Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WBEZ public safety reporter Chip Mitchell…
* From the report…
* Illinois Municipal League…
* Governor Pritzker…
* She Votes Illinois | Mary Beth Canty, candidate for IL House of Representatives, District 54: She Votes Illinois is pleased to feature Mary Beth Canty, incumbent, running for IL House of Representatives, District 54. Follow our series, She Runs Illinois 2024!, leading up to election day as we showcase and uplift the voices of Illinois women running for public office in the upcoming election, November 5, 2024. * Tribune | Illinois rental assistance program restarted, with $75M available for renters and landlords: The new program follows a federally funded, statewide program that assisted tenants who were facing financial hardship tied to the COVID-19 pandemic and at risk of eviction. The federally funded program — which began in October 2022 and was funded through the 2021 federal American Rescue Plan Act — helped more than 10,500 landlords and renters in Illinois and stopped accepting applications in May as the funds were nearly exhausted. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s longest-serving City Council member Ed Burke is in prison: Edward M. Burke, the onetime dean of the Chicago City Council and its longest-serving member, has surrendered to a federal prison to begin serving his two-year sentence for racketeering, bribery and attempted extortion, authorities have confirmed. Burke is in custody at a low-security facility in Thomson, Illinois, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. * WTTW | 6 Months Later, Officers Who Shot Dexter Reed Remain on Leave: Police Officials: While none of the officers who shot at Reed, who was hit 13 times, have returned to active duty, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling has refused a call from Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten to relieve them of their police powers. Snelling’s rejection of Kersten’s recommendation means the officers have continued to be paid by the city. Three of the officers earn more than $102,000 annually, while the fourth earns $93,000, according to a city database. * WTTW | Tensions Between Mayor Johnson, CPS CEO Martinez Escalate Amid Questions About School Closures: Martinez had been scheduled to join WTTW News’ “Chicago Tonight” on Monday but declined to appear hours before the show was scheduled to air. Martinez reports to the Chicago Board of Education, whose members — all appointed by the mayor — have the power to terminate his contract. * WTTW | Police Misconduct Agency Rejects Watchdog’s Demand to Reopen 5 Probes Closed During Push to Clear Backlog: In each of the five cases, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg informed Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten that the agency known as COPA had erred when it closed those cases because they involved serious allegations of police misconduct that were not eligible to be closed as part of what COPA called its Timeliness Initiative. * Press release | Supermajority of City Council sends letter to the mayor calling for improvements in Chicago’s extreme weather response plan: “We’ve lost too many people to weather extremes that we have the means to predict and prepare for,” said Ald. Vasquez, who authored the letter. “Last winter, someone died outside overnight, on the steps of a closed city warming center. I can’t think of a more urgent call to action than that.” The goals of the working group would be to bring together the Mayor’s Office, members of City Council, homeless outreach and shelter service providers, healthcare workers, and people with lived experience of homelessness to work toward sustainable, measurable solutions to the city’s current gaps. * Block Club | Lakeview Residents ‘Trapped’ In Apartments As Elevator Issues Plague Affordable Housing Complex: In one instance, Ed Dubray, a top-floor resident who uses a wheelchair, had to call the Fire Department to be carried up five flights of stairs after getting stuck on the second floor when building management left for the day. “I’m trapped up here,” Dubray said. “I can’t get to the doctor. I can’t get my medicine. I can’t go to the store. They all act nice, but they don’t give a damn about us.” * ABC Chicago | United Airlines gives students behind-the-scenes look at O’Hare Airport for Girls in Aviation Day: More than 50 middle and high school girls got a special behind-the-scenes view of what it is like to have a front-row seat in aviation. “I’m having a lot of fun. I’ve never been on a plane, for real,” said Gwendolyn Brooks College Prep senior Neambi Walker. “I’ve never been in such a nice little business class area. The seat goes back. We get shoes.” * Block Club | Uptown People’s Law Center Leader Stepping Down After Decades Fighting For Prisoners’ Rights: This year, Mills is taking a step back in his role at the center for the first time since the ’90s, transitioning back to being a staff attorney after a decade as Uptown People’s Law Center’s executive director and a previous 23 years as its legal director. During his tenure, Mills has taken on legal battles for healthcare benefits for Appalachian miners who migrated to Uptown and for prisoners unjustly in solitary confinement. His work has even helped lead to the closure of one of Illinois’ most notorious prisons. * Crain’s | Calumet Fisheries maintains tradition amid change in aftermath of a fire: Not much changed at the famous red-roofed restaurant in the subsequent 75 years, at least not until an electrical fire damaged the interior in 2023. The blaze forced Calumet Fisheries to close up shop for seven months as the team brought in new display cases, walk-in coolers, electrical and plumbing systems, and a fresh roof. It reopened in June to many locals’ relief. There was a brief moment after the fire when current co-owner Mark Kotlick, son of Sid Kotlick, considered closing up shop. “Do we take our insurance money and call it a day?” he recalled thinking. But his pause did not last long. Mark Kotlick knew he needed to stay open for both his longtime employees and the restaurant’s loyal customers. * Tribune | After a treacherous, monthslong journey from Venezuela to Chicago, migrant amputee marries longtime love: ‘She’s my life. My everything.’: Pedron’s family currently lives in a shelter run by the state in Little Village. They are hoping to stay here by pleading asylum, and haven’t received permission to work legally yet. They’ve received some housing benefits from the state, but Pedron worries because he and his wife don’t have stable jobs. They need to find something affordable for their family of six. * Daily Southtown | Ford Heights mayor convicted of embezzling village funds: Ford Heights Mayor Charles Griffin was convicted Monday of embezzling village funds, though he was not held accountable for stealing the full $147,000 prosecutors claimed. Cook County Judge James Obbish said Griffin is guilty of a felony in the embezzlement of between $10,000 and $100,000 in public funds “to benefit himself, his family and his friends” from 2014 to 2017, both during and after his first tenure as Ford Heights mayor. * Tribune | To fend off potential state takeover, Evanston/Skokie District 65 may close schools, lay off staff: Robert Grossi, a financial consultant hired by the district, said the district is in danger of an Illinois State Board of Education takeover if the district does not find a way to balance its budget. The district has seen deficits of over $10 million in the last three school years due to increasing expenses and decreasing revenues, all as it prepares to build a school in Evanston’s Fifth Ward. Superintendent Angel Turner presented initial plans for an expense-cutting program to the Board of Education at its Board meeting last Monday. The plan’s specifics will be presented to the board in January 2025 by Grossi and the District’s chief financial officer. * Shaw Local | McHenry cancels $2.8M land deal for scuttled plans for hotel, 500 apartments downtown: Second Ward Alderman Andy Glab asked that the final documents note that the Carey family asked for the contract’s termination, “not just that the city canceled it.” The wording was agreed upon by both sides, McArdle said, and any changes to the language would have to be approved by Carey representatives, but he added he would inform them of the request. * AXIOS | Your guide to the Cook County State’s Attorney race: In Democratic stronghold Cook County, Republicans have held the seat only three times in the last 90 years, the last time being 1996. After a very close Democratic primary, Judge Eileen O’Neill Burke eked out a narrow win over former prosecutor Clayton Harris III, even though the County Democratic Party endorsed Harris. * CBS Chicago | Kevin Bacon performs for inmates at Cook County Jail in Chicago: It’s part of a collaboration with Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart to bring art, music, and inspiration to those in custody. Bacon also took questions from the audience about his music and acting career. “I’m working on a TV show that’ll be out in the middle of the year,” he said. “I got a movie called — well, I don’t really know what it’s called. We’re still trying to find distribution for it, but you know, I’m still out there begging.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego OKs concept plans for nine-hole indoor golf course: ‘This is first on the Earth right in Oswego’: The 100-acre site west of Route 30 and north of Rance Road is currently in unincorporated Will County and would have to be annexed into Oswego and rezoned from agriculture to a regional business district, according to the proposal. Canada-based Megalodome Golf is proposing to build four 270,000-square-foot golf domes at the site. Three domes would contain a nine-hole golf course, while the fourth dome would be a practice facility, according to the plan. * WJBC | ISU selected as partner for Central Illinois regional simulation training hub by DCFS: The Illinois Department of Child and Family Services has selected Illinois State University as one of four regional training hubs when the university’s Child Protection Training Academy opens in early November. According to an ISU news release, the four-year $2.1 million grant was finalized back in June following months of planning. ISU says this partnership will support workforce development. * SJ-R | Former Springfield police officer indicted on drug charges: A former Springfield police officer was indicted on drug charges. Clayton Hadley was indicted for possession of larger than legal amounts of marijuana as well as possession of testosterone. Deputies searched Hadley’s home on July 31 and found more than three pounds of marijuana along with multiple vials of suspected testosterone. Deputies also found roughly $5,000 in cash at Hadley’s home. * Courier & Press | Evansville sports legend Clint Keown dies in Illinois car wreck: Clint Keown, who starred as an athlete at Memorial High School and the University of Evansville, died Sunday in a car wreck in Crawford County, Illinois. Crawford County Sheriff Bill Rutan told the Courier & Press that the investigation is ongoing, but he could confirm that it was a one-vehicle incident, and that the driver had died. * Fox Illinois | Maroa-Forsyth’s Grant Smith commits to the University of Illinois: The Illini landed a new offensive weapon from Maroa-Forsyth this week when Grant Smith, the Troajn’s 6′5″ three-star tight end. The senior standout is just four games into his final Trojan campaign and already has 13 receptions for 225 yards and six touchdowns. His junior year saw a similar level of success, finding the endzone eight times with 535 yards and 30 receptions. * AP | Americans Can Order Free COVID-19 Tests Beginning This Month: U.S. households will be able to order as many as four nasal swab tests at COVIDTests.gov when the federal program reopens. The U.S. Health and Human Services agency overseeing the program has not yet given an exact date when ordering can begin. An agency spokesperson has said the tests will detect current virus strains and can be ordered ahead of the holiday season, when families and friends gather for celebrations.
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Question of the day
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The setup…
* The Question: Can things get worse?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Despite 2023 firebombing, Planned Parenthood of Illinois expands abortion services in Peoria
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * August of last year…
* Today…
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Monday, Sep 23, 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 David, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Suspicious package sent to Illinois State Board of Elections is under FBI investigation
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told about this early this morning. CNN…
* Add Illinois to the list. SJ-R…
This morning ISBE spokesperson Matt Dietrich said he had no updates, “It’s the FBI’s case now.”
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Lessons learned from the La Schiazza trial
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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A quick ShotSpotter history
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * March, 2017…
* 2018…
[Debunked] * 2019…
* 2020…
* 2021…
* 2021…
* 2021…
* 2021…
* 2021…
* 2022…
* 2023…
* Yesterday…
* Also yesterday…
2003…
* After many spin revisions over the years, the question in Chicago has essentially boiled down to possibly/probably saving lives of at least some shooting victims vs. over-extending already constrained police resources at the expense of 911 response times…
So, that means seven victims rendered aid had no 911 call and we don’t know how badly injured any of those seven were.
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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
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Open thread
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Judge’s decision in gun ban challenge weeks away as state also set to appeal concealed carry ruling. Tribune…
* Related stories…
∙ Capitol News Illinois: State wraps up case in challenge to assault weapons ban At 8:45 am Governor Pritzker will give remarks at National Association of State Treasurers Annual Conference. At 10:25 am, the governor will speak at the Institute for Women’s Policy Research Power+ Summit. Click here to watch. * Crain’s | Assault weapons ban would have prevented 38 mass shootings, Northwestern study says: The study, published today in the journal JMIR Public Health & Surveillance, is the first to consider how many mass shootings the ban would have prevented, the health system said in a press release. The federal ban on certain military-style automatic weapons and high-capacity magazines was enacted in 1994 and ended in 2004, during which time Northwestern estimates it prevented five public mass shootings. * Tribune | With jury deadlock ending La Schiazza trial, prosecutors in looming Madigan case face clear challenge: Closing arguments in the federal trial of former AT&T Illinois boss Paul La Schiazza, who was accused of bribing House Speaker Michael Madigan, brought an expected crowd to a Chicago courtroom. But only one spectator could claim to have had a direct influence on the proceedings. That was James Snyder, the former mayor of Portage, Indiana, whose fight to overturn his own bribery case ended with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June that raised the bar for prosecutors in a number of Illinois public corruption cases. * SJ-R | Lawmakers weighing use of solitary confinement in Illinois prison. Here’s what to know.: Last year, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislation making it illegal to confine incarcerated youth in solitary confinement for any purpose other than preventing immediate physical harm. Now advocates and lawmakers are calling for limits of the practice for incarcerated adults. There appeared to be momentum brewing during the spring session for such legislation — dubbed the Nelson Mandela Act — passing out of committee and wracking up dozens of Democratic co-sponsors. If passed, it would have limited solitary confinement to no more than 10 consecutive days or 10 days within a 180-day period. * Treasurer Michael Frerichs | Hey, Stellantis, a deal is a deal. Open the Belvidere plant now: You don’t need a PhD in Economics to understand basic supply and demand or to question why market conditions are an impediment to Stellantis, but not to the same extent as Ford or General Motors. Market conditions certainly did not prohibit Stellantis from rewarding Tavares with a $39 million annual compensation package, an increase of 56 percent. Nor has it prompted the CEO to return some of that compensation until market conditions improve. * WAND | Illinois House Republicans renew calls for property tax reform: “Illinois is still poised to be a leading economy in our nation,” Rep. Dan Ugaste (R-Geneva) said Thursday. “But we’re certainly never going to do it by overtaxing homeowners until they either lose their properties or are rendered valueless or we drive businesses out of our state.” Republicans argue the state should set aside 25% of its revenue each year to make pension payments and send more money to schools. Ugaste said his plan could save taxpayers $82.4 billion over the next 21 years. Although, his bill has never moved out of committee. * Quantum Insider | AOL’s Founder Predicted A Midwest Tech Hub: A Decade Later, Illinois’ Quantum Ecosystem Is Fulfilling The Prophecy: The idea that a tech hub could rise in the Midwest once seemed improbable. For decades, Silicon Valley has long been synonymous with “epicenter of innovation.” However, predictions of a Midwest resurgence, made nearly a decade ago by AOL’s founder Steve Case—are beginning to take shape. Illinois is positioning itself as a quantum computing hub through tax incentives, major investments, and a growing quantum ecosystem, as demonstrated by recent developments in the state. * Sun-Times | Chicago organizers work to ease Black-brown tension over the influx of migrants: The conversations between Latino and Black Chicagoans began earlier this year, alternating between locations in the mostly Black neighborhood of East Garfield Park and the largely Latino neighborhood of Pilsen. An event on Sept. 12 brought together about 35 people to discuss disciplinary practices in public schools. Other discussions have centered around law enforcement, housing, jobs and immigration. Some Black participants say that before these dialogues, they hadn’t taken the time to try to understand Latinos and their struggles. * Chicago Reader | Henry V, portrait of a serial killer: Directed by Chicago Shakes artistic director Edward Hall (whose brilliant 2003 Rose Rage remains a seminal production at the Navy Pier theater), Henry (Elijah Jones, in full command of the stage) goes to war for two reasons: A) because his feelings have been hurt by a child (the Dauphin of France and a prank involving tennis balls) and B) because he’s so wrapped up in his ego that he fails to understand the bishops convincing him to invade France only want war as a means of fattening church coffers. Yes, Henry’s eve-of-battle St. Crispin’s Day Speech is an inspiration to underdogs through history. But when Jones’s Henry unleashes the passage with fire-breathing righteousness, urging his men to invade a sovereign country where countless will be slaughtered, it feels dangerous and disingenuous. * Block Club | Rain Flushes Away Chicago’s Foul Smell: On Sunday, the seemingly endless string of sunny, 80-degree days this month came to an end as rain storms rolled through the city. The National Weather Service forecasted rains and possible thunderstorms for the city through the day Sunday. The rain was much needed for multiple reasons. Before Sunday, September had only seen 0.04 inches of rain, compared to the monthly average of 1.73 inches, according to the National Weather Service. The lack of rain has led to drought conditions for much of the Midwest, including Chicago and Illinois, according to NBC 5. * Sun-Times | White Sox tie 1962 Mets’ record with 120th loss: With their fifth consecutive defeat and 23rd in the last 28 games, the Sox fell to 36-120 to tie the expansion 1962 Mets’ record for most losses in the modern era and break the 2003 Tigers’ AL-record 119 losses. “It’s very frustrating; it’s not what we want,” said Miguel Vargas, who homered off Yu Darvish. “We don’t want to be on this side of history.” * Tribune | As suicide deaths become more common among young kids in Illinois, one Waukegan mom mourns her 10-year-old daughter: After losing her daughter, Gaines said she’s felt sadness, grief and, at times, guilt. Gaines isn’t alone in her experience. Suicide among young people is a “challenging and prevalent problem,” with Black and LGBTQ+ kids, who are at disproportionate risk nationally and in Chicago, according to Dr. Aron Janssen, a vice chair at the psychiatry and behavioral health department at Lurie Children’s Hospital. * WGN | Cook County welding renaissance: Latinas Welding Guild helps bridge the gap: “We want this to be a space where anyone can grow and learn and develop in their welding skills,” said Jessica Rodriguez Hernandez, Deputy Director of the Latinas Welding Guild. “When We started the organization, it was really with the intent to help women get into the trades. But as we realized it wasn’t just women who needed those doors to be open. * Daily Herald | Barrington gearing up for more discussion of Motor Werks expansion: The Motor Werks auto dealership’s proposed expansion of its Barrington campus will undergo further scrutiny by village officials and residents next week. The plan commission will reconvene Sept. 30 as it considers the proposal, which calls for a new Porsche facility, a parking garage with restaurant and retail elements, an expanded showroom and another high-end dealership to the site on Dundee Road between Barrington Road and Grove Avenue. * AP | A historic but dilapidated Illinois prison will close while replacement is built, despite objections: The prison is behind on maintenance by $286 million, according to a long-range capital needs study released in May 2023. It identified $12 million in immediate upgrades, but Hughes said that “grossly underestimates the full spectrum of urgent needs.” Wood’s court order focused on falling chunks of concrete, bird feathers and feces and foul-smelling tap water. * Sun-Times | North Carolina GOP gov candidate Mark Robinson drops Chicago-area fundraiser after vile posts surface: Robinson, the lieutenant governor of North Carolina, a key presidential battleground state, scrubbed the Kenilworth visit, according to a post on the website of the Tenth Congressional District Republican Organization. On Saturday, the group’s website was no longer promoting Robinson’s event. Instead, on the organization’s “coming events” page, there was this message: “Welcome. Our earlier speaker cancelled, but we have secured a great Trump ally for this event! Stay tuned!” * WAND | SEIU Local 73 blames short staff on wages at U of I: “We are disappointed that University management have failed to take negotiations seriously while continually posting threats against the workers,” said Joseph Richert, SEIU Local 73 Secretary-Treasurer. “From suspending civil service rules to intimidating workers about their access to healthcare, management continues to demonstrate a lack of respect for these essential employees. Our members are fully prepared to strike for as long as it takes to secure a contract that provides a living wage.” * WCIA | Pharmacies in Central Illinois face medicine shortage: Hudson Drug and Hallmark shop in Paxton say they’ve been limited on their supply of Adderall and Ritalin. He says other pharmacies could be going through the same thing because of multiple different situations. These drugs could be high in demand, or several manufacturers aren’t making money off the specific item and other companies have to meet the need. * WAND | Charleston Middle School student arrested for making threats: The Charleston Police Department said a Middle School student has been detained on preliminary felony juvenile charges for making a threat to a student, to pull a fire-alarm. They say the student also threatened to commit additional violence on school grounds. The student is facing several charges including making a terrorist threat, which is a Class X felony, and Disorderly Conduct, school threat, which is a Class 4 Felony. * WCIA | U of I building service workers plan to strike Monday: According to an email sent to SEIU 73 members, the strike will begin at 7:00 a.m. In that same email, the Bargaining Committee asked workers who are scheduled to come in to not come to work. For those who are already working, they ask them to clock out and head to the picket line. * Crain’s | Caterpillar joins Ford, Lowe’s in diversity rethink as backlash grows: Caterpillar Inc. is introducing new guidelines on external sponsorships and donations as part of a review of some of its DEI initiatives, after anti-diversity activist Robby Starbuck told the company he was preparing a social media attack against its policies. The construction and mining equipment maker, which in 2022 moved from Illinois to the Dallas area, said it will focus all employee training programs on fostering “high performance,” require senior manager approval for external speakers at company events, and implement new guardrails around its employee resource groups. The changes were communicated in a letter to employees that Starbuck shared on his social media page. * Pantagraph | 2 Black Civil War veterans in Central Illinois fought to be citizens, voters: When the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was formally adopted on March 30, 1870, less than a week later both men exercised their newfound right to vote. Because of a special charter, El Paso’s city election was held one day earlier (Monday, April 4), than the rest of the elections held in the State of Illinois (Tuesday, April 5). However, when Strother arrived at the polls to vote, he was denied by one election judge, William Niefing, who stated “if any law existed entitling Negroes to vote he had not seen it.” * The New Yorker | How inflation fooled almost everybody: Early in the current inflation debate, at least one highly placed group of economists did draw a more appropriate lesson from history. In a July, 2021, blog post, Cecilia Rouse, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, and two colleagues—Jeffery Zhang and Ernie Tedeschi—highlighted the years immediately after the Second World War, when the U.S. inflation rate jumped to more than fourteen per cent in 1947 before falling back to minus one per cent by the end of 1949. In the course of the war, a lot of factories had been reoriented to produce armaments, which meant consumer goods were in short supply. After the fighting ended, households that were eager to get back to normal bought a lot of the goods and services they had been deprived of, and prices shot up. (Another factor: wartime price controls had been lifted.) “Today’s shortage of durable goods is similar,” the White House economists wrote. “A national crisis necessitated disrupting normal production processes.” They noted that the postwar inflationary period “ended after two years as domestic and foreign supply chains normalized and consumer demand began to level off.” * DNYUZ | Elon Musk’s X Backs Down in Brazil: After defying court orders in Brazil for three weeks, Mr. Musk’s social network, X, has capitulated. In a court filing on Friday night, the company’s lawyers said that X had complied with orders from Brazil’s Supreme Court in the hopes that the court would lift a block on its site. The decision was a surprise move by Mr. Musk, who owns and controls X, after he said he had refused to obey what he called illegal orders to censor voices on his social network. Mr. Musk had dismissed local employees and refused to pay fines. The court responded by blocking X across Brazil last month. * The Guardian | ‘A break from the heat’: Americans most affected by climate crisis head midwest: As a Rust belt town of 65,000 people in eastern Indiana, Muncie may not be the most exciting place in the world. It doesn’t have beaches, year-round warm weather or much in the way of cosmopolitanism. But for Laura Rivas, a cybersecurity engineer formerly of North Miami Beach, Florida, Muncie is perfect. Before she moved there in 2022, life in Florida had become unbearable.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to keep up with the La Schiazza trial. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Sep 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Weekend updates: CPS; CTU; GOP
Saturday, Sep 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
“Me and my”? Great grammar for an education CEO. /s The letter…
Illinois Latino Agenda…
* Background is here. CTU official…
* Background is here and here. Marni Pyke…
You knew that would happen.
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Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Shaboozey… I’ve been driving for miles and miles and miles
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * It’s just a bill. CBS Chicago…
* Sen. Robert Peters and Rep. Justin Slaughter…
* ABC Chicago…
* Sun-Times | Johnson accused of picking another police-related fight with City Council: Gov. JB Pritzker has authorized selling a former Illinois National Guard armory to the city for $1 for the “express purpose” of creating a new police district. But Mayor Brandon Johnson now wants to use the building for “storage, maintenance and operation of police vehicles, equipment and aircraft.” * Sun-Times | Chicago developer completes first phase of affordable housing project in North Lawndale: The first phase of apartments at a North Lawndale development is already 50% leased, and the amenity-heavy project will bring additional housing units to the community as it starts phase two. Project and city leaders gathered at OC Living, the residential portion of the Ogden Commons development, on Thursday to mark the grand opening of phase one and kickstart phase two of the more than $200 million project. The Habitat Co. will build about 300 units at the former Chicago Housing Authority site.
* Tribune | New inclusive dental clinic at UIC an ‘oasis’ for patients with special needs: Burman said the Inclusive Care Clinic solves a problem not many dentist offices are thinking about: being a place that anybody can access. “Some people can’t get through the doorways, some people can’t even make it to the front door because there’s no ramp, or they won’t take somebody because of behavioral issues,” Burman said. “That’s not right. Everybody needs to have the medicine and dentistry that they’re entitled to.” * Block Club | As Riot Fest Kicks Off, West Siders Debate Its Place In Douglass Park: Grassroots group Únete La Villita organized a press conference last week outside the Park District’s headquarters while the agency’s board members voted to grant Riot Fest’s permit, just nine days before its kickoff. There’s a lack of transparency behind the permit process, protesters said. Anton Adkins, a lifelong North Lawndale resident and an organizer for Únete La Villita, said the group is calling for an in-person public meeting with Riot Fest and Park District officials and neighborhood Ald. Monique Scott (24th) to address the community’s concerns, like losing access to the public park. * WGN | Riot Fest features ‘world’s largest’ butter statue of John Stamos: This year’s butter statue comes after a yearslong love affair between Riot Fest and Stamos. A love affair that may very one-sided. According to the festival, it all started with a tweet to Stamos in 2013 asking him to reunite Jesse & The Rippers at Riot Fest — but unfortunately, they had no luck. Then in 2016, the fest attempted to get Stamos’ attention again and had an artist create a sculpture of his head out of butter. Again, no luck with having him perform, but he did respond to their post of the butter sculpture and said, “Riot Fest I’m certainly flattered & pretty frightened by #ButterStamos. Does this come with toast? Funny comments?” * Tribune | Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark enforces decorum at City Council meetings; is it too restrictive?: At the most recent council meeting Sept. 9, several residents raised concerns about what they believe was an increased police presence, noting about 10 officers were stationed inside the council chambers. “That is very intimidating to have officers actually surround people as they give their speeches,” said the Rev. Johnathan Johnson, a pastor at the Holy Bible Missionary Baptist Church in Harvey, who has been a vocal critic of a city ordinance requiring churches to obtain business licenses. * Daily Herald | ‘Only the beginning’: Lake County government building powered by solar : Soon, electricity to run the Central Permit Facility on the government campus in Libertyville will be generated by more than 2,000 ground-mounted photovoltaic panels covering two acres nearby. What is considered a medium-sized solar field was built by Maryland-based Standard Solar Inc., under a 25-year lease agreement that has the county paying a monthly rate for all the power generated. * WGN | St. Charles officer who retired 3 years ago dies from ALS: Police officer Chris Grove was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease, shortly after retiring from the department in 2021. According to St. Charles police, Grove died Tuesday at the age of 51. * Sun-Times | In ‘bird city’ Homewood, toxic chemicals found at nature preserve: The source of the color as well as an oily film is a stormwater outflow owned by Homewood that collects water from nearby businesses including Homewood Disposal, a garbage and recycling business that referred questions to Homewood officials. The outflow is the responsibility of the Homewood village government. * Crain’s | Empty Skokie tech park building heading to auction block: Skokie-based American Landmark Properties has hired real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle to seek a buyer for the building at 8030 Lamon Ave. in the northern suburb, according to a marketing flyer. The developer spent nearly $21 million in recent years redeveloping the 1970s-built, 135,851-square-foot building with space suitable for life sciences research, the flyer said, betting that biotechnology, pharmaceutical and other types of companies hunting for wet lab space would fill it. * WCIA | ‘I am not here to divide our board’: Champaign Co. Board Chair defends position: “The chaos that the chair inserts into regular board functions makes it difficult to perform basic government tasks. I just want to point out that, despite consultation with the State Attorney’s Office and extensive mentoring by various board members, the Chair continues to misunderstand and misuse the role of board chair,” [board member Emily Rodriguez] said * WCIA | Clifton students walk out after teacher’s arrest: Brett Sorensen was arrested Tuesday following an investigation by the Illinois State Police. While he teaches at a high school in Iroquois County, Sorensen lives in Paxton and was arrested at his home. He remains in the Ford County Jail pending a detention hearing scheduled for next week. Central High School administrators said they cannot comment on personnel matters, but did say Sorensen has been placed on paid administrative leave. Students aren’t satisfied, however, with the actions taken by the school. They want Sorensen fired. * AP | Hotter summers are making high school football a fatal game for some players: At least 58 players have died from exertional heat stroke between 1992 and 2024, according to the Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticut, and thousands more are sickened each year. This summer has been especially bad, with five high school players dying since July of suspected heat-related illnesses, including 14-year-old Semaj Wilkins who collapsed during drills last month at his Alabama high school practice.
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More Chicago drama as mayor reportedly tries to force out CPS CEO (Updated x2)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
…Adding… Sigh…
…Adding… Hmm…
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Illinois Supreme Court slams “absurd” premise of appellate court ruling on pretrial detention
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Unanimous decision with Justice Mary K. O’Brien authoring the opinion…
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This story triggered me
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * One of my earliest intense memories is getting yelled at by my Aunt Marsha for venturing into a fully grown cornfield with a neighbor kid. Marsha was a teenager at the time and she was babysitting me. I was four or five years old and thought it was fun. We were pretending to be monsters while we knocked down corn stalks. Marsha was worried that I’d get lost or attacked by a wild dog, and I never blamed her for being angry with me because I instantly realized what a stupid thing that was and that the neighbor kid was bad news. Once you get deep into those fields, you lose your perspective, particularly when you’re so young. Case in point…
Thanks, Marsha!
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Caption contest!
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You’ve probably heard the news about North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson. Well, there’s an Illinois angle… ![]() The Tenth Congressional District Republicans have devoted an entire page to promote the event. But click here in case they delete it. I reached out to several Republican organizations yesterday about whether the event was still moving forward and have yet to hear back. * And I know I’m kinda asking the impossible, but please do your utmost to keep it clean in comments. Thanks.
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CPD superintendent, ATF chief criticized for spreading false information about SAFE-T Act
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling and special agent in charge for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives’ Chicago Field Division Christopher Amon penned a Tribune op-ed yesterday…
* ACLU Illinois Communications Director Ed Yohnka responded…
* But wait, it gets better. I had all the above by late yesterday afternoon and decided to hold it until this morning. Last night, I received this email from the ACLU…
*facepalm.emoji* * Meanwhile, St. Louis Public Radio interviewed the chief judge of St. Clair County about one year without cash bail…
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Open thread
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: With jury stuck 11-1, judge declares mistrial in case of ex-AT&T boss accused of bribing Speaker Madigan. Tribune…
* Related stories… ∙ Sun-Times: AT&T jury hangs up — mistrial declared in case of former exec accused of bribing Madigan, weeks before ex-speaker’s own trial ∙ Capitol News Illinois: Jury deadlocks, mistrial declared in case of ex-AT&T boss accused of bribing Madigan ∙ * Sun-Times | Questions on Illinois officials’ oversight of state-funded South Side center for troubled kids: The center, run by Aunt Martha’s Health and Wellness, was closed by the state in June after a care provider and a guard were charged with sexual assault of young residents. But problems, including thousands of reports of violence and years of lax oversight, had gone on for years. * Press Release | Illinois Payroll Jobs, Unemployment Rate Up in August: The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that nonfarm payrolls were up +800 while the unemployment rate increased +0.1 percentage point to 5.3 percent in August, based on preliminary data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and released by IDES. The July monthly change in payrolls was revised from the preliminary report, from +12,900 to +10,300 jobs, while the revised unemployment rate was 5.2 percent, unchanged from the preliminary July unemployment rate. The August payroll jobs estimate and unemployment rate reflect activity for the week including the 12th. * Crain’s | Christy George named CEO of an increasingly active Intersect Illinois: Fresh off her role leading day-to-day efforts to prepare to host the Democratic National Convention, Christy George is taking over as CEO of Intersect Illinois, the state’s private-sector partner in recruiting and retaining businesses. It’s a homecoming of sorts for George, 38, who previously was part of J.B. Pritzker’s economic team, working on deals such as the Gotion battery plant in Manteno and Lion Electric electric-bus factory in Joliet. She replaces Dan Seals, who left in July. * Capitol News Illinois | State wraps up case in challenge to assault weapons ban: A federal judge invoked images from the 1917 race riots in East St. Louis, Illinois, on Thursday at the end of a trial in a case challenging the constitutionality of the state’s ban on assault-style weapons and large-capacity magazines. Judge Steven McGlynn, who has presided over the trial, called attention to the neighborhood just outside the courthouse, much of which was destroyed during a series of deadly attacks by a white mob against the city’s Black population. […] “I wonder what would have happened,” he said in a possible indication of how he intends to rule. “I wonder what would have happened if they (the Black population) had had some of the weapons we’re talking about today.” * WAND | Illinois state dental society, IDFPR raise awareness about unlicensed dentists: “I want Illinois to understand that unregulated and unlicensed dental care is a huge problem and it is a dangerous risk,” said Dr. Sherece Thompson. “You are gambling with a person’s oral health and there is no procedure that is safe when done by someone who does not have proper training in oral health.” * NBC Chicago | What is an advisory question? What Illinois voters will decide on this November: While these questions will certainly provoke a measure of debate and discussion, they do not come with any guarantee of future legislation or amending the state’s Constitution, according to officials. * Tribune | Bed supply should remain constant as city seeks to merge homeless, migrant shelter systems, social service leaders say: Advocates for both asylum-seekers and homeless Chicagoans have supported the move toward a unified shelter network, saying it will boost resources for the unhoused population in the city. Others warn it will overwhelm an already overstretched system, as the groups have very distinct mental health, language, legal and other needs. * Sun-Times | Deadbeat Chicago city workers owe $18 million in unpaid fines, fees: About $16.5 million of the debt is owed by employees of sister agencies like the CTA, where about one of every four workers is carrying an outstanding debt — by far the highest rate of any of the agencies. * Crain’s | Amazon closing Goose Island fulfillment center, one of the first it opened in Chicago: Amazon is closing its fulfillment center in Goose Island, nearly 10 years after it opened as part of the e-commerce titan’s expansion efforts in Illinois. The company says it will not renew its lease at 1111 N. Cherry Ave. According to a WARN notice filed with the state, 211 employees are set to receive layoff notices effective Nov. 13. However, Amazon says these workers will have the option to relocate to “nearby operations sites.” * Crain’s | The future of the hybrid office? It could look like this: Relativity is one of the few companies tying itself to the future of LaSalle Street after a series of departures of big-name tenants. Roughly one-third of office space along LaSalle in the Loop is empty, according to a recent analysis of the street by the Urban Land Institute, largely a result of banking giants BMO and Bank of America decamping for new towers in the West Loop. […] To foster this environment, the company put in stadium-style communal seating and a large video wall for broadcasting company-wide meetings. The office also features other amenities such as a library, a juice bar and an arcade with a sports simulator, all designed to attract employees to work at the office. * Tribune | Amtrak salutes Latino workers who kept the trains running on time: When train travel expanded into Illinois in the 1800s, it was the lowest ranking employees who laid the rails, which could weigh close to half a ton. To keep the trains running on time through the winter, they’d light fires to thaw the tracks. Called “traqueros,” a term derived from the Spanglish word traque, which means track, these Latino workers were honored by Amtrak on Wednesday in Union Station. * Sun-Times | Worst team ever plans 2025 payroll cut, seeks money for new ballpark. Wanna be a White Sox fan?: The current public discussion is about the Sox’ intention to decrease its payroll next season because they’ve had such a rotten year financially. It’s something the Sun-Times has written about several times this season. Whenever they get around to openly discussing the payroll, the Sox surely will talk about sticking to “The Plan,’’ which means nurturing young, talented and inexpensive players. But it’s also about profit. I very well might be brain-addled, but it seems to me that the solution to what ails the team is better baseball players, which means spending more money. * Daily Herald | Foster cites lying politicians as top issue; challenger Evans says it’s immigration: Foster, a scientist and former entrepreneur who has served the 11th District since 2013, warned about politicians who lie repeatedly because “they expect that there’ll be political benefit from it.” In scientific fields, saying something you know isn’t true will end your career, Foster said. But that’s not the case in politics today, he added. * Daily Herald | Hanover Park parks president speaking out on citation for verbal assault of teen referee: According to the police report, the 17-year-old boy was escorted to his vehicle after the game by adults who had witnessed the altercation. The referee reported he felt scared Elkins was going to hit him, according to the police report. Elkins Thursday said he was inspired to speak out further because of the response news coverage of the police report was generating. * Daily Heral d| Hoffman Estates native uses archaeology training in search for Americans missing in combat worldwide: Friday is National POW/MIA Recognition Day, but bringing missing Americans home is a year-round focus for Hoffman Estates native and professional archaeologist David Brown. He now employs the same techniques to find and identify U.S. military personnel from World War II and later for the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency within the Department of Defense as he previously did to unearth the culture of ancient civilizations. * SJ-R | New sheriff in town: County board officially approves Crouch nomination: Crouch, 51, was sworn in by Seventh Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow as her husband, Robert, the police chief of Riverton, and her two sons looked on. […] Crouch was also assigned to the Child Advocacy Center before her retirement, where she investigated cases of child abuse. Board chairman Andy Van Meter cited her “incredible breadth of experience with almost every aspect of policing and managing.” * WCIA | Champaign Co. organizations aid low-income families: Two groups in Champaign County are partnering together to help low-income families. The Housing Authority of Champaign County and VOLO are eliminating the cost of Wi-Fi. They’re starting a new project called VCHAP it’ll provide free wi-fi for 355 homes in six Housing Authority of Champaign County properties. * CBS Chicago | Hours before Freddie Owens’ execution, friend who testified against him says he lied: “Freddie was not there”: Owens is set to die at 6 p.m. Friday at a Columbia prison for the killing of a Greenville convenience store clerk in 1997. It will be South Carolina’s first execution in 13 years. But Owens’ lawyers on Wednesday filed a sworn statement from the friend and co-defendant, Steven Golden, late Wednesday to try to stop South Carolina from carrying out the execution. Prosecutors reiterated that several other witnesses testified that Owens told them he pulled the trigger. And the state Supreme Court refused to stop Owens’ execution last week after Golden, in a sworn statement, said that he had a secret deal with prosecutors that he never told the jury about.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to keep up with the La Schiazza trial. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Sep 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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