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Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Thanks again to everyone who has donated to our annual fundraiser to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. I cannot imagine what it must be like to be a child in such turmoil, especially at this time of the year. Please, click here to contribute. Thanks!

Also, you can continue voting through the weekend on today’s Golden Horseshoe category. We will see your comments even if no one else can.

* We’ll be back Monday

Qué sabroso pa’ bailarlo, dímelo, a cantar

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Pritzker backs hemp regulation bill (Updated x3)

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a press release

Today Governor JB Pritzker, joined by medical experts and legislators, announced his support for proposed legislation intended to regulate the “intoxicating hemp” industry, a term used to describe hemp-derived THC and CBD products currently sold outside of a licensed dispensary setting (such as Delta-8 products). The legislation, which follows reports of minors ingesting misleading or poorly labelled products, sets limits on intoxicating hemp products like those imposed on legal cannabis through the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act (CRTA). These regulations would ban misleading marketing and packaging that rips off consumer brands to appeal to children while moving intoxicating hemp products into the state’s existing marketplace to follow safe testing and dosage requirements.

“This regulatory gray area has created a loophole that put Illinois consumers of all ages, but particularly children, in danger while an underground market flourished—the exact opposite of what Illinois has done by regulating our cannabis industry,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We’re closing that loophole and protecting Illinoisans of all ages by incorporating these products into the regulated and equitable system of dispensaries already in place in the state.”

“These changes are motivated by a clear and present need to protect our children and communities. We have a responsibility to close these gaps that let unsafe, unregulated products reach the shelves,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “This legislation ensures clear rules and fair oversight, protecting public health while creating a safer marketplace for everyone.”

The legislation:

    • Regulates intoxicating hemp products similar to how legal cannabis is regulated, this includes:

      o Prohibiting packaging designed to imitate candy/popular food products
      o Prohibiting packaging/marketing designed to appeal to children
      o Requiring safe packaging for intoxicating hemp products
      o Imposing taxation and testing requirements consistent with CRTA

    • Dictates that these intoxicating hemp products will only be sold at licensed dispensaries (as opposed to gas stations, smoke shops, or stand-alone delta 8 shops)
    • Makes 21 years old the legal age for purchasing intoxicating hemp products
    • Creates a hemp consumer product processor license to allow current hemp processors to sell into adult use cannabis dispensaries

In recent years, there have been increasing reports of minors ingesting intoxicating hemp products, including Delta-8 variants, often marketed using the recognizable brand colors and designs for popular snack foods. With no testing or dosage requirement for these products, many contain amounts of THC that far exceed what is permissible for adult use cannabis products and come from out of state with no oversight or testing for pesticides or biological contaminants.

Retail sale of non-intoxicating CBD products will continue to be allowed outside of a dispensary setting with certain product registration and quality standard requirements.

I’ll post industry/stakeholder react if I receive any.

…Adding… The Cannabis Business Association of Illinois…

“A federal loophole has allowed for the proliferation of intoxicating hemp products such as Delta 8, which use potentially harmful chemicals to alter the composition of hemp to get consumers high. This is happening outside the structure of the state’s legal cannabis industry, meaning there are no rules or regulations guiding the production or sale of these products – which the Federal Drug Administration warns have not been evaluated for ‘safe use in any context.’ This not only leaves consumers at risk, it also undermines the state’s carefully regulated cannabis market, particularly social equity cannabis license holders who face extensive rules and regulations to operate while those selling intoxicating hemp continue to get off easy,” said Tiffany Chappell Ingram, Executive Director of the Cannabis Business Association of Illinois.

“We applaud Gov. JB Pritzker’s call to protect consumers and rein in this gray market. We urge lawmakers to take swift action, as Illinois is already falling behind other states that have adopted meaningful regulations. Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford, House Assistant Majority Leader Kam Buckner and House Assistant Majority Leader Barbara Hernandez have been strong legislative champions, and we look forward to working collaboratively to put in place a measure that will empower consumers, protect public health and help ensure our state’s legal cannabis industry can reach its full potential.”

…Adding… Chris Lindsey at the American Trade Association of Cannabis and Hemp…

Governor Pritzker’s leadership on addressing unregulated synthetic hemp intoxicants represents an important step toward protecting public safety. Synthetic THC products like Delta-8 THC, Delta-10, and others, which are sold without proper testing, labeling, or oversight, pose significant risks to consumers who too often do not know they are consuming. Illinois has invested years in creating a robust regulatory framework for cannabis to provide for consumer protection and public health and safety. Unregulated synthetic hemp intoxicants undermine this goal.

Quote from Michael Bronstein, President of ATACH:
“Governor Pritzker’s call to regulate intoxicating synthetic THC products masquerading as “hemp” is both timely and necessary. These products create potential public health risks to consumers who all too often do not know what they are consuming. ATACH fully supports efforts to ensure cannabis and hemp-based products are tested, labeled, and regulated properly.”

…Adding… The Illinois Hemp Business Association is opposed…

“The Governor supports hemp regulation, and so do we. That is why Illinois hemp businesses – despite being ignored and dismissed – have long championed balanced, sensible regulations that shield families from bad actors who peddle dangerous synthetics disguised as hemp or shamelessly market to children. However, HB 4293 is not regulation — it’s a full-scale ban that wipes out nearly all federally legal hemp-derived products, including CBD lotions, shampoos, and pet care items.

“The legislation would benefit large marijuana corporations at the expense of Illinois residents and the legitimate small businesses that follow federal law, yet does nothing to curb online sales of hemp products to minors from out-of-state companies. We agree with the calls to enhance consumer safety, but we must work together to craft thoughtful, targeted regulations that deliver real public health and economic solutions for our state.”

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Friday! Kick off your weekend by spreading holiday cheer—donate to our fundraiser so LSSI can help provide Christmas gifts for foster children! Click here to donate.

* Daily Southtown

Thornton Township Supervisor Tiffany Henyard filed a lawsuit Thursday seeking to overturn the results of what she believes was an improperly run Democratic caucus that kept her off the ballot. […]

She is suing the Thornton Township Democrats as well as committeeman and state Sen. Napoleon Harris, who received the Democratic nomination for supervisor, for denying voters their full rights to choose their own candidates.

Dixmoor Mayor Fitzgerald Roberts was also named as a plaintiff, though he released a statement Thursday stating his inclusion was a mistake on the part of Henyard’s attorney, Max Solomon. Solomon confirmed Friday morning he was working to remove Roberts from the suit and declined to comment until after he had done so.

The lawsuit alleges the township Democrats and Harris acted improperly by allowing members who met at the Homewood-Flossmoor Park District auditorium for a private event to stay there for the following caucus, while denying entry to others seeking to vote to nominate candidates.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Judge won’t acquit former AT&T Illinois boss in Madigan bribery case after hung jury: A federal judge on Thursday declined to acquit former AT&T Illinois president Paul La Schiazza after his September trial on charges that he bribed ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan ended in a hung jury. U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman was forced to declare a mistrial after jurors failed to reach a verdict in La Schiazza’s case, which ended a few weeks before Madigan’s trial began five floors down in Chicago’s Dirksen Federal Courthouse.

*** Statehouse News ***

* IPM | Illinois teachers urging lawmakers to help them use artificial intelligence safely in the classroom: “With the rapid expansion of AI, we’re not sure which apps are Student Online Personal Protection Act-compliant and which ones aren’t,” Murmann said. “Not all districts have access to screening all of these tools. So teachers are very hesitant to use them, and not using something could inhibit a learning practice.” The Teach Plus fellows are asking the General Assembly and Illinois State Board of Education to provide guidelines to schools “with urgency,” and incorporate teacher voices to continually update its approach. Some states like California and Minnesota have already published policies to guide the use of AI in the classroom.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | As Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson delays budget vote, City Council members complain about what the budget lacked: Ald. Maria Hadden, 49th Ward, a progressive who was going to vote “yes” on the budget Friday, argued opponents of the budget who are dissatisfied with Johnson “just want to be oppositional.” “They’re upset with him,” she said. “I think this is some people in council just kind of flexing — if you want to go that route — on things that they feel like he hasn’t compromised enough on, or he hasn’t talked to them enough, or they feel disrespected, or they feel like he’s not listening.” But she noted that opposition to this budget proposal spans the political spectrum, including from those in Johnson’s own progressive wing. Hadden ultimately blamed the delay on the fact that “the fifth floor can’t get relationships together.”

* Sun-Times | City Hall ouster exposes rift in Johnson’s environmental mission: Mansour’s ouster is the type of behind-the-scenes politics that would’ve been largely overlooked had it not been flagged by community advocates who knew how integral he was to an air-quality assessment that they deemed important. The devices are a step toward understanding how air pollution can significantly fluctuate in low-income communities of color. “Those monitors could be utilized in our community rather than collecting dust,” says Cheryl Johnson, executive director of People for Community Recovery in Riverdale on the Far Southeast Side. “When the city makes the commitment to provide resources, make it happen. In our community, we’ve been waiting over 30 years for air monitors.”

* The Triibe | Chicago activists push for universities to pay for city services to ease budget woes: As Chicago City Council works to pass a 2025 budget that will likely include a property tax increase, organizers are calling for private universities to pay their fair share for public services. “We know these private institutions that are benefiting from services – like law enforcement, like the fire department – aren’t having to pay property taxes,” says Jesse Hoyt, executive director of the community organization ONE Northside, which is pushing for universities here to participate in a tax-paying program named PILOT. “Now, more than ever, we need to see progressive revenue options, and we see the PILOT program as one of those ways of really achieving that.”

* WTTW | CPS Planning ‘All-Hands-on-Deck’ Approach to Protecting Students, Families From Mass Deportations: Martinez said the district enacted a “comprehensive response” to protect its students, families and staff when Trump’s first term began in 2017, and CPS officials are planning to take similar steps before Trump’s inauguration next month. Earlier this week, Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan said that mass deportations would “start right here in Chicago.” “We are not taking these threats lightly and be sure that we will stand strong to protect our school communities from harm,” Martinez said.

* Block Club | ‘A New Day At CHA’? Residents Still Face ‘Ridiculous’ Conditions In Public Housing Buildings, They Say: The CHA and its property managers haven’t properly maintained her building for the last 15 years, causing headaches and safety concerns for her and her neighbors, she said. Flowers’ experience highlights larger, ongoing management failures by the CHA — problems agency officials have said multiple times over the past year they’re working to address.

* Block Club | Chance The Snapper Is Now 7-Foot-1 — And Helping Scientists Study Cancer: Chance is now 7-foot-1. He was just about 4 feet long when I first found him. He has also nearly quadrupled in weight to about 130 pounds since then! It took three of us to pick him up. More importantly, he’s now contributing to vital research that could pave the way for advanced cancer treatments — or perhaps, someday, a cure.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | It’s a wonderful site — Christmas movies find ideal backdrop in the suburbs: The historic Long Grove Bridge doesn’t get much respect from the dozens of vehicles that have bumped it over the years, but directors of Christmas movies love it. Some of the many holiday films shot in the suburbs over the years have used the iconic covered bridge as a backdrop. Dare we say it’s a hallmark of the season.

* Patch | Bald Eagles Stay The Winter In Will County Preserves: That means the regal raptors are likely to be hanging around the Forest Preserve’s Lake Renwick Preserve in Plainfield, McKinley Woods in Channahon, Rock Run Rookery Preserve in Joliet and Whalon Lake in Naperville. However, the preserve is reminding visitors, that proper bird-watching etiquette requires humans to give the birds a wide berth.

* Tribune | Northlight Theatre announces groundbreaking for long-awaited Evanston theater: Northlight Theatre told the Tribune Tuesday that it plans finally to break ground on a new Evanston home in early March. The new theater building, which is projected to cost around $32 million, is expected to be ready in time for the 2026-27 season. Construction is expected to be substantially complete by the summer of 2026. Northlight says it has raised $26.2 million toward that cost and plans a continued public campaign this winter to secure the remaining $6 million. Either way, enough money has been raised for construction to get underway.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sangamon Co. prepares to hand over info to DOJ; makes changes to hiring processes: Sangamon County Sheriff Paula Crouch has been on the job for about three months, and one of her first tasks was compiling a huge trove of information for the U.S. Department of Justice. “Obviously, they have received some information that they believe that the information they’re requesting for us will help answer the questions that have been posed to them,” Crouch said.

* WGLT | McLean County’s smaller communities embrace ‘a different way of policing’: “We get out of the car, we interact with the students and the staff, making sure everybody gets in safe, and [making] sure everybody leaves safe,” Hudson Police Chief Mark Kotte said. Hudson, located just north of Bloomington-Normal, is home to about 1,700 people. It’s one of a few dozen smaller communities in McLean County with their own police force — albeit a small one with two full-time officers and one part-time.

* WCIA | Illini football takes teen moms on shopping spree for third-straight year: For a third straight year, Bret and Jen Bielema picked up the bill giving 50 young families a financial boost of a $200 shopping spree at the Urbana Walmart through the YoungLives program. They’ve had an incredible season on the field, but the opportunity to do this off the field, it just says so much about his (Bret Bielema’s) heart and the way that he reaches out,” YoungLives director Erin Watson said.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | Environmental Internationalism Is in Its Flop Era: Despite all of that, this year in international environmental diplomacy went exceptionally badly. Inflation and cost-of-living crises, coupled with a rightward shift in politics in many countries, meant that negotiating for major environmental spending this year was poised to be difficult. But environmental diplomacy has also reached a hard new crossroads: The science of ecological destruction is settled, the trajectory is bleak, and the need for change is obvious. All that’s left to do is decide who should deal with it.

* Bloomberg | Inside the Graphic and Bizarre Threats Against Scotus, Federal Judges: For years, the US Marshals Service has been raising red flags about the nature of the threats directed at Supreme Court justices, federal judges and its other protectees, but the agency has never disclosed the content and details of the threats, until now.

  5 Comments      


Drilling down

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN TV

On a crisp October day two guys sped away from Illinois State Police and later, officers from two county sheriff’s departments. The men were arrested only after they tried to flee through a corn field where their car caught fire. Inside, police say they found three kilos of drugs laced with fentanyl. Police reports say the men denied knowing the drugs were hidden in the floorboard of the car they claimed to have “borrowed” from someone in California. One said they “fled in fear of being deported,” according to a police report.

Within days a judge released one of the men after an initial check found no criminal record.

“Guarantee you’ll never see him again,” Kankakee County sheriff Mike Downey said. “I can’t call ICE and say ‘This individual is getting released tomorrow, or in three hours.’ I can’t. So he walks out the door.”

The Illinois law that prohibits local police from cooperating with immigration agents and detaining a person because of their immigration status was actually signed by a republican governor, Bruce Rauner, during the first Trump administration. Supporters say it allows people in this country illegally to feel safe reporting when they’ve been a victim of crime and cooperate with police investigating crime. […]

Kankakee County earned $17M from the federal government renting jail space to ICE from 2016-2022 [when a new state law prohibited it]. The sheriff says cooperating with immigration – and deportation – is about much more than money.

“I just don’t believe that Illinois will ever be a safe state until our governor decides to effect policy change and I don’t see him doing that,” Downey said.

* The Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights’ senior policy counsel Fred Tsao issued this response to the story…

To say that people arrested in Kankakee County were released “because state law prevents [the Sheriff] from asking about immigration status” is false, and to say that police in Illinois are “handcuffed” when it comes to people in the country without authorization is simply untrue. The TRUST Act does not include any restrictions on Illinois county sheriffs or state’s attorneys from arresting, charging, and sentencing people for violations of state or local laws. On a daily basis across Illinois, sheriffs release people who have served their time, have their charges dropped, or who are no longer ordered to be held on pretrial detention by a judge — as it should be as a matter of fairness and simple due process.

But the TRUST Act is in place to protect immigrants from being punished a second time for the same violation after serving their sentence or paying their fine, or from being put at further risk of deportation even before their local charges are adjudicated. And from how the Kankakee sheriff is telling this story, it shows exactly why we need laws like the TRUST Act and Illinois Way Forward as we face an overzealous incoming presidential administration hellbent on disrupting life for immigrants in Chicago and Illinois.

As to the specific incident in the WGN segment, I’m left with more questions: what happened to the other person who was held? What charges were filed? Couldn’t the judge (unnamed in the segment) have used their discretion under the SAFE-T Act to hold both of them? To the Kankakee sheriff’s other comments in the segment, why does he feel like he even needs to ask the “countless people” released in his county about their immigration status? Couldn’t he and his officers simply continue doing their work as they have since Illinois Way Forward went into effect in 2021? What makes it different now, other than being emboldened by the new administration?

Truthfully, this sounds like a combination of (1) complaints from a sheriff who lost out on millions in rent from ICE seeking additional reason to profile and punish community members based only on his perceptions and assumptions of their immigration status since he is not allowed to affirmatively ask about it, and (2) a news report that takes what the sheriff was saying at face value when further questions could have poked holes in the story he was trying to tell.

* OK, according to a Shaw Local story from last month, one was held because he had a criminal record. The other was released under the Pre-Trial Fairness Act because the locals thought he didn’t have a criminal record. But it turns out he did have a juvenile record that California did not transmit right away.

Also, FYI, state law does allow local law enforcement to cooperate if ICE produces a judicial warrant.

* From that Shaw Local story

According to a Wednesday news release, the SAFE-T Act required officials to hold a pretrial release hearing within 48 hours of the arrest.

“Before the hearing, Grundy County officials confirmed that both suspects were Honduran nationals, with one having an immigration detainer warrant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security,” according to the release. “At the hearing, the local state’s attorney requested detention for both suspects due to the severity of the charges.”

The court granted one detention request based on the outstanding warrant and criminal history, and the other suspect was released because he had no criminal history available within the 48-hour hearing window.

California authorities informed Grundy County that the released suspect, an 18-year-old, had a juvenile record that would have led to his detention, according to the sheriff’s office.

Also from the story

“Let’s be clear about the facts,” [Ben Ruddell, the Director of Criminal Justice Policy for the ACLU of Illinois] said. “The requirement that an arrested person appear before a judge within 48 hours is a constitutional standard that was in place before the Pretrial Fairness Act went into effect. In fact, the current law allows prosecutors to request additional time, up to 48 hours, to prepare for a detention hearing. No such request was made in this case.”

However

For receiving records, [Kyle Klukas, the First Assistant State’s Attorney] said the issue arises that records departments typically only work Monday to Friday. Since the arrest was made on a Thursday and the trial was on a Friday, the time the county was able to detain Barahona would’ve run out.

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Pritzker says he has no preference in debate about possibly adopting a new state flag

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s Q and A yesterday

* Q: The new potential state flags have been unveiled. Do you have an opinion on the top 10 designs, and do you believe that Illinois would be better served by a new banner?

* Pritzker: I really like our current flag. I also like the designs that were put forward. Don’t want to sound too political about that, but I mean, I think a lot of effort was put in that. I saw a report that showed 10 flags, but they forgot that there’s also the centennial flag. There’s also, you know, the original flag. Those will be considered, I think, in the voting that’ll take place by the public. So, you know, I don’t have a preference about any single one of those. I am glad, though, that we’re at least considering all the options here, and what we end up with will be a choice that the public makes.

* The Sesquicentennial Flag is also in the mix…

  13 Comments      


IMA chief responds to Pritzker comments on lagging employment growth

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Governor Pritzker on Wednesday

Isabel: The latest COFGA report found that Illinois’ job growth rate was about a 10th of the national growth rate since October 2019. Are you at all concerned about this, and how do you plan to increase that rate across the state?

Governor Pritzker: Yeah, I would remind you that when I took office, Illinois was in this similar position, right? Where there’s a low, lower growth economy for the state of Illinois than there has been for the United States more broadly.

That’s something I’ve been very interested in and focused on changing. You know, I was in business before I became governor. I have always believed that Illinois could do so much better.

As you know, we’ve had a series of crises that have hit the state, not the least of which was the COVID-19 crisis. So there are things that have impeded our progress in the state.

Having said that, as you know, over the last two and a half years basically since the end of the COVID crisis, if you can say that it’s fully ended, I think it has, the crisis part of it anyway.

We’ve been very focused in my administration on growing the economy, on attracting jobs and businesses, and that’s working. But again, it’s, you know, takes a long time to change the trajectory you’re moving a, a, you know, an aircraft carrier, when you’re changing the trajectory of a state’s growth rate.

But, we’re making progress. And I look forward to, you know, you’ll hear some announcements, as you have in the past. [I] don’t make these things up, people often have asked me ‘well when are we going to hear the’ you know, and then you hear them. But nobody takes into account that I promised them and I delivered them. And you’ll hear more announcements about that as well.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* I called Mark Denzler yesterday and chatted with him about what the governor had said. Denzler is President and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…

I think what I would first say is that, traditionally, Illinois is usually one of the first states to go into, and I’m not going to say recession, but usually one of the first states to start shedding jobs. And traditionally, we’re one of the last states to come out of it. When you look at economic cycles throughout the years, that is a pattern that has traditionally happened. Now that being said, and I can address manufacturing jobs, I’m not an expert on retail or hospitality or other sectors, but when I look back, and I took some time to look back at data from October 2019, to present, which I think is what the report said. You know, in manufacturing, we’ve lost about 6500 jobs. But when you look at other neighboring states, Ohio has lost nearly double the amount of jobs. Indiana lost manufacturing jobs. California lost about 40,000 manufacturing jobs. So we’re doing better than a lot of our neighboring states. Now, Wisconsin gained, Texas gained, but in generally, in the industrial Midwest, we’ve done better than some of our other states in manufacturing.

What I would say moving forward, what we really need to focus on, and again, talking manufacturing is energy policy is critical. Manufacturers are the largest consumers of energy in the United States. We use about one-third of all the energy that’s produced in the United States, and there are growing concerns about the ability to make sure that we have generation, that we have reliability. That’s on the foremost of the minds of manufacturers.

Secondly, a huge issue that we hear about when I talk to my members is permit time. How long is it going to take a shovel to get in the ground? You know, because right now, every state is competing. They all ask the question, how quickly can I get my project started?

And then the third big issue is workforce. And I would say that our workforce is second to none. We have a fantastic manufacturing workforce. We have great colleges and universities.

And the other thing, I think, generally, what I would say is we started behind most other states. You know, Illinois struggled for years, and I do give the governor and his team a lot of credit and members of the General Assembly for focusing on education and workforce and focusing on incentive packages. We have lacked behind the country, quite frankly, severely. And so we started creating a closing fund, and created REV Act and improve the EDGE credit. And so, you know, we have dug a hole in Illinois that’s going to take some time to get out of.

* On turning the ship around…

I would agree with the governor and the fact it takes a while to turn the ship around. And it wasn’t a Republican issue or a Democrat issue, it was quite frankly, for two decades we really struggled with a focus and to kind of create a policy.

The governor has done a great job of marketing the state. And I will tell you I get calls now from companies that had never considered Illinois. They’re now saying, ‘Hey, tell me about your incentive packages, tell me about your workforce. Tell me about your energy.’ Who previously had no interest in Illinois. So I really do see renewed excitement and interest in Illinois that I didn’t see five years ago.

I would agree with the governor on that we still have improvements to make. Like I said, I think we can do things better in permitting. Because companies calling saying, how quickly can I get a shovel on the ground?

I think the incentive package, and again, credit to the governor and in the General Assembly. Literally, every year in the last five or six years, they’ve updated some incentives as they talk to companies.

And then again, the workforce issue. There’s a couple companies that have left Illinois that called me after, one went to Tennessee and one went to Mississippi, and they said ‘We struggle with workforce.’

I think as we continue investing in those at the same time we’re going to have to address the budget challenge, and we need to be careful that they don’t do it exclusively on the backs of employers by raising taxes significantly. We need to continue trying to do some about the property tax system. I continue to hear about that.

We’re going to have to revisit the energy issue. We’re major consumers and users, and we have to make sure that we have safe, reliable and low cost power. It had been an advantage of Illinois for many, many years. We’re slowly losing that advantage as our costs go up.

But you know the advantages we have when you start thinking about climate change, we have access to water. Twenty percent of the fresh water is in the Great Lakes for the manufacturing sector. That’s a huge advantage.

The announcement a few minutes ago on Quantum. I was part of the NDA, and I was with Psi-Quantum in Palo Alto, I think that has great opportunity to continue to grow our biopharmaceutical sector and life sciences, whether it’s Lake County or it’s in Chicago and other parts. I think we have a huge opportunity to grow that.

And I do think you see in the state’s five-year plan, we actually have a plan. We have a focus. If we can continue down that path, I think that will be very helpful.

  25 Comments      


Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rich is in Florida and is trying to take it a little easy, so he asked me to handle today’s awards the way I see fit. It’s my first time doing this, so here we go.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Democratic Illinois State Representative goes to Rep. Lindsey LaPointe

She has taken on the complex and always frustrating issues involving human services. She is far more than just “interested” she dives deep into policy and makes sure her fellow lawmakers don’t just rubber stamp agency decisions that have a huge impact on Illinois.

Her work on budgeting issues for behavioral health providers has been the difference in many cutting programs or being able to continue to serve vulnerable populations. She has earned the respect of everyone who works in the human services arena, whether state or private sector. She is a true “legislative workhorse” not afraid to do the heavy lifting requiring learning complex issues.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for best Republican State Representative goes to Rep. Jeff Keicher

He is super responsive when I reach out. Additionally, he was a victim of a politically motivated death threat. He did speak on the stress and toll on him and his family, he even considered quitting - but thankfully he continues to serve - seems very deserving.

Rep. Norine Hammond, our 2023 winner, deserves a honorable mention for her work this year.

Some very solid nominations were made yesterday, so thanks for that and congrats to our winners!

* Today’s categories…

    Best Democratic Illinois State Senator

    Best Republican Illinois State Senator

As always, explain your nomination or it won’t count. And please do your best to nominate in both categories.

* This is your daily reminder to click here and help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for their foster kids. So far, we’ve helped LSSI buy presents for 1,036 foster children. That’s just so amazing, but they serve 2,530 kids, so please click here.

  12 Comments      


State laws taking effect Jan. 1

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Senate Democratic Caucus…

With the new year quickly approaching, a number of new state laws will take effect. Nearly 300 laws will officially be on the books beginning Jan. 1 — from one that fights catalytic converter theft to another that makes it easier to cancel online subscriptions.

In the new year, victims of car theft won’t be on the hook for towing and storage fees, families can expect lower out-of-pocket EpiPen costs and more. The Illinois Senate Democratic Caucus outlined the top 10 laws affecting Illinoisans in the upcoming year. These include:

· HB 2443: Insurers must now cover medically prescribed hearing aids and services for individuals of all ages, ensuring access to essential care.

· HB 3639: Life-saving epinephrine injectors are now capped at $60 per twin-pack, making allergy care more affordable.

· HB 4589: Recyclable metals dealers must track vehicle and part information for catalytic converters to prevent illegal sales.

· HB 4911: Gym memberships can now be canceled online or via email if those options were used to join the contract.

· HB 5561: Employees are protected from retaliation for exposing workplace practices they believe violate the law.

· SB 2654: Vehicles that are stolen and later towed will not incur storage fees if recovered within seven days, and owners can retrieve essential items, like medical devices and textbooks.

· SB 2764: Businesses offering free trials longer than 15 days must email consumers three days before the cancellation deadline.

· SB 3201: Law enforcement will now be trained to better recognize and respond to individuals with autism.

· SB 3471: Illinois drivers can now request free replacement plates if their license plates are stolen.

· SB 3479: Businesses offering veteran or military benefit services for a fee must disclose all terms upfront.

A full list of laws that take effect Jan. 1, 2025 can be found here.

* NBC Chicago

According to the Illinois General Assembly’s website, at least 293 new laws will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025, and they cover a variety of topics, including your health insurance, the rights of employees and employers, and even the way you display your driver’s license during traffic stops and other settings. […]

HB 2161 – Employers discriminating or harassing employees based on their family responsibilities is now a civil rights violation. […]

HB 4206 – Tenants will be permitted to pay landlords in cash or paper checks to avoid transaction fees associated with direct deposit or credit or debit cards. […]

HB 5408 – Drivers will be prohibited from stopping or parking vehicles on shoulders of highways within a half-mile radius of the eastern entrance to Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. […]

SB 0275 – The Secretary of State’s Office will be required to offer applicants the option to be issued an 8-year driver’s license within the next two years.

* Fox Chicago

Starting in 2025, the cost of medically necessary epinephrine injectors, which are used to reverse the effects of severe allergic reactions, will be capped at $60 for a twin pack for those with health insurance. […]

In 2025, a veteran with a disability or the veteran’s caregiver won’t have to pay a building permit fee for improvements to the home of the veteran.

A person’s DNA profile collected because they were a victim of a crime will not be allowed to be entered into a DNA database. The new law will apply except in certain medical examiner or coroner investigations. […]

Landlords will be prohibited from charging a potential tenant an application screening fee if the prospective tenant provides a reusable screening report that meets certain criteria.

* WTVO

Starting January 1st, 2025, most employers in Illinois will have to disclose pay and benefits information on job postings, thanks to a new law.

The change is mandated by an amendment to the Equal Pay Act of 2003 that Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law last year.

The law requires that all employers with 15 or more employees include the pay scale and benefits on job postings, both internal and external.

It will apply to positions that will be performed in Illinois, including remote work.

Companies will have 14 days from the start of the year to add salary and benefit information to job postings or face a $500 fine.

  8 Comments      


Energy Storage Brings Cheaper Electricity, Greater Reliability

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois’ economy is growing and as a result, so is electricity demand. This rising demand is projected to outpace supply, which means higher costs and the potential for reliability issues. The solution? Build more clean energy resources while lowering demand peaks. By expanding small- and large-scale energy storage and renewable energy, Illinois can ensure the economy has the electricity it needs to fuel growth. What’s more, renewable energy is low-cost while energy storage optimizes supply and demand, lowering costs for all Illinoisans.

Illinois can’t make a successful transition away from expensive fossil fuel plants without enough energy storage. Support comprehensive renewable energy and energy storage policies; learn more here. https://www.solarpowersillinois.com/legislation-hb-5856

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Open thread

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

We’re almost to $26,000 in our annual drive to buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks!

But we need to keep it going. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois has lots and lots of foster kids in their care network and we’ve raised enough to buy presents for about 40 percent of them. So, please, click here and give whatever you can. Thank you!!!

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* We’re thrilled to share that we’re nearing $26,000 in our annual drive to bring Christmas joy to foster kids!

But there’s still work to do—so far, we’ve only covered presents for about 40 percent of the kids in Lutheran Social Services of Illinois’ care. Let’s keep this momentum going! Every little bit helps. Click here to donate and make a difference. Thank you so much!

* ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson calls off vote on 2025 city budget. Sun-Times

    - After a frantic search for votes that came up short, Mayor Brandon Johnson has called off Friday’s vote on his 2025 budget — a vote he was destined to lose.
    - Johnson steadfastly refused to avoid layoffs of furlough days that would impact the unions that put him in office. Nor would he risk eliminating hundreds of police vacancies.
    - Johnson will now spend the next few days making additional changes in hopes of attracting the 26 votes needed to pass the budget at a meeting next Wednesday.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | The best images of 2024 by Chicago Tribune photographers : In 2024, Tribune photographers captured the emotions — anger and joy, determination and fear — that defined an unforgettable year. Through their lenses, our staff documented a 12-month period marked by social change, political extremism, human resilience, environmental challenges and moments of collective celebration.

* NPR | Dixon State Rep. expresses outrage after President Biden commutes the sentence of former City Comptroller Rita Crundwell:
Dixon Republican State Representative Bradley Fritts issued a statement saying he is outraged by the commutation. He says it’s unclear if Crundwell will still owe restitution to the citizens of Dixon. In 2013, Crundwell was sentenced to nearly 20 years in federal prison for stealing more than $53 million dollars from the city over two decades. She used the funds to finance a lavish lifestyle and a horse breeding business.

*** Statewide ***

* Axios | Illinois flag redesign: Readers pick their favorite: This week, the Illinois Flag Commission announced 10 finalists in the running to be the state’s new flag. We asked you to pick your favorite. 21% of you like No. 6 (above), which features a bust of Abraham Lincoln inside an outline of Illinois.

* WICS | Clanin Creative honored as Illinois flag design finalist, highlights agriculture: Clanin Creative design agency right here in Champaign is one of 10 finalists selected by the Illinois Flag Commission. Their design was chosen out of 5,000 others. Clanin Creative says they were shocked to be named a finalist. And no matter the outcome this is a huge milestone for them.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Growth of Chicago area data centers taking off with no signs of a slowdown: Data centers — sprawling facilities that help power the tech behind everything from online shopping to scheduling dentist appointments — are popping up across the country, and Chicago has been recognized as one of the leaders. Industry experts say Chicago and nearby suburbs will continue to be an industry powerhouse, with 30 data center projects planned over the next five years. Utility infrastructure will also expand as companies look toward the suburbs to fit their land needs. But if large companies like Microsoft, Meta or Oracle secure agreements for new data centers, it could eat up the region’s extra power capabilities.

* Block Club | What Happened To Neighborhoods When Their Schools Closed? New Documentary Explores Aftermath: “Beyond Closure,” by Chicago-based Borderless Studio and On The Real Film, features local journalists and community advocates reflecting on the school closures and looking toward the future as some of the vacant properties are redeveloped.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson appoints a seventh school board member:
Sean Harden will be the seventh board member and will fill a spot left vacant by Rev. Mitchell Johnson, who served as board president for a week before resigning amid social media posts criticized as antisemitic, misogynistic, and conspiracy-laden. City officials did not immediately say whether Harden will serve as president of the board. But he might only be able to continue serving after a new partly elected board takes over in January if he is appointed to lead the board.

* NBC Chicago | Lawmakers push for hearings on state’s hemp industry in January: Local lawmakers are pushing for hearings on Illinois’ hemp industry next month, highlighting a push for further regulation and more emphasis on social equity in the business. Chicago Ald. William Hall said Thursday that he will be seeking a public subject hearing on hemp shortly after the new year.

* Sun-Times | IBM will join Illinois’ sprawling quantum park on South Side, state aims to be ‘the global quantum capital’: IBM’s decision is a huge win for Gov. JB Pritzker, who has for years sought to make Illinois a global leader in quantum computing and innovation. The announcement comes a day after the City Council gave the multibillion-dollar quantum computing campus final zoning approval.

* CBS | Chicago firefighters’ union casts “no confidence” vote against CFD leadership: In a letter posted on the union’s Facebook page, Cleary noted that, even as firefighters were putting out a fire at the County Building and City Hall on Wednesday, the city’s contract negotiators “appeared unprepared to discuss anything relevant to the contract issues that Local 2 leadership provided months to years in advance.”

* Block Club | Meet The Death Doulas Helping Chicagoans Die — And Live — Better: The Chicago Death Doula Collective specializes in “death work,” helping people with end-of-life planning and emotional support through art, therapy, massage and other healing practices.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Tiffany Henyard, once seen as a reformer, now at odds with both her boards. What happened?: But not long after her election as mayor and even before her installation as supervisor of the state’s biggest township, Henyard began clashing with village trustees over spending and transparency. Her building and breaking down of intergovernmental relationships would continue in Dolton and at the township. Now she faces head winds as she seeks reelection as mayor in the February Democratic primary and tries to challenge being kept off the ballot in her run for a full term as township supervisor.

* Daily Herald | School districts approve Arlington Park tax deal with Bears: Three Arlington Heights-area school districts have given stamps of approval to an agreement with the Chicago Bears that resolves a property tax dispute over Arlington Park and other issues. Boards of education for Northwest Suburban High School District 214 and Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 voted on the 12-page memorandum of understanding late Thursday, following the Palatine Township Elementary District 15 school board’s vote Wednesday night.

* Sun-Times | Dispute between a landlord and city of Markham has young family paying the price: A dispute between the city of Markham and a landlord has left the property owner’s tenant and her four young children without water for nearly a month, a newly-filed lawsuit says. The lack of running water for Iesha Taylor made for a dismal Thanksgiving and has threatened to ruin Christmas as well, says Taylor, a single mom who’s been decamping to nearby hotels so her kids ages 4, 7, 13 and 15 can wash up, shower and sleep.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Outgoing DACC president voted off board of trustees ballot: Community member Lynn McLinden filed an objection against Nacco’s candidacy. The board’s decision was based on Nacco not having the needed 50 registered voter signatures on his candidate paperwork. They disqualified 33 of his signatures because of incorrect addresses among other reasons.

* BND | Lawsuit: East St. Louis allows sewage to spill into lake, Mississippi, despite EPA orders: East St. Louis Mayor Charles Powell III and City Manager Robert Betts could not immediately be reached for comment about the lawsuit on Wednesday. Attorneys representing the city also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The complaint alleges that untreated sewage spills from East St. Louis outfalls into the Mississippi River and Whispering Willow Lake during “high-flow conditions,” such as heavy rain.

* WSIL | Three Polar Plunge events scheduled in southern Illinois for Special Olympics: The Polar Plunge started in Lake Bluff in 1999 with 150 plungers. This event raised more than $34,000. Since then, thousands of people plunged in the frigid waters across the state of Illinois, supporting Special Olympics Illinois for more than two dozen years.

  24 Comments      


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

Friday, Dec 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Live coverage

Friday, Dec 13, 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.

  Comment      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Dec 13, 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.

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - New stuff (Updated x2)
* Roundup: Ex-Speaker Madigan back on the stand
* It’s just a bill
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Live coverage
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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