-11 teams (the Raiders and Giants) and six that were 3-10.

* Block Club | In New Holiday Rom-com ‘Christmas In Chicago,’ Lincoln Square Is The Star: When she decides to return home for the weekend, much is made of her elaborate efforts to get on the CTA. But she eventually rides the train to the Western Avenue Brown Line stop, where she has an encounter with a handsome stranger who turns out to be local alderman Austin Ward (Michael Copon), before she heads to her family’s business: Timeless Toys, 4749 N. Lincoln Ave.

* Tribune | Lake Michigan experiences warmest November in 30 years as climate change heats up the Great Lakes: Lake Michigan surface temperatures peaked at over 6 degrees above normal last month, the warmest they have been in November since 1995 when recordkeeping began at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In the first two weeks of December, daily lake temperatures hovered 2 to 4 degrees above the historical average.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan-area officials hail Supreme Court coal-ash ruling: ‘The cleanup that our public deserves’: Dulce Ortiz, a co-founder of Clean Power Lake County and a Waukegan Township trustee, said Friday she is happy with the Supreme Court decision and hopes it will lead to the removal of legacy coal ash from the NRG property. “I’m wonderfully surprised by the decision,” Ortiz said. “The corporation has used loophole after loophole, and it has still not cleaned up its mess. I’m pleased the Supreme Court allowed the rule to stay in place. It was good news.”

* Daily Herald | Why suburbs might ‘see’ a difference in Lake Michigan water from Chicago: A change in the city’s water treatment process that began last week should ultimately result in a long-term benefit to consumers, but could cause a temporary “discoloration” of water, authorities say. Chicago water department officials said there is a slim chance of seeing the discoloration, which most likely will appear as cloudiness. They also emphasize there will be no change in water quality. It remains safe to drink, bathe in and cook with.

* NBC Chicago | New documentary explores controversy surrounding Dolton ‘Super Mayor’ Tiffany Henyard: “Super Mayor: The Cost of Chaos in Dolton,” an hour-long documentary from NBC Chicago, dives into Henyard’s rise to power and the controversy that has since unraveled around her. For over a year, NBC Chicago reporter Regina Waldroup has been following the events that have unfolded in Dolton and Thornton Township. She has embedded herself in the community by attending board meetings, speaking with residents and seeking answers to their most pressing questions.

* WGN | Tiffany Henyard’s power struggle takes a twist: South suburban politician Tiffany Henyard’s struggle to stay in power took a strange turn in recent days when her attorney filed – and then quickly dropped – a lawsuit claiming she was illegally blocked from participating in democratic caucus slating meeting. “I am shocked by the politics of it all,” Henyard attorney Max Solomon told WGN Investigates Monday morning.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County officials vow not to help any mass deportation efforts: ‘We want everyone in our community to trust in that’: As undocumented Lake County residents and their families begin to worry about deportations promised by President-elect Donald Trump, some local officials are pledging not to be part of the effort. Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart said the Illinois Trust Act prevents law enforcement agencies within the state from assisting with the application of federal law, including immigration regulations.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Family of Sonya Massey relieved as court keeps ex-deputy jailed: Nationally renowned civil rights and personal injury attorney Ben Crump and co-counsel Antonio Romanucci issued the following statement after the Illinois Supreme Court denied former deputy Sean Grayson’s pretrial release, ensuring that he remains jailed. This comes after the Illinois Appellate Court ruled that Grayson be released with conditions in November, saying that the State did not have enough evidence to prove that Grayson was a danger to the community if he were to be released.

* 25News Now | Hundreds of non-tenure track teachers approve 3-year contract with Illinois State University: A release from the ISU Education Association said members ratified the contract on Tuesday, Dec. 10. Terms of the deal have not been released, but the union said the agreement covers compensation, assignment of duties, and other issues related to working conditions. Salary and sick leave benefits were key issues, according to the union, which represents 500 full-and-part-time non-tenure track instructors.

* SJ-R | Here’s why two UIS Performing Arts Center venues will temporarily close in 2025: The Sangamon Auditorium and the UIS Studio Theatre, housed within the University of Illinois Springfield’s Public Affairs Center, will be closing in June of 2025 for work to modernize the building’s plumbing system. The work is estimated to take a year and three months, and the Performing Arts Center plans to reopen in September 2026.

* WCIA | Danville accepting submissions to beautify City: Danville’s new public art initiative is now accepting submissions from designers. The “Angel Alley” project was created to “increase foot traffic, elevate the cultural landscape, and enhance the aesthetic appeal of the area,” according to the City. Both artists and graphic designers are invited to submit their ideas.

* The Southern | Poshard Foundation brings holiday joy to over 700 kids: The Poshard Foundation’s annual Christmas toy giveaway brought together volunteers and caseworkers who worked hard to provide gifts for over 700 children across Southern Illinois this holiday season. The event, held Tuesday and again on Wednesday at John A. Logan College, marks the foundation’s 25th anniversary, aimed to support abused, abandoned and neglected children who might otherwise go without.

*** National ***

* NPR | How are states spending their opioid settlement cash? Look yours up in this database: States allotted, on average, about 18% of their funds for addiction and mental health treatment; 14% for recovery services such as housing, transportation, and legal aid; 11% for harm reduction efforts such as overdose reversal medications; and 9% for prevention programs that aim to stop people from developing substance use disorders. States committed, on average, about 2% for syringe service programs, through which people can get sterile needles. (A variety of entities received this money, from law enforcement to nonprofit organizations to government agencies.)

* NYT | Automakers Thrived in the Pandemic. Many Are Now Struggling: A few years ago, automakers were celebrating record profits as the pandemic created shortages of new cars, allowing them to raise prices. Now the hangover is setting in. Nissan, the Japanese automaker, is laying off 9,000 employees. Volkswagen is considering closing factories in Germany for the first time. The chief executive of the U.S. and European automaker Stellantis, which owns Jeep, Peugeot, Fiat and other brands, quit after sales tumbled. Even luxury brands like BMW and Mercedes-Benz are struggling.

* BND | IL congressman eyes modernizing Veterans Affairs department as House committee chairman: Illinois Congressman Mike Bost — who was recently elected for a second two-year term as chair of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs — said he wants to focus on modernizing the department and improving veterans’ health. Bost, a Marine veteran who comes from a long line of military members, said he’d like to cut back on the hoops veterans need to jump through to access their benefits. “We’ve got to modernize the VA to make sure that the VA isn’t created just for the VA,” said Bost, R-Murphysboro. “It’s created for the veterans.”

* Newsweek | More Americans Are Taking the Train Than Ever: Amtrak set its all-time ridership record for a fiscal year in December, surpassing 32.8 million passengers, an increase of 15 percent from 2023. Amtrak’s ticket revenue reached $2.5 billion, a 9 percent increase year-over-year, and also the highest in its history. Board Chair Tony Coscia credited the ridership growth to several factors, saying in a statement that it “reflects not only the need for train travel in America but also the impact of strategic investments that support our long-term vision.

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Roundup: Ex-aide testifies Madigan ally’s AT&T contract was ‘kind of a joke’

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

A former top aide to ex-Speaker Michael Madigan on Monday continued his testimony as a government witness against his old boss – but for much of his cross-examination sounded a lot like a defense witness, bolstering their portrayal of Madigan’s operation as hardworking, constituent-focused and straightforward.

Thomas Cullen, who worked for the Speaker’s office in the 1990s and maintained close ties with Madigan staffers after becoming a lobbyist, began his cross-examination from Madigan’s attorneys by confirming that Madigan’s office followed rigorous rules separating political work from government work. And he testified that he did political work out of a love of the game – not because of political pressure from the Speaker. […]

Cullen testified Monday that he never saw any work from Acevedo, and that a report Acevedo was assigned to write became an inside joke between him and the AT&T brass.

Why?

“Because it was not viewed as some report that was worth anything really,” Cullen said. “It was just kind of a joke”

* Center Square

Acevedo could take the stand later Monday to testify under an immunity agreement.

Cullen said the $22,500 that AT&T paid to Acevedo in 2017 and 2018 was “a lot more” than what such lobbying work would have cost. He said Acevedo’s assignment to write a report about the state’s Latino caucus was to justify payments to him in case someone questioned the financial arrangement.

Cullen also testified that he was unaware of any work Acevedo produced for AT&T and that Acevedo didn’t ask for assignments.

Prosecutors allege that ComEd and AT&T Illinois gave out no-work or little-work jobs and contract work to those loyal to Madigan to get legislation passed that would benefit the companies in Springfield. A jury convicted four former ComEd executives and lobbyists last year in a related trial, and ComEd itself agreed to pay $200 million in fines as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with prosecutors.

* Madigan’s attorney Todd Pugh on cross


* More…

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Another piece of the economic puzzle: Professional licensing reform

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. The full task force report is here. We’ve been talking lately about Illinois’ almost non-existent employment growth since October of 2019. It’s a tenth of the national growth rate. Here are Noah Bazis and Daryl James writing in Crain’s

As a member of the Comprehensive Licensing Information to Minimize Barriers (CLIMB) task force, a bipartisan group created by the Illinois General Assembly, Carter collaborated with state lawmakers, regulators, academics, and social sector leaders for two years.

Illinois licenses more than 100 professions, including higher-paying jobs in medicine. But the task force focused on low-to-middle-income occupations, where service providers feel the regulatory burdens more severely.

“Current licensing requirements, ostensibly designed to protect public health and safety, instead can unintentionally impose unnecessary and onerous barriers to entry into the workforce, disproportionately affecting poor and disadvantaged communities,” the task force concludes.

* The bottom line is that Illinois licenses too many occupations

Less intrusive policy answers are often available, which sunrise committees could explore. Licensing, the most burdensome and expensive regulatory tool available, should be a last resort. Some people can afford the expense. But the admission price can be too high for many others.

* The task force is proposing an inverted pyramid with licensing as a last resort

* A few of their ideas

Moratorium on New Licenses:

    • Pause the creation of any new occupational licenses in Illinois for 12 months.
    • Limit new licenses to those situations where there is a demonstrated public safety or welfare interest that cannot be adequately addressed with alternatives to licensing.

Training and Education:

    • Allow individuals seeking a license to be paid during their training.
    • Offer apprenticeship programs in high schools.
    • Reduce training/education requirements to only what is demonstrably necessary to protect health and safety. Consult with states having the lowest training days to determine if lower requirements are feasible. […]

Streamlining Processes and Reducing Barriers:

    • Lower licensing fees and consider temporary grace periods for new businesses.
    • Include numerous stakeholders and the public in the regulatory process to ensure fairness.
    • Offer regulatory alternatives to licensure, such as registration, certification, apprenticeships or competency based on education, training, and/or experience.

Justice-Involved Licensees:

    • Avoid blanket prohibitions on licensure for individuals with criminal records. Instead employ targeted standards to determine whether there is a relationship between (a) the underlying criminal conduct; and (b) the duties and responsibilities of the licensed occupation; which (c) would threaten public safety.

They also want any changes apply to local governments and preempt home rule.

Those are just some of their ideas. Click here for the rest.

  12 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Dec 16, 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 Janet, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Today’s must-read

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Pearson

Donald Trump’s Nov. 5 loss in Illinois was a foregone conclusion, allowing leading Illinois Democrats to focus on the nearby swing states of Wisconsin and Michigan in an ultimately unsuccessful effort to advance Kamala Harris’ bid for the presidency.

But a closer look at the presidential election results in Illinois shows that a significant number of the state’s Democratic voters also had their focus elsewhere — though not on Trump.

While Trump closed the gap in Illinois on a percentage basis compared with his last two runs for president, it wasn’t because he won over large numbers of Democratic voters. His ostensibly improved showing came about in in large part because Harris received nearly 410,000 fewer votes in Illinois than Joe Biden got in defeating Trump four years earlier, according to election results that were certified earlier this month.

Illinois Republicans, who have repeatedly been touting the November results as a sign of growing momentum for their beleaguered party, have been promoting largely illusory gains. Trump’s vote total increased by a mere 2,188 votes from 2020, with a notable decline for the president-elect in downstate counties that have become the GOP’s geographic base.

Go read the rest. Lots of stuff in there.

* To add a bit to the above story, Trump received 20.56% of the vote in Chicago this year. The last time a statewide Republican received more than 20 percent in Chicago was in 2014, when Bruce Rauner defeated Gov. Pat Quinn. This year’s result received a lot of attention, but Rauner received 20.63%, which was slightly ahead of Trump’s percent. Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka took 25 percent in the city that year.

So, why did Trump not do nearly as well as Rauner statewide? Trump got thumped in the suburbs. Rauner received 45 percent of suburban Cook County’s vote in 2014, while Trump got 35.7 percent this year (a three-point increase from 2020).

Trump lost DuPage County by 13 points, Rauner won the county by 37 points. Four years later, Rauner lost the county to JB Pritzker by two points. Pritzker won it in 2022 by 15 points.

The only way for Republicans to reverse their statewide problem is by winning some suburban counties.

…Adding… I posted this in comments, but it’s something else to keep in mind…

Ronald Reagan got 40 percent of the vote in all of Cook County in 1980, then got 48.4 percent in 1984. We heard lots of realignment talk back then. But by 1992, Bill Clinton took the county with 58 percent.

You’re gonna need more than one race to prove a massive trend.

  22 Comments      


Pritzker on potential pension reform

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGEM

Teachers, police officers, firefighters and other public employees told Illinois state lawmakers Friday the state’s current pension system is not fair.

They testified during a House Personnel and Pensions Committee hearing in Chicago about how to fix the current system, which sees newer employees getting smaller benefits.

“The disparity between Tier 1 and Tier 2 pension benefits is stark and unfair. I work alongside colleagues performing the same duties but with significantly better retirement benefits,” said Eric Hall a firefighter and paramedic in Bloomington. […]

Though there’s no quick fix, lawmakers have filed bills in both the state House and Senate to address Tier 2 problems. If passed, it would bring the final average salary pension calculation in line with tier one, align retirement ages between the tiers, implement an across the board 3% simple interest cost-of-living adjustment for all Tier 2 members and close and adjust the pension salary cap to match the social security wage base. That will address the so called “safe harbor” problem and ensure their pensions equal what they’d make if they received social security benefits.

* HB5909‘s synopsis

Amends the Illinois Pension Code. Makes changes to Tier 2 benefits, including changing the amount of the automatic annual increase to 3% of the originally granted retirement annuity or 3% of the retirement annuity then being paid for the General Assembly and Judges Articles, changing the limit on the amount of salary for annuity purposes to the Social Security wage base, changing the calculation of final average salary to the Tier 1 calculation for persons who are active members on or after January 1, 2025, and changing the retirement age. Establishes an accelerated pension benefit payment option for the General Assembly, Chicago Teachers, and Judges Articles of the Code. Provides that, with regard to persons subject to the Tier 2 provisions, a security employee of the Department of Human Services, a security employee of the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, an investigator for the Department of the Lottery, or a State highway worker is entitled to an annuity calculated under the alternative retirement annuity provisions of the State Employee Article of the Code. Authorizes the conversion of service to eligible creditable service. Provides that the Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act (Article 20 of the Code) is adopted and made a part of the Downstate Police, Downstate Firefighter, Chicago Police, and Chicago Firefighter Articles. Authorizes SLEP status under the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund for a person who is a county correctional officer or probation officer and for a person who participates in IMRF and qualifies as a firefighter under the Public Safety Employee Benefits Act. In the Downstate Firefighter Article, includes a de facto firefighter in the definition of “firefighter”. Defines “de facto firefighter”. Provides that the monthly pension of a firefighter who is receiving a disability pension shall be increased at the rate of 3% of the original monthly pension. Makes changes to the minimum retirement annuity payable to a firefighter with 20 or more years of creditable service, the minimum disability pension, and the minimum surviving spouse’s pension. Makes other changes. Amends the State Mandates Act to require implementation without reimbursement by the State. Effective immediately.

* The governor was asked about the bill Thursday

Reporter: Tomorrow there’s a hearing for HB5909 and that’s focused on Tier 2 fixes, it’s not solely on that but that’s one of the things. Can you comment on that legislation and do you support it? Do you think it’s going to be the fix that’s needed to bring the system into social security compliance?

Governor Pritzker: Let me say this. I think you’ve heard me talk about the fact that we have to meet, what’s referred often to as a Social Security equivalence, in order for it to sort of meet the standards for the state not having a larger liability. We are not exact-no one is exactly sure what that amount is.

The estimate, I’ve seen several estimates, let’s just call it $3 to $6 billion total over a 20 plus year period. So that is something that has to be done. I know there are people who would like to add other things on to a bill like that. And I think some of those things are included in this bill that you’re referring to.

But, you know, I have several things on my mind when I think about this. I think most especially, maintaining our fiscal responsibility in the state of Illinois to, you know, we already have a significant amount of pension liability and payments that we make, but we’ve been managing those properly.

And you heard me say, I think yesterday, here that our pension funded ratio has been improving every year or total over the last six years since I took office. And I’m proud of that, and it’s something that in yours to the benefit of everyone in this room and everyone at home that is a resident of the state of Illinois. So that is something I don’t want to let go.

Reporter: What about this legislation?

Pritzker: Yeah, I think that’s why you have hearings. We want to hear what people have to say about it.

  39 Comments      


Groups eyeing state cash stashes may be disappointed

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The Democratic legislative leaders and the governor agreed to squirrel away $260 million in lump-sum appropriations to various state agencies last spring. But now some groups are figuring out that a big pile of state money is just sitting there and they are trying to stake their claims.

This came to light last month when the Chicago Tribune reported that people advocating to replace the lost federal money for afterschool programs wanted to tap into two separate $25 million lump-sum legislative appropriations to the Illinois State Board of Education for “grants and administrative expenses associated with after school programs.”

Trouble is, the governor committed to the House speaker and Senate president not to spend that money until all three could agree what it would be spent on.

The Tribune claimed it did not receive a response from the state board of education, but a board spokesperson told me, “At the request of the General Assembly, ISBE is awaiting their direction before proceeding.”

The appropriation, the spokesperson said, “was not tied to an existing statutory program that outlines the distribution method.”

“ISBE is working closely with leadership in the General Assembly to determine their intention for adding the new $50 million appropriation for after-school funding included in the FY25 budget,” the spokesperson said. “We understand the urgency surrounding after-school programming and remain committed to ensuring that these resources are allocated in a way that best serves students and families across Illinois.”

Also, the federal money the groups told the Tribune they want actually no longer exists. And the state appropriation doesn’t specify that the $50 million should go to 21st Century Community Learning Center grants, which is what they want it spent on. Apparently, that federal money was supposed to be used for startup grants for the past 10 or so years, but the state has allowed providers to use it as base, ongoing funding.

And there’s a whole lot more out there. According to Gov. JB Pritzker’s spokesperson Alex Gough, “there are lines included in the budget that the agencies need additional guidance from the General Assembly in order to meet the intent of the funding.” Legislative sources confirmed that this is the case.
Lump sums for pet projects?

Aside from ISBE, the agencies which “need additional guidance” from the legislative leaders include the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, which was lump-sum appropriated $75 million “for grants and contracts associated with youth employment opportunities.”

The Illinois Department of Public Health was appropriated $30 million “for grants and administrative expenses associated with public health programs, including but not limited to awareness, outreach, and other programs to improve health outcomes.”

The Illinois Community College Board was also appropriated $30 million “for grants and administrative expenses associated with workforce development programs.”

So far, I’m told none of those agencies and boards have set up any mechanism to distribute the money. Only the Illinois Department of Human Services has sent out a Notice of Funding Availability for its $75 million appropriation “for grants and administrative expenses associated with youth employment programs.” But no decisions have yet been made.

What’s going on here? Well, legislative leaders had a ton of pressure from their members for more spending, but there simply wasn’t enough money to pay for it all. So, they created these lump sums in order to cram more pressure into less money.

The leaders could’ve specified exactly how the money was to be spent, but then the leaders would’ve committed to spending way more than the available revenues allowed.

Instead, by doing it this way, the leaders could tell individual members that their pet projects were funded, even though they technically aren’t until the leaders decide what, if anything, to do with the lump sum cash.

The governor and ISBE have the power to spend the money now. But these vague lump sums were part of the final budget deal, which is deemed almost a sacred covenant. Once a governor or a legislative leader breaks a budget deal, a lot of trust is lost and future deals become that much harder to make.

Much the same thing happened last year, when legislators demanded a ton of spending even though there wasn’t enough money to pay for it.

The difference this year is that the state is looking at a large budget deficit next fiscal year, so things will need to change. At the very least, whatever is funded this year might not be continued next year. At most, some money might not be spent at all to help patch the upcoming hole.

  5 Comments      


Break up these transit fiefdoms, please

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* But if you listen to Metra, no reforms are needed. Marni Pyke at the Daily Herald

Facing troubling allegations including misconduct, racism, promiscuity and cronyism at the Metra Police Department, leaders authorized an investigation that ended up costing about $1.57 million.

But the agency has stayed silent about what a small army of attorneys uncovered after spending months scrutinizing the department, which underwent major reforms a decade ago. […]

The alleged breaches include: discrimination against minorities; harassment of female officers; racist, sexist and homophobic slurs at work; officers dating their bosses and receiving perks; and a “silo” structure that fed miscommunication. About 30 examples were cited, including the following: […]

    • “Officers only conducting arrests and traffic stops toward Hispanics because they ‘might not be legal.’”
    • A sergeant harassing new female officers, and calling one frequently at night while she was off-duty.
    • A white officer with multiple squad crashes was never reprimanded while a Black officer whose car was scratched was “written up.”

[…]. Between February and September, 2023, about 25 people — two partners, multiple attorneys, paralegals and nine outsourced lawyers — spent more than 2,500 hours on the probe, records show. In June, nearly 600 hours were expended by 20 individuals with the monthly bill totaling $264,468.

  19 Comments      


Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There were some slim pickings in Friday’s awards contest. Senate topics aren’t usually very popular here, but we’ll make do. The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Democratic Illinois State Senator goes to Sen. Patrick Joyce

Senator Patrick Joyce is a likable, hardworking, moderate member of the Senate. His door is always open, and he works well to reach compromises on complex issues that ultimately help his constituents. He is well-liked by staff which tells you something, and colleagues on both sides of the aisle. He also has an approachable demeanor and a smile even on the busiest session days.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Republican Illinois State Senator goes to Senate Republican Leader John Curran

He is an asset to the republican caucus. He is able to command respect from the many factions within this caucus without angering his members. I’m actually not sure why we wants to be a leader as they have very little say.

* Today’s categories

    Best Contract Lobbyist

    Best In-House Lobbyist

As always, do your best to nominate in both categories and make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count.

* Out of the blue, I called someone on Friday who had just donated a significant amount of money to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. I’ve known the guy for years and told him I was curious, without being in the least judgmental, why he waited almost two weeks to contribute.

He said he’s a natural procrastinator and would think about donating, and then would get distracted by other things. I asked whether our numerous daily reminders were helpful and he said they definitely were. A reminder could catch him at a moment when he had the time and focus to click the link and contribute.

So, hopefully, now is the time when a reminder to help Lutheran Social Services by Christmas presents for foster kids prompts you to donate. Please, click here. Thanks.

  54 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Spread holiday joy with LSSI!

We’ve raised over $25,000 so far—thank you! But there’s more to do! Every donation helps bring hope to families this season.

Click here to give today!

* This holiday classic always puts me in the spirit—hope it does the same for you



  1 Comment      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Thanks to your generosity, we’ve already raised over $26,000—a huge step toward making this holiday season brighter for those in need.

But we’re not done yet! There’s still so much joy to share, and your support can make a difference. Every gift helps spread love, hope, and care to families served by LSSI.

Donate now. Let’s make this season unforgettable for everyone. Thank you for being part of this mission!

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | Metra stays mum on pricey probe of police misconduct allegations: Facing troubling allegations including misconduct, racism, promiscuity and cronyism at the Metra Police Department, leaders authorized an investigation that ended up costing about $1.57 million. But the agency has stayed silent about what a small army of attorneys uncovered after spending months scrutinizing the department, which underwent major reforms a decade ago.

* Tribune | In Downers Grove, whether to elect library board exposes old political rifts: Two years after the Downers Grove library was forced to cancel a planned drag queen bingo over right-wing threats, leaders of the western suburb are considering a controversial proposal to replace the appointed members of the library board with an elected one. “This will tear our community apart for no reason,” warned resident Debbie Anderson Phillips at a recent emotionally charged library board meeting. “It will be an ugly, ugly, ugly fight.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol City Now | Helping women in prison: “When you incarcerate a woman, you incarcerate the whole family.” Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton says that’s what an inmate told her during a recent series of women’s prison tours. Stratton, along with Illinois First Lady MK Pritzker, want to improve conditions for women in prison, expand opportunities for them when they are released, and even try to keep them from becoming entangled in the system in the first place.

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker calls for lawmakers to crack down on intoxicating hemp sales: The governor came out Friday in support of legislation that would set a minimum age of 21 to buy such products. It would require hemp companies to obtain licenses and test and label their products, similar to the requirements for legal marijuana. And it would ban copycat packaging that looks like common candy or snack brands.

*** Statewide ***

* WBBM | Illinois state insect heading towards threatened species status: Curator of entomology at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum Allen Lawrance says this was a bad year for monarch butterflies but points out they see big population swings from year to year. “It was another bad year for monarchs. So we’ve had a couple bad years in a row,” Notebaert said.

* Tribune | Intentionally weak government oversight gives Illinois public officials cover for corruption: Carol Pope lasted only about two years as the Illinois General Assembly’s inspector general before quitting in frustration. When Pope, whose job was to investigate allegations of wrongdoing by legislators and their staffers, asked for more autonomy amid a burgeoning corruption scandal in the legislature, lawmakers instead passed a law limiting her powers. The legislative inspector general “has no real power to effect change or shine a light on ethics violations,” Pope, a former state prosecutor and judge, wrote in a scathing resignation letter in 2021. “The position is essentially a paper tiger.”

*** Chicago ***

* CBS Chicago | Mayor Brandon Johnson abandoning $68.5 million property tax hike in latest bid for budget deal: The move comes as the mayor and aldermen have been spending the weekend working to negotiate a possible deal to end the budget impasse in time for a vote on Monday afternoon. The mayor’s team was holding briefings with alders on Sunday to discuss his latest plan. Sources said one new element of the effort to pass a budget deal on Monday includes the city cracking down on major sports teams and other venues in Chicago to reimburse the city for police overtime costs for special events. That would bring in an estimated $10 million for the city.

* Tribune | Plans to overhaul Chicago Union Station could take a step forward in 2025, but more money is needed: Long-running plans to revamp Chicago’s Union Station are poised to take a step forward in 2025, as Amtrak prepares to begin modernizing and boosting capacity at the commuter and intercity rail hub. But the construction marks only one step of Amtrak’s plans to overhaul parts of the station. The railroad, which owns Union Station, still needs to line up more funding for the rest of the work, a prospect that could face questions with a new presidential administration set to take office.

* AP | As Chicago Public School cut back on bus service, parents are turning to rideshare apps: Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s fourth-largest district, has significantly curbed bus service in recent years. It still offers rides for disabled and homeless students, in line with a federal mandate, but most families are on their own. Only 17,000 of the district’s 325,000 students are eligible for school bus rides.

* Block Club | The Good Wolf, From Little Bad Wolf Team, Offers ‘Refined’ Dining In Andersonville: The Good Wolf, 1547 W. Bryn Mawr Ave., brings “a more refined atmosphere, featuring high-end cocktails [and] an elevated shared plate menu” to the bustling Clark Street corridor, according to a statement from the restaurant. The menu includes small plates like cheese curds ($12), oysters ($4 each), carbonara ($17), Shrimp De Jonghe ($20) and Beef Wellington ($40).

* ABC Chicago | Spirit of Progress statue removed from fmr. Montogomery Ward building for repairs: The Spirit of Progress has been atop the former Montgomery Ward Administration Building since 1929 near the North Branch of the Chicago River. The building is now a condominium and the homeowner’s association is paying for the work to preserve the statue. They hope to have the Spirit of Progress, also known as Diana, to reinstalled next spring or summer.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | East Coast investor spends $104M on two suburban shopping centers: Connecticut-based Hutensky Capital Partners paid $63.3 million for Bloomingdale Plaza, a 486,000-square-foot property in the DuPage County suburb, and $40.5 million for Lake View Plaza, a 359,000-square-foot retail center in Orland Park, according to property records and an announcement from real estate brokerage CBRE.

* WBEZ | Here are more than a dozen ways Cook County’s property tax system could be more fair: A common theme theme in the study is that communication between county Assessor Fritz Kaegi and the county Board of Review needs to improve. These two key county agencies help determine the fate of how much commercial property owners pay in taxes and how that burden shifts to struggling homeowners. Researchers found there’s a big gap in how much data these two agencies share to figure out how much a property is worth, leading to wild fluctuations in how much everyone in Cook County pays in taxes.

* Daily Herald | Donations pour in to ‘save lives,’ fund winter shelter for DuPage County’s homeless: DuPagePads has a street outreach team to check on people experiencing homelessness and help get them into a safe place to stay. Usually, there are around 20 to 25 people in that program. But in October, with cold weather approaching, the number “went way up,” reaching 103 at one point, DuPagePads President and CEO April Redzic said.

* Daily Herald | ‘A resilient nation’: Leaders stress importance of community at MLK Dinner: Organized by the Arlington Heights-based Illinois Commission on Diversity & Human Relations, the event in Palatine featured Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch as keynote speaker. “To me, a community is really about creating a sense of belonging,” he said. “That we’re a part of something larger than ourselves. The need for community is deeply rooted in our biology.”

* Sun-Times | Cook County official tried to ‘escape’ after alleged DUI crash in Andersonville, 911 caller said: The 911 caller and his partner told the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ that Samantha Steele, a Democratic member of the Cook County Board of Review, tried to flee the scene of the Nov. 11 crash before police arrived — but her car was too damaged to drive.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Senator Duckworth meets with transportation leaders in southern Illinois, secures funding for SI Airport: Duckworth met with Southern Illinois Airport Director Gary Shafer and secured $500,000 in federal funding recently for the Glenn Poshard Transportation Education Center. Duckworth toured the facility with SIU Chancellor Dr. Austin Lane and former U.S. Representative Glenn Poshard.

* Shawlocal | Oglesby voters to decide on change in city government on April ballot: A proposed change to Oglesby’s city government was given the go-ahead Thursday to be on the April ballot after a referendum petition was determined to have met requirements. During a hearing at the La Salle County Courthouse in Ottawa, Circuit Judge Jason A. Helland approved a petition that many Oglesby residents signed to seek a structural change in city government, opening the opportunity for the Oglesby City Council to hire a city manager to oversee its departments.

*** National ***

* NYT | Exxon Plans to Sell Electricity to Data Centers: The country’s largest oil company is designing a natural gas power plant outfitted with carbon capture technology to meet the voracious power demand of technology companies.

* EEF | New Email Scam Includes Pictures of Your House. Don’t Fall For It: Contrary to the claims in your email, you probably haven’t been hacked (or at least, that’s not what prompted that email). This is merely a new variation on an old scam —actually, a whole category of scams called “sextortion.” This is a type of online phishing that is targeting people around the world and preying on digital-age fears. It generally uses publicly available information or information from data breaches, not information obtained from hacking the recipients of the emails specifically, and therefore it is very unlikely the sender has any “incriminating” photos or has actually hacked your accounts or devices.

* The Atlantic | The Ozempic Flip-Flop: West Virginia gave obesity drugs to teachers and state employees—then took them away: In March, the state’s Public Employee Insurance Agency (PEIA) decided it could no longer bear the crushing costs of Wegovy and Zepbound. (These obesity drugs are sometimes better known by the brand names Ozempic and Mounjaro, respectively, which is how they are sold for diabetes.) In the months after, PEIA patients began running out of medication. They rationed their remaining supplies, stretching the weekly injections to 10 days, two weeks, even three weeks. They considered copycat compounded versions. One woman began sharing her diabetic mother’s Ozempic.

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Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care.

You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Dec 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $25,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.

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