Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jan 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Governor JB Pritzker updated his public schedule…
* Tribune | Evidence in corruption case really just ‘lobbying and politics,’ attorney for Madigan confidant argues: Michael McClain, a longtime confidant of ex-speaker Michael Madigan, was a smart and diligent lobbyist who never agreed to or knew about any bribery scheme, his attorney told jurors Tuesday in closing arguments in Madigan and McClain’s landmark public corruption trial. “What the evidence of this trial did show is lobbying and politics. Lobbying and politics,” McClain attorney Patrick Cotter said in his closing remarks, adding: “Lobbying and politics is not a crime.” * Capitol News Illinois | ‘Suspicion doesn’t cut it’: Madigan attorney urges jury to ‘see the man, not the myth’: Collins finished his closing arguments by accusing the FBI of exploiting that inclination by directing Chicago Ald. Danny Solis to seek Madigan’s help while secretly wearing a wire. “Make no mistake: Danny Solis is a malignant tumor at the heart of this case,” Collins said. “Solis is an actor in a stage production.” * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois House lawmakers file almost 1,800 new bills only 2 weeks into legislative session: The vast majority of the ideas won’t make it to the desk of Gov. JB Pritzker or become law—last General Assembly, House lawmakers filed 5,929 bills and only passed 564—but the list of proposals offers some insights into the issues members of the lower chamber are concerned about as they kick off their new terms in office. * Fox Chicago | Illinois GOP bill would require law enforcement to coordinate with ICE: Sponsored by State Sen. Neil Anderson (R-Andalusia), Senate Bill 1313 supports “targeted operations” to deport undocumented immigrants accused or convicted of felonies and calls on Illinois to take on an “active role” in helping ICE. […] The bill’s sponsor condemned Pritzker’s support of the Illinois Trust Act, which bars local law enforcement from helping ICE unless required by law or a criminal warrant. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools launches long-awaited site to show how schools are doing: The new school accountability dashboards replace the district’s controversial number ratings for schools, which CPS put on hold and then scrapped during the pandemic. Those ratings had drawn the ire of educators and some community members, who said they unfairly stigmatized campuses that serve students with high needs. The old level ratings had also factored into high-stakes decisions about school closures and staff overhauls. * WCIA | CUB challenges Ameren Illinois’ proposed $134 million gas rate hike: The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) said that Ameren has already earned $111 million in gas rate hikes since 2021. And, the new proposal would increase “key delivery charges by more than 20 percent,” according to CUB Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz. CUB said that the proposed hike would increase the customer charge by about 24%, to $25.16 per month, and the per therm (unit of heat energy) distribution charge by about 28% to 56.207 cents per therm. * WBEZ | Chicago’s immigration sweeps have restaurant and food industry employers feeling anxious: Sam Toia, president of the Illinois Restaurant Association, said Monday that its members are “very anxious” about possible arrests of Chicago-area workers by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. But as of Monday morning, there had been no reports of restaurant employees being arrested; nor had Toia heard anything about workers failing to show up for work because of fears of an ICE raid. * Sun-Times | Dr. Phil had no business taking part in ICE immigration raids in Chicago, Durbin says: “Dr. Phil has as much business being on these raids as he does performing surgery,” Durbin said. McGraw is a psychologist. Federal agents allowed McGraw enormous access during the Sunday operations, tagging along with President Donald Trump’s border czar Tom Homan, in Chicago to oversee the operation. The deal was mutually beneficial — Homan got favorable coverage as McGraw used his live coverage to build an audience on his MeritTV digital television network. * WTTW | UChicago Terrorism Expert Says Jan. 6 Pardons ‘Normalized Major Political Violence’: “This has also legitimated and normalized major political violence,” said Robert Pape, political science professor at the University of Chicago, terrorism expert and the founding director of the Chicago Project on Security and Threats, or CPOST. “Nearly 200 of those granted clemency are militia group members who, by their very membership in violent groups, pose a danger, and many of those who were sentenced to long prison terms, not just because of their role in Jan. 6, but because they pose an ongoing threat to police, the government and to our country and many of the others.” * NBC Chicago | NBC 5 colleague missing from Lakeview neighborhood: Chicago police are searching for Kevin Spencer, a 34-year-old man from the city’s Lakeview neighborhood. Spencer, who works in NBC Chicago’s IT department, was last heard from Friday Jan. 24, according to police. Spencer did not report to work this week, which concerned friends and family members say is uncharacteristic. * Daily Southtown | Wildfire at forest preserve near Tinley Park under investigation, officials say: Fifteen fire departments, coordinated by the Tinley Park Fire Department, responded to the blaze at 6 p.m., according to Carl Vogel, director of communications for the Cook County Forest Preserve District. Although the fire was outside Tinley Park’s jurisdiction, it was elevated to a second alarm brush box, prompting assistance from fire trucks across the area, according to a news release from the Tinley Park Public Safety Department on Facebook. * Daily Herald | Suburban police navigating conflicting state, federal directives on immigration crackdown: Asked how police will navigate conflicting directives, Addison Police Chief Roy Selvik said he anticipates legal questions related to federal law versus state law to continue. “Our current policy mirrors the TRUST Act and state law, and our agency will continue to operate under the guidance and recommendations set by the Illinois attorney general’s office,” he said. * Crain’s | Bizarre death fuels concerns at struggling Waukegan hospital: The Lake County Coroner’s Office is blasting safety and quality conditions at Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan following the death of a patient who had gone missing and was later found hypothermic on the facility’s roof. Chelsea Adolphus, a 28-year-old woman and Waukegan resident, was admitted to Vista Medical on Jan. 22 but was found the next day on the hospital’s roof wearing only a hospital gown at about 8:45 a.m. — almost seven hours after leaving her room, according to the coroner’s office. * Daily Herald | Archdiocese rejects reprieve for St. Thomas of Villanova school in Palatine: “As a school’s enrollment decreases, it becomes increasingly challenging to rebuild, as families often seek assurances of long-term stability when choosing a school for their children,” he wrote. Fundraising efforts, he added, can add instability that further drives down enrollment. * SJ-R | Springfield nonprofit continues helping women recovering from substance abuse: The nonprofit was founded by Executive Director Rev. Margaret Ann Jessup providing transitional employment, mentoring, recovery tools and a safe community for women recovering from substance abuse. In 2021, the nonprofit opened a housing program, which saves girls in the home 70% of their income. “When I got out of seminary, I wanted to start something to benefit this community to help women other people couldn’t or wouldn’t help,” Jessup said. “When you’re in recovery and you have any criminal past or have problems with the courts, probation, all of those require you to meet with people at certain times, do outpatient rehab, do drops at different times … there’s a lot of barriers to success.” * WCIA | The Fray to perform at the Devon’s Amphitheater in Decatur: On Tuesday, Decatur announced that The Fray will perform at the Devon Lakeshore Amphitheater on May 24, 2025. Tickets will go on sale Jan. 31 at 10 a.m. and can be purchased here. Prices range from $35 for lawn tickets, to $69 for standing pit or reserved tickets. * NYT | Caroline Kennedy Urges Senators to Reject Her Cousin’s Nomination: She urged lawmakers, who will be questioning Mr. Kennedy at his confirmation hearings Wednesday and Thursday, to reject his nomination. She cited his lack of experience, misinformed views on vaccines and personal attributes. In the letter, she described how he led other family members “down the path of drug addiction. “His basement, his garage, and his dorm room were the centers of the action where drugs were available, and he enjoyed showing off how he put baby chickens and mice in the blender to feed his hawks,” Ms. Kennedy wrote. “It was often a perverse scene of despair and violence.” * Axios | Which companies are rolling back DEI and which are standing firm: Mentions of DEI and “diversity equity and inclusion” in earnings calls have dropped roughly 82% since Q2 of 2021. The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) dropped the word “equity” from its strategy, while corporate communicators have started to lean more heavily on terms like “belonging” and “diversity of thoughts and perspectives.”
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- Anyone Remember - Tuesday, Jan 28, 25 @ 2:45 pm:
So Sen. Anderson is taking the position that the IRS can’t use “administrative warrants” against anyone, citizen or not, but ICE can use “administrative warrants” against US citizens?