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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bring joy to a foster child this holiday season. Your donation helps provide gifts and spread warmth to children in need. Make this season magical—click here to give today and brighten a child’s holiday!

* Tribune

[Illinois] is in better shape to withstand a downturn than it was during either the 2007 Great Recession or the 2020 COVID recession, according to the joint study published Monday by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

“No state in the nation is recession proof,” said report co-author Frank Manzo, an economist at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a La Grange-based nonpartisan research organization. “But Illinois is better positioned to overcome the challenges and withstand the forces that trigger recessions than at any point in recent history.”

The elimination of the general fund deficit and replenishing the state’s “rainy day” fund with $2 billion lead the list of post-pandemic improvements that should help Illinois weather a possible recession with a little less pain than the previous two, the study found.

Other improvements include a work-share program implemented in 2021 that allows employers to avoid layoffs by temporarily reducing workers’ hours while enabling them to receive pro-rated unemployment benefits.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTVO | These new Illinois laws are going into effect on Jan. 1, 2025: So, starting January 1st, 2025, the Illinois minimum wage will be $15 an hour, according to the Illinois Department of Labor. Tipped workers will also see a minimum wage increase, from $8.40 an hour to $9 an hour. That’s thanks to a state law that says tipped workers must earn at least 60% of the state’s minimum wage.

* WBEZ | More Muslim girls are playing youth sports and celebrating their religion while doing it: In 2021, an Illinois law went into effect allowing students to freely wear hijabs, leggings and long sleeves without having to request a waiver from their school district. Muslim Civic Coalition president Dilara Sayeed, whose group helped draft the bill, said the change gives boys and girls in Illinois the chance “to play in uniforms that meet their faith traditions and not have to constantly be seeking approval to do it.” It was also around that time that a number of basketball leagues in the Chicago suburbs aimed at Muslim girls sprang up. Chaudhary, the coach who prayed with her players, started iDrive Faith + Athletics in suburban Woodridge in 2021 to teach young Muslim girls basketball. […] When she coached girls basketball at a suburban Islamic high school a decade ago, she said referees occasionally inspected the hijabs some of her players wore.

*** Statewide ***

* River Bender | Raoul Issues Statement On Appellate Court Opinion To Stay Injunction On Protect Illinois Communities Act: Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit stayed an injunction a district court entered regarding the Protect Illinois Communities Act. The stay will remain in place while the appeal is pending. “I am pleased the 7th Circuit has stayed the district court’s injunction. My office will continue to prosecute the appeal, and the Protect Illinois Communities Act remains the law of the land as the litigation is pending in the lower courts. The Protect Illinois Communities Act is an important tool to prevent weapons of war from being used in our schools and on our streets, and I am committed to defending its constitutionality.”

* WAND | IL Farm Bureau President Addresses Rift: At a Saturday afternoon news conference, IFB President Brian Duncan characterized AFBF’s move as demonstrating a preference for quantity of members over quality of member engagement. “By making this choice, AFBF is abandoning 70,000+ farmers over a decision that will ultimately benefit Illinois Farm Bureau, county farm bureaus and Illinois farmers,” Duncan said. “We believe we are taking steps to effectively grow our organization. Our plans are not only in numbers but both in value and influence of our farmer members.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chicago | Game of Zones: So why is it so hard to build multifamily housing here? There isn’t a single culprit, but a big one is the city’s zoning laws. As of 2023, 41 percent of Chicago’s land was zoned for single-family residential, according to the Metropolitan Planning Council, a nonprofit policy group. A change to allow more units requires rezoning approval, a multistep process that includes a review by the Department of Planning and Development, a public meeting, and zoning committee approval before a full City Council vote. Then there’s aldermanic prerogative, the unwritten but prevalent practice of granting alderpersons final say over decisions in theirs wards, including zoning changes.

* Bloomberg | Lyft Urges Chicago Riders to Ask City Hall to Reject New Tax: “The Chicago City Council is considering another tax on rideshare,” according to an email Lyft sent to Chicago riders on Thursday. “If passed, riders like you may face price increases. On top of high costs of living and inflation, this is the last thing riders in Chicago need.” A spokeswoman for the city’s budget department, LaKesha Gage-Woodard, declined to comment on the proposed ordinance or Lyft’s stance, given the city is in the midst of budget negotiations.

* WBEZ | Axing a guaranteed income program to fill the city’s budget hole will cost Chicago long-term, advocates say: As the mayor’s administration works toward a budget deal, about $30 million in COVID-19 relief funds set aside for the Chicago Empowerment Fund is on the chopping block. A coalition of formerly incarcerated residents, immigrants and advocates urged the mayor and City Council members to keep the guaranteed income program in the budget at a City Hall news conference. “Shame, shame, shame on the City Council; shame on our mayor,” said Richard Wallace, executive director of Equity and Transformation (EAT), a group focused on helping returning citizens on the West Side. “We got commitment from the city that this pilot was going to be in the budget in 2025 and for us to find out that this program is slowly but surely getting pushed out, it was something that we could not sleep with.”

* Sun-Times | David Perry, urban planner with a passion for strengthening Chicago neighborhoods, dies at 82: David Perry, a longtime urban planner and Chicago professor who focused on strengthening cities and making urban spaces serve residents, has died at age 82. He died Dec. 2 at home following a long illness, his family said. Mr. Perry was the director of the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois Chicago for nearly 12 years. He was also an urban planning and policy professor at UIC and served as associate chancellor for the Great Cities Commitment. He retired from the university in 2018.

* Block Club | North Side Businesses Struggle Amid Burglary Surge: ‘How Is This Sustainable?’: The Oct. 17 break-in at 2D was the third in 10 months, the couple said. The employee who alerted them — a 19-year-old recent transplant to Chicago, already traumatized from previous break-ins — later quit. That experience, and those early-morning phone calls, have become common for restaurant owners across the city, especially in commercially dense North Side neighborhoods where popular restaurants and bars abound — and burglaries have spiked this year. The stream of news reports and stories from business owners about repeated break-ins has yet to slow down, leaving many frustrated, tired and, in the words of one veteran restaurateur, “numb.”

* Block Club | How Former Bull Joakim Noah Is Building Community — And Preventing Violence — Through Basketball: Basketball has allowed former Chicago Bulls star Joakim Noah to travel the world and compete at the highest level while giving back. But it is his time in Chicago — and the connections he made in the city — that have most informed his charitable work in violence prevention. Noah’s One City Basketball League hosted its third championship tournament Saturday at Wendell Phillips Academy High School, 244 E. Pershing Road. The league, composed of boys and young men ages 16-25, promotes violence prevention and conflict resolution. It also includes programs to develop life skills such as financial literacy and career readiness. Players are paid $50 per game.

* Block Club | Shedd Aquarium’s Wonder Of Water Replaces 53-Year-Old Exhibit — And Gives Lake Life Some Love: Shedd Aquarium’s newest exhibit, “Wonder of Water,” opens to the public Tuesday, replacing the long-running Caribbean Reef exhibit in the museum’s historic rotunda. When the aquarium opened in 1930, the rotunda featured a swamp ecosystem exhibit. In 1971, it was updated to the Caribbean Reef, showcasing tropical fish, stingrays and sharks. Wonder of Water, the latest iteration, includes two massive, 28,110-gallon tanks featuring saltwater and freshwater ecosystems, uniting the parallel worlds for side-by-side discovery.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Jim Dodge to stay on ballot as challenger to Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau after objection pulled: Jim Dodge will remain on the ballot as candidate for Orland Park village president against incumbent Keith Pekau after an objection to his nominating papers was withdrawn Monday. Dodge said he plans a lawsuit to recoup legal expenses he incurred defending the challenge. John Hartmann filed a challenge to Dodge’s nominating petitions to challenge Pekau, claiming paperwork by Dodge, a former village trustee, is confusing as to whether he’s running for mayor or village president, although the terms are often using interchangeably.

* Daily Herald | ‘A completely different look’: $4 million streetscape improvement planned for downtown Lake Zurich: Over the last two years, the village has been replacing old water mains, sanitary sewers and other structures in the area and will be moving above ground as the next focus in the Main Street corridor. As planned, Main Street from Lake to Church streets will be rebuilt as part of a streetscape project to include new landscaping, parking, sidewalks, crosswalks, seating and enhanced signage.

* Shaw Local | Fluoride in the water: Some on McHenry City Council question its presence in city system: “It seems like a hindrance to everybody involved,” Koch added. “I don’t know exactly the reasons … drinking this fluoridated water, breaking down of your immune system. I want to get rid of it,” [Alderman Michael Koch] said. Koch may to be referring to another study from the journal Frontiers in Immunology and found on the National Institute of Health’s National Library of Medicine Website. That study states: “Excessive fluoride intake in water may induce immunosuppression, decreasing the number of immune cells and damaging the immune function of the thymus.” That study refers to levels in excess of 2.4 mg for children 8 to 16 years that it said “may lead to … adverse health effects. Those levels are notably higher than what’s in the local water systems.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County has almost 10K lead water pipes; ‘It’s a known toxin’: While Lake County Public Works’ water system is almost entirely lead-free, there are more than 9,800 reported lead service lines in the county, according to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Catherine Game is executive director of the Brushwood Center, an environmental justice and health equity nonprofit. Last year, Game said the group released a report on Lake County looking at the intersection of environmental health and social determinants of health. Communities have been impacted by a “kind of legacy of pollution and lead pipes,” she said.

*** Downstate ***

* Press Release | Illinois researchers to kick off new phase of program to explore space-based manufacturing: What is being billed as the most exciting phase of a space manufacturing project called Mission Illinois is set to kick off this month. The project is currently gearing up to send a specialized construction apparatus to the International Space Station to demonstrate space-based or on-orbit manufacturing during the summer of 2026. The mission is backed by four and a half years of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency-funded research in space materials, manufacturing and structural design at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

* SJ-R | ‘A heart of gold’: Clyde Bunch, who served on the county board for 46 years, dead at 88: Clyde Bunch, who was first elected to the Sangamon County Board in 1978 and was recognized as the longest-serving county board member in Illinois, died at Bridge Care Suites in Springfield on Dec. 3. He was 88. Bunch was one of eight Democrats to serve on the 29-member board. He represented District 21, which encompasses the south-central part of Springfield.

* WGIL | Meet Kristi Mindrup, the new and first female president of Western Illinois University: Mindrup has served as WIU’s interim president since April 2024. Prior to that, she served as the Vice President for Quad Cities Campus Operations. Mindrup brings 27 years of experience in higher education, focused on organizational leadership, strategic planning, academic affairs, student services program and partnership development, inclusive campus environments and campus operations. Mindrup also provided leadership for the planning and establishment of the WIU Quad Cities Riverfront Campus in Moline.

* BND | Beyond mayoral challenge, three other Belleville city races will be competitive: Four races for Belleville city offices will be competitive in the consolidated election on April 1, 2025. Mayor Patty Gregory is being challenged by City Clerk Jenny Meyer, who announced her candidacy in late August. In early September, Gregory confirmed her intention to seek a second term. Teacher and Ward 5 Alderwoman Shelly Schaefer will compete for the vacated city clerk’s position against newly elected St. Clair County Board of Review member Irma Golliday.

* PJ Star | Small-town bond between an Illinois football player and injured boy near Peoria: Wettstein was 14 when he suffered an all-terrain vehicle accident on on Aug. 25, 2024, leaving him hospitalized with head injuries. He has endured multiple surgeries and traveled to Chicago for therapy in what has been an ongoing long road to recovery. […] The 6-foot-1, 215-pound Duley arrived at Hank Wettstein’s house and presented him with another No. 31 jersey and a card signed by the Illini team. And he gave him the gift of time together.

*** National ***

* NYT | Most Rural Hospitals Have Closed Their Maternity Wards, Study Finds: Over 500 hospitals have closed their labor and delivery departments since 2010, according to a large new study, leaving most rural hospitals and more than a third of urban hospitals without obstetric care. Those closures, the study found, were slightly offset by the opening of new units in about 130 hospitals. Even so, the share of hospitals without maternity wards increased every year, according to the study, published on Wednesday in JAMA, a prominent medical journal. Maternal deaths remained persistently high over that period, spiking during the pandemic.

* OPB | AI slop is already invading Oregon’s local journalism: The Ashland Daily Tidings — established as a newspaper in 1876 — ceased operations in 2023, but if you were a local reader, you may not have known. Almost as soon as it closed, a website for the Tidings reemerged, boasting a team of eight reporters, Minihane included, who cranked out densely reported stories every few days. And those reporters were covering a lot more than local news. They dove into Oregon’s fentanyl crisis (“Measure 110 might be in for a repeal”), homelessness in Eugene (“All In Lane County homeless program delivers impressive results”), and the food scene in Portland (“The fourth best burger in the U.S. is in Portland”) — essentially any issue that might draw attention from Oregonians. The reality was that none of the people allegedly working for the Ashland Daily Tidings existed, or at least were who they claimed to be. The bylines listed on Daily Tidings articles were put there by scammers using artificial intelligence, and in some cases stolen identities, to dupe local readers.

* Semafor | Dem governors keep their powder dry on Trump at Governors Association meeting: Most of them gathered in Beverly Hills for the Democratic Governors Association’s post-election meeting; none were ready to join Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Colorado’s Jared Polis’ promised coalition against the threat of “autocracy.” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy told Semafor he congratulated Donald Trump after the election and “invited him to cut the ribbon” on a project he approved that got built in the Biden administration.

  4 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Dec 9, 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 Richard, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Caitlin Anderson

She is one of 4 or 5 current LC staffers with a Masters. Has to be one of the most organized staffers on the 2nd floor. Because she needs to be with all her duties. These include 4 members that worked her with their combined 70 plus bills, all of which Caitlin stayed on top of. She is the support staffer for the HDem Womens Caucus which is the largest sub-caucus. And she’s in charge of team tasked with Identifying, producing materials for, and distributing information on all events and holidays taking place through the state…. to all 78 district offices….on a monthly basis.

Utmost-honorable mention goes to our 2023 winner Liz Moody.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Breeann Steinacher

Bree manages an incredibly busy Ryan Spain, including his scheduling both in and out of Springfield. She is incredibly responsive, never fails to return a call or email, and is always super kind even when she’s telling you no. She is a fantastic part of the HGOP LA Team.

Congratulations!

* On to today’s categories

    Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member

    Best Republican State Senate Staff Member

Nominees can be from the government or the political sides. Please try to nominate in both categories if you can, and don’t forget to explain your nominations or they won’t count.

* We’ve now raised the money to purchase 663 Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks! But the need is far greater than that. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois helps care for more than 2,500 foster children.

These kids have all been going through a lot at no fault of their own. You don’t become a foster child if you’re living a great life, after all. So, your donation could help brighten the lives of kids who could really use a lift.

Please, click here. Thanks so very much!

  29 Comments      


Roundup: Budzinski testifies about the ‘Sphinx’

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lobbyist Nancy Kimme was briefly back on the witness stand to conclude her testimony

* Tribune

The jury in Michael Madigan’s corruption trial has heard many nicknames given to the powerful Democratic House Speaker, from the obvious, like “MJM” or “Mr. Speaker,” to the more esoteric such as “Himself” and “our Friend.” […]

[Sphinx] was the moniker applied to Madigan by some members of JB Pritzker’s team after Pritzker’s election in 2018, according to U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski, who was a top Pritzker aide before her election to Congress in 2022.

The nickname, a reference to the mythical figure of Egyptian pharaohs typically used to convey strength and ferocity, was used in an email shown during Budzinski’s testimony referencing a job recommendation from Madigan for Pritzker’s new administration.

“Attached is the most recent Sphinx list of recommendations ahead of your meeting today,” read the Dec. 4, 2018, email, which was sent from Budzinski to Pritzker and his soon-to-be chief of staff, Anne Caprara. “We have noted these in our process and they are coming thru our portal.”

* Sun-Times

“We need to call him at least,” Budzinski told people in charge of personnel. “The Speaker raised with JB yesterday.”

Budzinski testified that she felt it important to be “responsive” to Madigan’s recommendations, but that it wasn’t necessary to “act” on them. And when asked if anyone was appointed based on a private payment or benefit to Madigan, she told a prosecutor “absolutely not.”

“Because that would be wrong and we have a process, we would never do that,” Budzinski said. […]

Testimony in the trial ended early Monday, after Budzinski left the stand, due to services for 7th Circuit Judge Joel Flaum, who died Wednesday. Prosecutors are nearing the end of their case against Madigan but told U.S. District Judge John Blakey they now expect to rest early next week.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner


* Center Square

On cross-examination, defense attorneys took Budzinski through the Sphinx list, pointing out cases where Madigan’s recommendations didn’t get the jobs he had requested. The Sphinx list generally had recommendations from Madigan and Pritzker. Budzinski also said she didn’t feel required to hire Madigan’s recommendations and wasn’t worried about backlash if she failed to hire one of Madigan’s picks.

She also said she only hired people who were qualified.

* Courthouse News reporter Dave Byrnes

* More…

    * State Week | Prosecutors move closer to wrapping up their case against Madigan: After weeks of testimony and recorded conversations, prosecutors have indicated they are inching toward resting in the case against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and his longtime friend and advisor, Mike McClain. The court action has put a spotlight on how Madigan conducted business in the role he held for so long. We get an update on the case so far.

  10 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Legislative news

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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It’s just a bill

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Anti-Defamation League…

Leading civil rights groups will hold a news conference TOMORROW, Monday, December 9 at 9:00 AM to discuss a dramatic rise in hate crimes in Illinois and steps needed to protect at-risk communities. The news conference will be held at the headquarters of the Chicago Urban League.

The civil rights groups will call on the Illinois State House of Representatives to pass SB 3552/HB 5368 during January’s Lame Duck Legislative Session. The bill requires all law enforcement in Illinois to receive on-going training and education on state and federal hate crimes laws and how to identify, report, and respond to bias-motivated criminal activity.

SB 3552/HB 5368 is modeled after a 2023 recommendation from the Governor’s Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes, which noted: “A mandate of comprehensive basic and in-service hate crimes training… will help victims of hate crimes and incidents receive appropriate responses, bridge data and investigatory gaps, and develop trust between communities and law enforcement agencies.”

SB 3552 unanimously passed both the Illinois State Senate and the House committee of jurisdiction prior to the General Assembly recessing in June. Passage by the full House of Representatives during January’s Lame Duck Legislative Session is the only remaining legislative step to send the bill to Governor Pritzker for his signature and increase safety among Illinois’ most vulnerable communities. Illinois would become the 15th state in the country to require law enforcement in the state to receive hate crimes training and education.

The FBI’s most recent hate crimes data shows a 22-year high in the number of hate crimes reported across the United States and a 362% increase in the number of hate crimes reported in Illinois from 2019 (70 hate crimes reported) to 2023 (324 hate crimes reported).

* From the press conference

Regional Director of the Midwest ADL David Goldenberg: [The Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board] helped us draft this bill, so the state standard Training Board. Brendan Kelly, who’s the director of the Illinois State Police, serves on the [Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes] with myself and [Jim Bennett]. He has been very involved and supportive of this. It’s often law enforcement usually pushes back against more training. They’re actually embracing this one, and they’re saying, we need it as a policy. They typically don’t endorse a bill, but they filed a slip of no opposition this time.

You can watch the full press conference here.

* From SB3552

The [General and the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board] shall develop or approve a course to assist law enforcement officers in identifying, responding to, and reporting crimes committed in whole or in substantial part because of the victim’s or another’s actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, national origin, or disability, or because of the victim’s actual or perceived association with another person or group of a certain actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, national origin, or disability. Each course must include instruction to help officers distinguish bias crimes from other crimes, to help officers in understanding and assisting victims of these crimes, and to ensure that bias crimes will be accurately reported. The Board must, within a reasonable amount of time, update this course to conform with national trends and best practices.

* Related…

  15 Comments      


How Madigan is alleged to have corruptly used the legislature to pad his own pockets

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Whenever someone assures you that another person you’re both dealing with “understands” the “quid pro quo,” you’d be wise to run away as fast as you can and never look back.

But that’s exactly how then-Ald. Daniel Solis assured then-House Speaker Michael Madigan in late June of 2017 that their mark — the developers of a West Loop apartment complex — would eventually be convinced to retain Madigan’s property tax appeals law firm.

Solis chaired the powerful Zoning Committee, so the developers had to come through him, and Solis said they would understand the game: The developers hire Madigan’s law firm and their zoning changes would be approved.

“I think they understand how this works,” Solis told Madigan. “The quid pro quo.”

Solis admitted on the stand during Madigan’s corruption trial that what he said to Madigan was “dumb.”

Madigan didn’t know that the federal government was recording all his conversations with Solis. So, what was dumb about what Solis said is that Madigan might’ve immediately cut all ties to Solis, and Solis’ federal handlers would’ve been furious that he let the target get away.

Turns out, the real dummy was Madigan.

Madigan didn’t walk away. Instead, he kept going back to Solis, only gently admonishing him weeks later by telling Solis not to say the quiet part out loud and instructing him in the polite way of conducting business.

And then a few months later, while talking about another real estate deal, Solis asked whether the West Loop developers had signed on with Madigan’s firm. Madigan didn’t say, but appeared to give Solis the go-ahead to process their zoning request.

“You were contemplating processing something,” Madigan said. “You should go ahead and process that.”

The feds are also trying to prove that Madigan’s consigliere, longtime lobbyist and fellow defendant Mike McClain, wasn’t just freelancing without Madigan’s approval when it came to all the demands McClain was making of Commonwealth Edison.

The trial so far has given the feds big wins on that point. Madigan and Solis were in discussions about the state transferring a Chinatown parking lot to the City of Chicago so that it could be developed into a hotel, and Madigan could get the property tax business. So, he told Solis to reach out to McClain.

McClain would give the developer “some ideas about how to go about it.”

A couple of months later, Solis again brought up the Chinatown parcel to Madigan. “Let me get back into it and, and, um, see if there’s some way to find somebody that can talk to IDOT. That, that’s where the decision’s going to be made,” Madigan said.

“I’m trying to figure out a way to approach it,” Madigan later told Solis about the parcel. He appeared to be calculating how he could pass a bill to benefit his law firm without leaving any overt fingerprints.

Madigan eventually told Solis that one of the Chinatown developers would soon be receiving a call from McClain.

The effort to transfer the property extended into the spring of 2018 for several reasons, most importantly opposition from local legislators.

In March of 2018, Madigan told Solis that maybe McClain should talk to the senator who was putting a brick on the land transfer, and then explained to Solis at length how this particular legislation could shorten the time it would take to transfer the property to the city.

From there, jurors heard recordings about the intricacies of passing the bill, including who was blocking it. McClain is heard on a recording briefing Madigan about which legislators were opposing the bill and about how the then-secretary of transportation was “getting squeamish” about it.

Also in March, Solis told Madigan that if Madigan could “take care of that [Chinatown] matter in May,” during the end of spring session, “I’m confident they’ll appreciate it and … sign you up on after May.” Madigan didn’t run away then, either.

But the bill eventually died and a possible payday was missed.

On May 28, 2018, a few days before the scheduled end of spring session when there was still hope the bill would advance, McClain called a member of Madigan’s House staff to tell them about the property tax transfer bill, “that deals with a developer of [Madigan’s].” McClain told the staffer: “He wants to make sure he votes ‘present.’”

In other words, if the feds didn’t have Madigan, McClain and Solis on numerous recordings, Madigan could’ve officially covered his rear by voting “present” on a bill that would’ve potentially padded his pockets and that he’d allegedly been actively pushing behind the scenes for months on end.

And it continued from there.

  27 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Start your week with kindness by donating to LSSI’s Christmas toy drive and bringing joy to a child in need.

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Kick off your week with compassion—support LSSI’s Christmas toy drive and help make the season bright for kids in need. Click here to donate!

* ICYMI: State anti-book-ban law leads some school districts to forsake grants to maintain local control. Tribune

    - Around 700 school districts regularly applied for state library grant funding in the last two years. Since the law took effect on Jan. 1, about 40 elementary and high school districts opted not to seek the funding from the secretary of state’s office.

    - The state library grants are not large — about $850 for small districts. No district that opted out of applying for funding this year received more than $4,000 in grant money during the last fiscal year, according to state records.

    - Joe Salmieri, superintendent of the Laraway Community Consolidated School District 70C in the Joliet area, said he didn’t want to lose autonomy over his school or library policies by applying for a grant.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* QC Online | See where Illinois cities stand on keeping 1% grocery tax cut by state: East Moline is the first city, voting at the City Council meeting on Nov. 4 to implement its own 1% tax when the state tax expires in 2026. First Ward Alderperson Olivia Dorothy was the only councilmember to oppose the measure, saying at the meeting that taxes on groceries are regressive and hit lower-income residents harder.

* IPM | Illinois law requires transparency when police kill people. Many cases stay in the dark: In most of Illinois’ largest counties — including Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane, McHenry, Winnebago, Champaign, Sangamon, Peoria, McLean, Rock Island, and Kendall — prosecutors generally seem to comply with the law, releasing reports when they decide not to charge an officer. In fact, of the 15 largest counties in Illinois, just three elected prosecutors appear to fail to meet this requirement: Will County State’s Attorney Jim Glasgow, Madison County State’s Attorney Thomas Haine and St. Clair County State’s Attorney James Gomric.

* Daily Herald | How Illinois generated $2 billion in tax revenue from gamblers in the last fiscal year: The most recent “Wagering in Illinois” update from the Illinois legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability also shows gambling tax revenue crossed the $2 billion threshold for the first time in 2024. The $96 million increase in gambling tax revenue from the previous year represents a 4.8% spike, according to the report. The state’s fiscal year ended in June.

*** Statehouse News ***

* ABC Chicago | Illinois Legislative Black Caucus holding policy summit: The Illinois Legislative Black Caucus will hold its most critical policy summit in Chicago this week. It’s happening as the future of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion programs and the Department of Education face concerns and challenges with the pending Trump Administration.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Ex-Rep. Edward Acevedo granted immunity, compelled to testify in Madigan corruption trial: Former state Rep. Edward Acevedo’s name has been thrown around five separate federal criminal trials in recent years involving the sweeping corruption probe of ex-House Speaker Michael Madigan. But Acevedo, 61, a Chicago Democrat and onetime member of Madigan’s leadership team, has never been called to testify — until now. Prosecutors late Thursday filed a motion in U.S. District Court saying they intend to call Acevedo as a witness in Madigan’s ongoing corruption trial, and are seeking permission of the chief judge to compel his testimony if he invokes his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination as expected.

* State Week | Prosecutors move closer to wrapping up their case against Madigan: After weeks of testimony and recorded conversations, prosecutors have indicated they are inching toward resting in the case against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and his longtime friend and advisor, Mike McClain. The court action has put a spotlight on how Madigan conducted business in the role he held for so long. We get an update on the case so far.

*** Statewide ***

* Journal-Topics | Del Mar To Step Down Next Year As State GOP Co-Chair To Seek Statewide Office: Palatine Township Republican Committeeman Aaron Del Mar, who also serves as co-chair of the Illinois Republican Party, plans to explore a run for a statewide office and will step down as state party co-chair in January or February, the Journal & Topics has learned. Del Mar said he sent what was to be a private email to party Chair Kathy Salvi informing her of his intention, so she would have time to find a new person to take his place. Del Mar said Salvi then sent an email to all members of the Illinois Republican State Central Committee, informing them of his pending departure.

* Crain’s | New report shows Illinois ranks near bottom for wage gains: Illinois employees who have been in their jobs for at least 12 months experienced a 4.5% increase in wages from November 2023 to November 2024, according to data from ADP Pay Insights. This growth was below the national average of 4.8%; Illinois ranked 44th in the country for wage increases. The median salary in the state was $56,700, below the national average of $59,200, the report found.

* Tribune | Imperiled wetlands save the Midwest billions in flood damage costs, study shows, but they’re disappearing: By absorbing water from storms and flooding, wetlands can effectively reduce the risks and destructive effects of these disasters, which are intensifying and becoming more frequent because of a changing climate. Previous research estimated that 1 acre of lost wetland can cost $745 in annual flood damage to residential properties, an amount that taxpayers fund through local, state or federal assistance programs.

* WGEM | Illinois seeking high schools for student-led initiative to prevent targeted violence and hate: Known as Illinois Invent2Prevent, it’s a partnership between the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and Office of Homeland Security (IEMA-OHS), Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and EdVenture Partners. The program is based off a similar program at the federal level run by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Students in participating schools will be tasked with designing and implementing peer-developed projects, tools and strategies to combat targeted violence and hate according IEMA-OHS.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Study shows ‘promising’ results from Chicago’s mental health responder pilot: The research, conducted by UChicago’s Health Lab, concluded the city’s “ambitious” Crisis Assistance Response & Engagement, or CARE, program showed “promising” results in providing enhanced interventions for mental and behavioral health issues — both high- and low-risk situations — and opioid overdose or substance use-related incidents.

* Block Club | City Clears Humboldt Park Tent Encampment, Vows Enforcement Moving Forward: The closure is part of a city plan that’s been in the works since the summer, said Sendy Soto, the city’s first chief homelessness officer. City officials offered all of the tent residents housing during the Department of Family and Support Services’ accelerated moving event in September, which secured 63 apartments for households living in the park. Those who didn’t get housing were offered shelter beds. On Friday, some said they missed out on housing in September because they weren’t there at the time or didn’t have IDs or documents the city needed.

* Bond Buyer | S&P releases report warning Chicago Board of Education: S&P Global Ratings released a report this week warning that the credit trajectory of the Chicago Board of Education will hinge on the outcome of current contract negotiations with the Chicago Teachers Union and the willingness of the CTU and Mayor Brandon Johnson to cut expenditures at Chicago Public Schools.

* Chicago Reader | Chicago’s first school board election happened. What’s next?: “We should have more Latino parents on the board, more Black parents, at least one Asian parent,” observed Martinez de Ferrer, who also serves on the Kids First Elected School Board Task Force. Regardless of who Johnson chooses, his 11 appointees plus the four CTU-backed elected board members theoretically equal a supermajority on the incoming board for the mayor and his close union ally. But in practice, matters may be more complicated. “Even if there is a majority interest, it’s going to be harder to get there than anybody can assume at this point,” District 2 winner Ebony DeBerry, who was endorsed by the teachers union, told WBEZ’s Reset.

* Edward Keegan | Are Chicago’s latest big projects too big to succeed?: One critical way to evaluate these proposals is a simple one: Are any of these proposed neighborhoods comparable to those that have evolved from Chicago’s basic street and density patterns? And the answer is no. While density of the city’s fabric does vary, two- to three-story-high structures dominate, accommodating residential and commercial construction with aplomb. At its most essential, Chicago’s basic form is simplicity: city blocks subdivided into 25-by-125-foot lots with a service alley behind each property. And while Chicago is rightly considered the birthplace of the skyscraper, most neighborhoods don’t have, or need, many buildings of great height.

* Tribune | ‘Long overdue’: Dick Allen, the 1972 American League MVP for the Chicago White Sox, is elected to the Hall of Fame: The celebration started the moment National Baseball Hall of Fame President Josh Rawitch said “1963 to 1977” as he began to unveil the results of the classic baseball era committee voting on television. Richard Allen Jr. jumped out of his seat and was swallowed in a sea of hugs. His father, the late Dick Allen, had just been elected into the Hall of Fame. “I wanted to hear it, I wanted to see it,” Allen said at a watch party at the Hilton Anatole, where the MLB winter meetings are taking place. “We saw it, just so much to take in.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Electoral Board rules Mayor Thaddeus Jones can be on ballot while state representative; residency challenge continued: Calumet City Clerk Nyota Figgs’ effort to prevent Mayor Thaddeus Jones from reelection was undercut Friday after the city’s Election Board dismissed her claim that he cannot serve as both mayor and as an Illinois state representative. Figgs said she believes that based on a state Supreme Court ruling on Jones’ eligibility to run in 2021, a referendum not certified until after the election would disqualify him from holding top position in Calumet City government.

* Daily Herald | ‘Starved for so long’: Pace wants riders to comment on service revamp, $150 million boost: Pace buses every 20 minutes? Pace buses in every town? Or a hybrid system? It’s in your hands, officials say. As Pace, Metra and the CTA face a looming $771 million shortfall in 2026, the suburban bus service is seizing on the crisis by proposing a Revision initiative. “This is really the first time in my career that we’ve put together a plan that is totally revamping our entire system — not just one piece of it, but the entire system,” said Executive Director Melinda Metzger, who has worked at Pace for 40 years.

* ABC | Labor Department investigating migrant child labor claims at HelloFresh: The U.S. Department of Labor is investigating HelloFresh, the popular meal kit service company, over allegations that migrant children were working at its cooking and packaging facility in [Aurora,] Illinois as recently as this summer, ABC News has learned. At least six teenagers, at least some of whom migrated from Guatemala, were found working night shifts at the facility, said Cristobal Cavazos, the executive director for Immigrant Solidarity, an immigrant rights advocacy group that helped report the matter to federal regulators.

* Daily Herald | Call for action after 2 kids, grandmother hit by vehicle outside Wheeling school: A crash that injured three pedestrians, including two children, during morning drop-off Friday at London Middle School in Wheeling is the latest example of unsafe driving by adults on campus, a school leader said Sunday. “Adults need to start being more conscious of the safety of our students that are coming to and from school, point blank,” said Michael Connolly, superintendent of Wheeling Township Elementary School District 21.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Supreme Court denies emergency motion to move Grayson pre-trial release hearing: An emergency motion filed by the Office of the State Appellate Defender asking for a supervisory order directing the Fourth District Appellate Court remand the hearing of a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with the July 6 murder of Sonya Massey back to the circuit court was denied by the Illinois Supreme Court.

* WCIA | Urbana brewery gives people a taste of a German Christmas: Riggs Beer Company is offering a little taste of Germany in Central Illinois. The brewery is hosting their annual German Christmas Market, where food, drink and gift vendors are ready to celebrate the holiday. People can warm up with crepes, bratwurst and hot mulled wine.

* Rockford Register Star | When is Illinois vs South Carolina bowl game? Citrus Bowl schedule, date: The Fighting Illini will play the South Carolina Gamecocks in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve in Orlando, Florida, game officials announced Sunday afternoon. The Illini finished the season 9-3 and are the Big Ten Conference’s highest-ranked team not in the College Football Playoff. They meet the South Carolina (9-3), who finished in a logjam at fourth place in the SEC and left out of the 12-team CFP along with other SEC teams Alabama and Ole Miss.

*** National ***

* Sun-Times | Sen. Dick Durbin will decide if he will seek another term after the first of the year: During an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” host Jake Tapper asked Durbin if he has “decided if you’re going to run for reelection.” Durbin replied, “I’ll be making an announcement after the first of the year.” That’s about what Durbin has been saying for months. But now that day is soon coming.

* Fast Company | Why 2023 was the year of the e-bike and not the self-driving car: All signs indicate that a city full of e-bikes would be safer, healthier, cleaner, and less congested than one dominated by cars—no matter how they are driven. And e-bikes really are car replacers: The addition of a battery can enable even mobility-constrained cyclists to conquer hills, haul packages, or beat the heat. Better yet, families can save tens of thousands of dollars by using an e-bike in lieu of a second or third car. And lest we forget: E-bikes are fun.

* WGN | Forever chemicals tainting food supply, destroying American farmers: Maine’s PFAS threshold for drinking water is 20 parts per trillion. Nordell says their soil also tested high. He recalls the terror of that time: “We were in free fall, do we have a business? Do we have a home here?” Then they had their blood tested for forever chemicals. Nordell says his and his wife’s blood levels are higher than chemical manufacturer employees who worked in PFAS factories.

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

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Dec 9, 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. 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, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised just over $15,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Weekend update

Saturday, Dec 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can continue voting on our Golden Horseshoe Award until we announce the winner sometime Monday. We’ll be able to see your comments this weekend even if others cannot. Click here.

And, please, if you get a moment, click here and donate to our annual Lutheran Social Services of Illinois Christmas Present Drive. So far, we’ve raised enough to buy presents for almost 600 foster kids. Thanks!

* Nat King Cole will play us out

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Friday, Dec 6, 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 Art, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* When you’re out holiday shopping this weekend, don’t forget about our LSSI Christmas toy drive. We’re far from our goal of giving a gift to every foster child. So please, help them out and click here to donate.

* Crain’s

The Department of Energy is racing against the clock to finalize a $335 million grant to help Stellantis overhaul its auto plant in Belvidere.

The project, which is expected to cost about $5 billion and result in 4,000 jobs, has been in limbo since it was announced a year ago as part of a new contract with the United Auto Workers.

The Department of Energy announced the Belvidere grant in July, but the agreement hasn’t been finalized. The department is negotiating with Stellantis to wrap up the agreement by the end of year, sources briefed on the matter say.

Once the agreement is finalized and funds are deemed “obligated,” it makes the money much harder to rescind. Because of federal budgeting rules, if the funds were canceled after being obligated, they wouldn’t count toward savings for future budgets.

* SJ-R

The State Appellate Defender Friday morning filed an emergency motion with the Illinois Supreme Court asking for a supervisory order directing the Fourth District Appellate Court remand the hearing of a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with murder back to the circuit court.

Friday’s request comes with directions that the lower court “set the case for a hearing to determine the least restrictive conditions of (Grayson’s) pre-trial release.”

The 30-year-old Sean P. Grayson is accused in the July 6 fatal shooting of Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old Black woman and mother of two children, who had called 911 about a possible prowler around her home in an unincorporated Springfield neighborhood. […]

Sangamon County State’s Attorney John Milhiser, in asking the Supreme Court asking it take up the appellate court decision, said in a news release that Grayson had demonstrated that he “cannot comply with conditions and is a danger to the community.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Block Club | Promontory Point’s Iconic Limestone Should Be Preserved, State Senate Says: The chamber unanimously passed a resolution during its veto session last month to “support the legitimate community preservation plan for Promontory Point,” as federal and city agencies work to strengthen the lakefront park against wave and storm damage.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson pitches aldermen on yet another tax package as he tries to pass 2025 budget: With the budget process already weeks behind schedule, aldermen Friday were briefed on a series of new taxes — and about $90.2 million in proposed cuts — in the hopes of reaching the at least 26 votes the mayor needs to push through a 2025 package. Under the proposal, the property tax hike would be cut to $68.5 million, according to sources present at the Friday morning briefing. To help make up the difference, the city would raise $8.1 million by changing the existing surcharge on rideshare trips downtown.

* Crain’s | Opponents rally against cuts to basic guaranteed income in Johnson budget talks: Equity and Transformation, or EAT, a nonprofit focused on helping formerly incarcerated residents, and the Illinois Coalition of Immigrant & Refugee Rights held a press conference inside City Hall this morning to emphasize the importance of basic guaranteed income, saying such programs help many people get themselves out of financial distress.

* Crain’s | Most crime in Chicago is exaggerated. But theft really is that bad.: The numbers are up across the board. The Chicago Police Department tracks burglary and theft separately. The former is defined as “the unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony or theft, or an attempt to do so.” The latter is “the unlawful taking or attempted taking of property or articles (valued at $500 or more) without the use of force, violence, or fraud.” CPD has already tracked more burglaries this year than last. The city is on pace to clock 7,780 reports by year’s end, up from 6,904 in 2023. Theft reports for 2024 currently total 18,771, also on pace to exceed last year by about 7%.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s Chan Zuckerberg Biohub hits a milestone: Its first big research rollout: Researchers in Chicago developed tiny sensors that measure proteins that indicate inflammation. It’s similar to the idea behind continuous glucose monitors, which help diabetes patients track their blood sugar. Glucose monitors focus on small molecules. Other diseases, however, are marked by proteins, which are large molecules that present different challenges and generally are monitored in one-off tests on blood or urine samples.

* Block Club | ‘unBlocked Englewood’ Film Explores Decades Of Unfair Housing Practices On The South Side: The documentary “unBlocked Englewood,” chronicling Johnson’s collaborative work to help repair homes on Englewood’s 65th and Aberdeen streets, will premiere 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at Kennedy-King College, 740 W. 63rd St. Tickets for the event are currently sold out, but some may available on a first-come, first served basis at the door.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Fire at Elgin homeless encampment spurs donation drives by local businesses: As word of the fire spread on social media Wednesday, several local restaurants announced they would be collecting donations for residents of the encampment. […] Elaine Paul of Paul’s Family Restaurant said they have been collecting supplies for the homeless for the past few months. But as word of the fire got out, they received a huge outpouring of donations Wednesday night and Thursday morning.

* Daily Herald | Why two Des Plaines candidates could be bumped from 2025 ballot: A special electoral board will meet Saturday to discuss the objections to Brian Kowalkowski’s and Margaret Chlebek’s bids in the 1st Ward, which is on the city’s northeast side. A third candidate for the 1st Ward seat, current City Clerk Jessica Mastalski, filed separate objections against Kowalkowski’s and Chlebek’s petitions. Kowalkowski’s paperwork faces an additional challenge from current 1st Ward Alderman Mark Lysakowski.

* Tribune | Appeals court overturns conviction against former Northwestern professor accused in knife slaying of boyfriend: An Illinois appeals court on Friday overturned the murder conviction of a former Northwestern University professor who was convicted in the gruesome killing of his boyfriend, ruling that a Cook County judge unlawfully barred him access to his attorney during the trial. Wyndham Lathem, a microbiologist who was fired by the university, in 2022 was sentenced to 53 years in prison in the 2017 slaying of Trenton Cornell, Lathem’s 26-year-old boyfriend, a punishment that Judge Charles Burns at the time called an “extreme sentence” but for an “extreme crime.”

* Shaw Local | DeKalb Park District missed $1M-plus in property tax revenue from Meta data center since 2022, says exec: The 2.3 million-square-foot development was left off of the park district’s tax rolls for the 2022 and 2023 tax years as a taxable property, according to city documents. DeKalb city officials and taxing bodies have for years touted the data center – owned by the parent company of Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram – as a significant tax revenue generator, bringing in needed money to fund city services. The center went online in November 2023, investing more than $1 billion in the city, Meta representatives said.

* Daily Herald | Volo Museum debuts Homer Simpson’s car for 35th anniversary of iconic show: This one-of-a-kind exhibit is a fan-recreated version of Homer Simpson’s iconic pink car, “The Junkola.” The car will be on display only this month, offering fans of the show a unique photo opportunity filled with a decorated Christmas tree, life-size cutouts of the Simpsons family in festive holiday outfits, and of course, the famous vehicle.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Ford County Board facing Open Meetings Act complaint for secret votes: WCIA’s newspaper partners with the Ford County Chronicle said John Kraft filed a complaint with the Illinois Attorney General’s office for how the board elected its chairman and vice chairman. Kraft, who works for the Edgar County Watchdogs website, filed the complaint three days after a “ballot vote” at their meeting. Board members at that meeting handed secret ballots to the County Clerk & Recorder, who then read the results out loud.

* WSPY | Former CEO of Big Brothers Big Sister of Will and Grundy Counties Indicted: The former Chief Executive Officer of Big Brothers Big Sister of Will and Grundy Counties was indicted by a Will County grand jury on Tuesday. Theodore Brodeur, 55, of Shorewood was charged with Theft, a class two felony. The indictment alleges that Brodeur knowingly exerted unauthorized control over property of the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties organization, being ATM cards and used them to obtain cash in excess of $10,000.00 which was for his own personal gain.

* WCIA | Danville City Council votes ‘yes’ to approve 1% grocery tax rate: Earlier this week, the Danville City Council voted ‘yes’ to approve the proposed 1% grocery tax rate. Danville Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. said nothing has changed and the new element is that cities will rule if they’d like to implement the grocery tax instead of the state. Williams said each year they collect about $750,000. It’ll go towards new police vehicles and a new playground for Elmwood Park. But people like Alderman Ed Butler feel the money could’ve been used elsewhere.

* WCIA | Rochester library faces ethics complaint after allegedly advocating for failed tax rate referendum: The Rochester Public Library District asked voters last month with a binding referendum to increase the tax rate for approximately $8 million in construction plus an increase of $261,000 per year for operations. The library’s website said an average homeowner in the district would pay an additional $37 each month. […] Now, the Illinois chapter of the Americans for Prosperity filed 35 ethics complaints, alleging library workers and board members used their jobs to push residents to vote yes.

* TSPR | With increased social service needs, Galesburg Public Library to add safety coordinator: But Library Director Noelle Thompson said since moving to the new building, the staff is handling a much greater volume and depth of needs — and helping people find the resources they need falls under the library’s mission of being a center of information. “Information needs vary greatly person to person,” said Library Director Noelle Thompson. “So when somebody comes in saying, I need a book on this topic, or somebody comes in saying, I need to know what resources are available to me, our responsibility is to be able to provide information for those services.”

* STLPR | ‘Dramatic way to go’: Lightning likely killed mastodon found on Principia College campus: “That’s something that doesn’t happen every day,” said Andrew Martin, chair of the sociology and anthropology department at Principia. Martin has been teaching classes since the fall 2023 semester all focused on digging up the skeleton. After examining the remains, the professor and students believe a lightning strike likely killed the animal. “It’s kind of a dramatic way to go,” Martin said. “We’re still developing that. You’re piecing together parts of the story from the bits that you find in the ground.”

*** National ***

* Medill | In news deserts, Trump won in a landslide: While Trump’s national popular-vote margin was just under 1.5%, his margin in news deserts was massive. He won these counties by an average of 54 percentage points. In the few won by Harris, her margin was a comparatively slim 18 points, the analysis shows. The findings are based on results from 193 of the 206 counties Medill has identified as news deserts, in states where county-level election results are currently available. The third annual State of Local News report, released by Medill’s Local News Initiative in October, documented the continuing decline of local news across the country, as measured by the number of newspapers, circulation, frequency of publication, employment and readership.

* AP | TikTok’s future uncertain after appeals court rejects its bid to overturn possible US ban: The U.S. has said it’s concerned about TikTok collecting vast swaths of user data, including sensitive information on viewing habits, that could fall into the hands of the Chinese government through coercion. Officials have also warned the proprietary algorithm that fuels what users see on the app is vulnerable to manipulation by Chinese authorities, who can use it to shape content on the platform in a way that’s difficult to detect — a concern mirrored by the European Union on Friday as it scrutinizes the video-sharing app’s role in the Romanian elections.

* ABC | RFK Jr. asked Fresno County raw milk producer to apply as FDA advisor: McAfee owns RAW FARM in Fresno County and says Kennedy has been a long-time customer, who now wants him to help create standards for getting raw milk safely on store shelves across the country. “And then they called me back and confirmed that I actually had that application was submitted and told me thank you very much,” McAffee said. “It’s just a waiting game now to see if RFK is confirmed and whether the team for “make america healthy again” is confirmed and going forward.”

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

Friday, Dec 6, 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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UIC testing lab accused of providing flawed results in 1,600 cannabis DUI convictions

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ABC Chicago

After a months-long investigation, the ABC7 I-Team discovered some test results from a prominent Chicago lab used by prosecutors have been deemed unreliable and could be inaccurate.

The lab, University of Illinois Chicago Analytical Forensic Testing Laboratory, is accused of providing flawed test results in cases of driving-under the influence of marijuana, many of them resulting in motorists convicted and sent to jail, and there are allegations of a cover-up. […]

“The University of Illinois Chicago lab has been providing misleading testimony in court, and as a result of that, their accrediting agency decided to audit the lab and then began to find a series of, they call them, nonconformance or failure to follow scientific standards, which has now put about 1,600 cannabis DUI cases that they tested in jeopardy,” [criminal defense attorney Don Ramsell said]. […]

Emails and internal communications obtained by the I-Team revealed the lab acknowledged testing problems last March and waited until May to alert police departments and prosecutors of possible flawed results. […]

The University of Illinois Chicago has now stopped doing tests for marijuana in law enforcement cases.

Go read the rest.

* Meanwhile, from an Albuquerque, NM publication back in March

During an episode of the DOJ podcast, Justice Today, Frances Scott, a researcher for the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) Office of Investigative and Forensic Sciences, said the popular model for determining weed impairment by testing THC concentration is flawed in a number of major ways.

Scott said that scientists understand the effects and chemical interactions of alcohol consumption and determining intoxication based on the concentration of alcohol in the blood is “relatively easy.”

But with marijuana, there are too many complicating factors involved to find reliably universal THC markers for intoxication.

Scott points out that there’s a big difference in intoxication levels when someone consumes edibles compared to smoking flower. Smoking produces a high that quickly escalates to a peak and then quickly recedes. Edibles produce a high that gradually builds and gradually recedes over many hours.

Click here to listen to the podcast.

* More from the Shorenstein center on Media, Politics and Public Policy

Currently, the two most common methods used to measure THC concentration to identify impaired drivers are blood and saliva tests, although there’s ongoing debate about their reliability. […]

Setting a legal limit for marijuana-impaired driving has not been easy. Countries like Canada and some U.S. states have agreed upon a certain level of THC in blood, usually between 1 to 5 nanograms per milliliter. Still, some studies have found those limits to be weak indicators of cannabis-impaired driving.

In the U.S., five states — Ohio, Illinois, Montana, Washington and Nevada — have “per se laws,” which set a specific amount of THC in the driver’s blood as evidence of impaired driving, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. That limit ranges between 2 and 5 nanograms of THC per milliliter of blood. […]

Saliva tests can detect THC for 8 to 24 hours after use, but the tests are not perfect and can results in false positives, leading some scientists to argue against using them in randomly-selected drivers. […]

In a 2021 report, the U.S. National Institute of Justice, the research and development arm of the Department of Justice, concluded that THC levels in bodily fluids, including blood and saliva “were not reliable indicators of marijuana intoxication.”

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Today’s must-read

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Uh-oh

* Make sure to read the whole thing, but check out his quotes

In his interview with the Tribune, Lee denied that he misled either Chicago or Texas officials on his residency.

“Honestly, do you know what ‘time’ is?” Lee said when asked how he was able to vote in Texas last month if he lives in Chicago. “If I live in Chicago now, it doesn’t mean that I lived there then. … A lot of people are registered in their hometown, even if they’re living somewhere else.” […]

“Being registered in a city and living in a city aren’t the two same things,” Lee said. “You don’t have to be registered to vote to live in a city. And on May 15, (2023,) I had residency in Chicago, and I’ve been a resident.”

Voters are typically required to vote in the state where they live, although there are exceptions for certain groups like college students and Americans living abroad. The Texas election code says “‘residence’ means domicile, that is, one’s home and fixed place of habitation to which one intends to return after any temporary absence.”

Lee has no voting history in Chicago except in the March 2020 primary, according to public records released by the Chicago Board of Elections. Records from the Harris County, Texas, clerk show Lee voted in Texas later that November, and that in the Nov. 5 election this year he voted at Thompson Elementary School in Houston.

Again, go read the whole thing.

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COGFA: Illinois job growth rate is about a tenth of national growth rate since October of 2019

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability

Incorporating November’s gains into the total, General Funds receipts through the first five months of FY 2025 are now down $291 million [-1.5%] as compared to receipt totals through November of FY 2024. As discussed last month, this overall decline includes the $633 million in one-time federal dollars from FY 2024 that will not repeat in FY 2025. Excluding these one-time federal dollars from the equation, “base” General Funds receipts are now $342 million or 1.8% above last year’s levels.

Even after two back-to-back months of declining receipts, the Personal Income Tax continues to have the highest revenue growth of any revenue source thus far in FY 2025. Through November, gross receipts are $658 million higher than last year for a growth rate of +6.4%. On a net basis, when subtracting out distributions to the Income Tax Refund Fund and the Local Government Distributive Fund, the growth descends to $559 million.

Corporate Income Tax receipts continue to be well behind last year’s pace. Through the first five months of the fiscal year, gross receipts are now $316 million behind last year’s levels, a decline of -15.3%. On a net basis, these receipts are $254 million lower. While, historically, over 70% of Corporate Income Tax revenues are still to be collected over the remainder of the fiscal year, much improvement is needed during these final seven months to reach budgetary projections for this revenue source.

After posting year-over-year declines in the first three months of the fiscal year, Sales Tax receipts have been slightly higher the last two months. Still, revenues from this source remain a disappointing $110 million behind last year’s pace for a year-to-date decline of -2.2%. On a net basis, when accounting for fewer distributions to certain transportation funds this fiscal year, the year-to-date difference is nearly flat with a slight decline of -$8 million or -0.2%. It is hopeful that recent reports of strong post-Thanksgiving sales will result in a boost to Sales Tax receipts in December to help eat away at this fiscal year deficit.

November’s lower numbers from All Other State Sources reduces this category’s cumulative gain down to $198 million. However, this difference is still a welcomed 14.6% above last year’s levels through the first five months of the fiscal year. Despite a slower November, Interest on State Funds & Investments continues to be well above last year’s pace by $82 million. Other sources in this category with strong gains through November include Insurance Taxes [+$82 million]; Other Sources [+$25 million]; and Public Utility Taxes [+$12 million]. These revenue lines have offset modest year-to-date declines from the Corporate Franchise Tax [-$9 million]; the Cigarette Tax [-$5 million]; the Estate Tax [-$5 million]; and the Liquor Tax [-$1 million].

With this month’s $3 million decline in Transfers In, the FY 2025 total through November is now $321 million behind last year’s pace. Much of this falloff is because the Income Tax Refund Fund Transfer this fiscal year was $302 million lower than in FY 2024. Lower year-to-date totals from Lottery Transfers [-$35 million] and Other Transfers [-$33 million] have contributed to this falloff. Offsetting a portion of these declines are $12 million in additional revenues from casino-related Gaming Transfers, $1 million more from Cannabis Transfers; and $36 million in new revenues from the Sports Wagering Transfer.

After trailing last year’s levels for much of the fiscal year, November’s strong month increased Federal Sources’ year-to-date “base” total to $1.709 billion, which is $168 million higher than last year’s five-month comparable total. However, if incorporating the $633 million in one-time revenues received in October 2023 into the equation, the Federal Sources total would be $465 million below last year’s levels with seven months remaining in the fiscal year.

* Part of the problem is lack of job growth

Illinois’ total nonfarm employment grew by nearly 40,000 jobs over the past year, increasing from 6.165 million to 6.205 million. This represents a growth rate of 0.6%, which lags behind the 1.3% growth rate observed nationwide. […]

A comparison of employment growth since before the COVID-19 pandemic reveals a similar pattern to more recent trends. Illinois has grown more slowly than the nation as a whole, with individual metro areas showing varying levels of growth. Since October 2019, U.S. employment has increased by 4.9%, while Illinois has grown by just 0.5%, adding approximately 28,700 jobs. Both Illinois and the U.S. experienced sharp declines in employment in 2020, followed by strong recoveries in 2021 and 2022. However, a noticeable slowdown in job growth emerged in 2023 and into 2024. While Illinois mirrored the national pattern, its initial declines in 2020 were steeper (-6.8% vs. -5.9%), and its subsequent rebound has been consistently weaker.

  6 Comments      


Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Senate Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Thera Bond

Doris Turner

My legislative assistant, Thera Bond, is the absolute best ever!!! She is much more than a LA; she is a goodwill ambassador, a liaison to the community, and the person who always cuts through the red tape and any roadblocks to get the answer and problem solve for our constituents. She goes above and beyond with a smile never complaining; just doing! I can honestly say - I could not be an effective legislator without her!!!

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Dana Hooven

Senator Fowler is constantly on the go working hard for the people of downstate. His District Director Dana Hooven is ever present ensuring his initatives are completed with excellence and constituent relations are successfully satisfied. She is a consistent face in the community and a great asset to the people of Southern Illinois in one of the most vast districts in the state. I’m not sure how anyone can keep up with the busyiness and impact of Dale, but Dana makes it look like a breeze!

Congrats to both of our winners!

* Today’s categories…

    Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager

    Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager

Try your best to nominate in both categories. It adds more weight to your case. Also, as always, make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count. Thanks.

* Y’all have so far contributed more than $14,000 to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks! But let’s keep it going. Please click here and give whatever you can and help put smiles on the faces of foster kids this holiday season.

  10 Comments      


Roundup: Madigan trial delves into political fight over Chinatown land deal

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

There is a parking lot in Chinatown tucked under the Red Line tracks, flat, narrow and nondescript except for a big sign advertising cheap rates.

To look at it, you’d never know the tiny, state-owned parcel would become ground zero in a petty but bitter political war — and a key factor in one of the biggest corruption cases in Illinois history.

But wiretapped phone calls played Thursday in the ongoing trial of former Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan gave jurors a detailed picture of the behind-the-scenes machinations, power plays and bruised egos in the battle over the 2½-acre lot, which a group of deep-pocketed developers wanted to turn into a mixed-use high-rise.

The dispute was fueled by many classic Illinois factors, including the icy rivalry between Madigan and then-Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, a falling out between then-state Sen. Martin Sandoval and Chicago Ald. Daniel Solis over Solis’ political backing of an opponent of Sandoval’s daughter, and a renegade freshman legislator irritated by developments being pushed in her district, according to testimony.

* Sun-Times

When veteran Springfield lobbyist Nancy Kimme agreed to usher a bill through the Legislature that would hand a state-owned Chinatown parking lot to the city of Chicago in the days of Gov. Bruce Rauner, the longtime Republican thought she had an easy task ahead of her.

Instead, Kimme would be confounded by infighting among Democratic politicians, including then-state Sens. Martin Sandoval and Tony Munoz, and then-Ald. Danny Solis (25th). She repeatedly turned to the man who brought her into the mess, fellow lobbyist Michael McClain, to help her solve the “Rubik’s Cube.”

But the two were stumped. Eventually, McClain told Kimme, “There’s something fishy here.”

McClain wasn’t far off. That May 31, 2018, call between Kimme and McClain was being secretly recorded by the FBI. And the two powerhouse Springfield lobbyists were right in the middle of a scheme that would one day lead to the indictment of McClain and former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan.

* WTTW

Kimme testified for much of the day Thursday about her work alongside McClain to get the Chinatown land deal finalized. That land — which was owned by the state of Illinois and was leased to a nonprofit that ran a parking lot on the parcel — needed to be transferred to the city of Chicago so it could then be sold to developers. [….]

On Thursday, jurors heard numerous secretly recorded phone calls between McClain and Kimme as they discussed their increasingly fraught plans to transfer the land.

Madigan and McClain wanted to ensure it was voted on at that point because with a gubernatorial election in fall 2018 between Rauner and Democratic challenger J.B. Pritzker, they were concerned it could be delayed even more extensively no matter who won.

Instead of a simple transfer deal, McClain and Kimme learned other state legislators including Martin Sandoval and Tony Munoz were seeking to jam up the transfer, and a plan to move the transfer through on a bill from Senate President Don Harmon had fallen through.

* Capitol News Illinois

Under questioning by Madigan attorney Tom Breen, Kimme said figuring out what she’d referred to in one wiretapped call as a “crazy parking lot disaster” had become “my Rubik’s cube.”

“Did you find it undoable?” Breen asked.

“I did,” Kimme replied.

“And that was because of miscommunication and bad information and petty politics?” Breen asked.

Prosecutors objected to Breen’s question, along with his insinuation a minute later that the situation was impossible as she’d been trying to follow “a script written by” the FBI.

The comment harkened back to cross-examination of FBI Special Agent Ryan McDonald last month when Madigan attorney Dan Collins accused the FBI of creating a trap just to see if the speaker would fall into it.

* The Sun-Times this morning

The federal judge presiding over former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan’s corruption trial agreed Friday to compel the testimony of former state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo after Acevedo’s attorney told prosecutors he planned to assert his Fifth Amendment rights to avoid potentially incriminating himself.

Prosecutors filed a two-page petition late Thursday night, signed by Acting U.S. Attorney Morris “Sonny” Pasqual, asking U.S. District Judge John Blakey to grant Acevedo immunity from prosecution as a result of his testimony, unless he commits perjury or otherwise fails to comply.

Attached to the petition was a letter from Deputy Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Hodge dated June 1, 2022 — and addressed to then-U.S. Attorney John Lausch — approving the request.

Blakey followed up with an order Friday morning, declaring that Acevedo “shall not be excused from testifying or producing evidence … on the ground that the testimony or evidence required of him may tend to incriminate him.”

* More…

    * WBEZ | Timeline: Key moments in the Michael Madigan federal corruption trial: Madigan is the longest-serving speaker of any legislative chamber in the country, having led the Illinois House of Representatives as its speaker from 1983 to 2021, except for a two-year window in the 1990s when Republicans controlled the chamber. For years, McClain was one of the best-known lobbyists under the Capitol dome, with a lengthy list of clients that included Commonwealth Edison, the power provider for Chicago residents that also has been at the center of the federal investigation into Madigan. McClain was also a longtime confidante of Madigan’s, having served together as legislators during the 1970s.

  2 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Janet Yang Rohr filed HB5919 yesterday

Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act. Provides that it is unlawful for an income tax return preparer or a software company to charge a separate fee for the electronic filing of returns under the Act. Provides that it is unlawful for a software company to offer for sale a version of its tax software that charges a separate fee for the electronic filing of returns under the Act and a version of the same tax software that does not. Sets forth penalties for violations of the provisions of the amendatory Act.

TurboTax charges a $25 e-filing fee for each personal state return. Residents of New York are exempt from the fee due to a law similar to Rep. Yang Rohr’s proposal.

* NBC reported in February that online filing through companies like TurboTax is getting more expensive

H&R Block’s desktop software options this year range from $25 for preparing “basic” returns to $75 for its “premium” offerings, like those capable of handling taxes on rental property. Those two are up by $5 and $10, respectively, since last year. Later this tax filing season, prices across all of its plans will rise by another $10. […]

TurboTax has kept its pricing unchanged from a year ago, but that will only last a few more weeks.

Its desktop software tools, which range from $40 for filing “basic” returns to $105 for “premier” offerings, remain above H&R Block’s pricing. And they’ll also be going up by $10 later this tax season — a common practice that both companies typically advertise prominently, looking to lure customers to file early.

Both H&R Block and TurboTax offer free online filing services for simple returns. But itemized deductions and slightly more complicated tax situations often require paying for upgraded features. And as many tax filers are reminded each year, both companies’ “basic” software options cover only federal taxes, with state filings tacking on another $40 apiece.

Thoughts?

  29 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Since Tuesday we’ve raised almost $13,000 to help LSSI buy Christmas presents for foster kids. That’s around 509 presents for children in foster care. Thank you so much for bringing joy into their lives.

But that’s about 19 percent of the foster kids in LSSI’s care system. Let’s make sure they all get some Christmas joy. Click here to give what you can.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* We’ve almost reached $13,000 in donations for our LSSI Christmas toys for foster kids fundraiser. Please take a moment this morning to help these kids!

* ICYMI: Criminally charged health care providers keep working unrestricted as state action lags. Tribune

    - After investigating complaints that Crystal Lake endocrinologist Dr. Hiralal Maheshwari had touched patients inappropriately in his exam rooms, McHenry County prosecutors approved a felony charge of criminal sexual abuse in December 2021.

    -Under state law, the prosecutors should have immediately notified the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The department should’ve issued an order within five days requiring a medical chaperone at his appointments.

    - It took five months before the state issued the chaperone order.

    - Of 35 health care workers who were charged with eligible offenses since Jan. 1, 2019, the Tribune found roughly half remained in good standing with the licensing agency for more than a month after criminal charges were brought in court.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois American Water will increase water rates: The move comes after state regulators at the Illinois Commerce Commission approved the requested increase on Thursday. The five-member board approved a $110 million increase for the company, a 30% reduction from the company’s original request early this year. Illinois American Water serves more than 1 million Illinoisans in roughly 150 communities around the state, ranging from South Beloit to Cairo, with major operations in the Chicago suburbs, Champaign, Peoria and the Metro East.

* Illinois State | Covering the eclipse: TV-10 reporter earns student Emmy for solar eclipse story: Bleyer, a senior journalism major, captured the April 8 eclipse in a roughly 2-minute package for TV-10, Illinois State University’s student television station. While the celestial event she covered was extraordinary, it was Bleyer’s work behind the camera that truly stood out. In November, she was awarded a college student Emmy for the piece she produced titled Small Town Eclipse.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Illinois has lost most agricultural land of any Midwest state since 2001, report finds: Illinois has lost 155,000 acres of agricultural land since 2001, which is the most of any Midwestern state, according to a recent study. 64% of the land lost in the Land of Lincoln is due to development, according to a report published in Farmdoc Daily that is associated with the University of Illinois. The report analyzed a 20-year dataset that reflects 2001 to 2021.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Aldermen push Mayor Brandon Johnson to make cuts, collaborate as budget deadline looms: The City Council majority urged Johnson in a letter sent to him Thursday to make further reductions in his spending plan to help set Chicago on a “sustainable path.” The public push shows the mayor and aldermen still have far to go as they continue to grapple with the budget and an end-of-year deadline approaches. “This is a moment where both history and the public demand that we do better, and we believe that is absolutely possible, but it requires true collaboration,” the letter reads in part. The aldermen who signed on represent a wide swath of the City Council. They included the co-chairs of the council’s Progressive Caucus, the leader of the Black Caucus and half the “budgeteers” Johnson tapped to help him negotiate with the council.

* Sun-Times | Ald. Gardiner’s ex-ward superintendent pleads guilty after trying to sell antique machine gun to undercover agent: Sikanich has long maintained the gun was brought home by his grandfather as a war trophy and wasn’t operational, as far as the family knew. But after delays in the case, Sikanich pleaded guilty to a count of unlawful use of a weapon in a last minute deal with the Illinois Attorney General’s Office that allowed him to avoid a bench trial that was set to begin Thursday before Judge Kenneth Wadas.

* Sun-Times | Family seeks millions from city after their 10-year-old girl was killed in ‘catastrophic’ police chase crash: The day after the crash, the city denied fault. Then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the “very brief” police chase was not the cause of the fatal crash. But last month, a week before the family’s lawsuit was set to go to trial, the city admitted liability and is only contesting the amount of damages, according to an ABC7 report. Opening statements began Thursday in the trial that will determine the amount the city should pay Da’Karia’s family. Cook County Judge Preston Jones Jr. is presiding over the trial.

* Sun-Times | Howard Kirschner, a former Benny the Bull, dies at 80: ‘He saw life in a unique way’: It’s not often that a funeral service starts with the playing of “Sirius” by the Alan Parsons Project, otherwise known in Chicago as “the Bulls song.” But the unconventional setting for Howard Kirschner’s service last week at the Chicago Jewish Funerals chapel in Skokie fit perfectly for him. Mr. Kirschner, one of the earliest to portray the legendary Chicago Bulls mascot Benny the Bull, was described by his wife as a “quirky” guy who “marched to his own drummer.”

* Block Club | Bernice’s Tavern Closes Over Liquor License Issue, But Owner Vows Comeback: Badauaskas’ boiler has a funny way of going out. His ice machine has broken down three times this year. And he alleges his insurance company recently sent a drone flying over the building to demand roof repairs. The liquor license expiration is the latest curveball that’s buckled the knees of the one-man operation. But it won’t strike Badauskas out. He’s vowing another Bernice’s comeback, hopefully in the coming weeks.

* ABC Chicago | Forever Home: Adopt ‘Saluki’: Saluki is a three-month-old kitten and is up for adoption at PAWS Chicago’s Lincoln Park Adoption Center, 1997 N Clybourn Ave. There is a $150 adoption fee, which is $125 each when adopting a pair.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Calumet City aldermen dismiss Mayor Thaddeus Jones’ case against Clerk Nyota Figgs: The case stalled Monday after Judge Alison Conlon recused herself after disclosing she may have distributed literature for Jones when he was running as a state representative in 2016. […] Patton said if Jones’ attorneys move forward with the lawsuit he will call for another special meeting to motion to dismiss the attorneys. The lawsuit’s dismissal was approved during the special meeting from all those who attended, including Alds. Patton, Monet Wilson, Michael Navarette, DeJuan Gardner and DeAndre Tillman.

* Daily Herald | Bears would pay $3.6 million a year, under proposed Arlington Park property tax settlement: The 12-page memorandum of understanding — brokered by village officials over the last year and a half of negotiations — aims to resolve a protracted tax dispute between the NFL franchise and three Arlington Heights-area school districts whose boundaries cover the 326-acre site purchased by the team in 2023. The deal must still be approved by the boards for Arlington Heights, Northwest Suburban High School District 214, Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 and Palatine Township Elementary District 15. All the elected panels meet next week.

* Gaming Intel | Accel Entertainment completes acquisition of Fairmount in Illinois: The acquisition gives Accel the only active horse racing venue in the greater St. Louis metropolitan area, as well as a master sports betting license and the opportunity to develop a legislatively authorized casino project. The company has paid a consideration of approximately 3.45 million Accel Class A-1 common stock, equivalent to around $35 million. Accel also plans to invest between $85 million and $95 million to fund the casino construction and for track investments.

* ABC Chicago | Tiffany Henyard to attend Thornton Twp. meeting to hear objections for election nominations: “One hundred percent confident that I will be, because they did a lot of illegal actions which my lawyer is drawing up the lawsuit currently,” Henyard said. Henyard also warns, the township is at risk of a shutdown because the board has not approved insurance. She said two trustees have boycotted multiple meetings to try to stonewall Henyard, which have halted township actions.

* Daily Herald | Vacant medical office building in Mount Prospect could turn into apartments: A vacant 1970s-style medical office building just west of the Union Pacific tracks on Central Road in Mount Prospect has been awaiting redevelopment for two years. Recent action by the Mount Prospect village board has given the project a new lease on life. Trustees on Tuesday approved extending the zoning approval granted in 2022 for a proposed apartment development at 500 W. Central Road.

*** Downstate ***

* WVIK | New Bio Chronicles Rise of Glenn Poshard from Deep Poverty in southern Illinois to Congress and SIU President: Glenn Poshard discusses his book, Son of Southern Illinois: Glenn Poshard’s Life in Politics and Education, that includes his upbringing and values in southern Illinois, military service, entry into politics, principled stands on PAC money, abortion and guns that cost him the Illinois Governor’s race, problems the Democrats have with rural and working class voters, the Poshard Foundation for Abused Children, and much more.

* WCIA | CWLP receives nearly $3 million to replace lead pipes: City Water Light and Power will begin another phase of lead service lines starting in March. CWLP received $2.9 million dollars in federal funding provided by the Illinois EPA. It will be used to replace lead water service lines for around 400 low-income customers.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Durbin and Ramaswamy trade barbs over federal loan to Rivian: “Isn’t this rich?” Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, said in a statement yesterday. “In 2009, when his Tesla operation was hanging by a thread, Elon Musk borrowed nearly $500 million from the Department of Energy — saving the company so they could put a new model of the car on showroom floors. Now, his DOGE partner, Vivek Ramaswamy, is questioning a similar loan to Rivian, a competitor of Tesla, saying it is ‘high on the list of items’ that he will look to claw back.

  7 Comments      


Live coverage

Friday, Dec 6, 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. 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, Dec 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised just over $12,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.

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Federal appeals court stays Downstate federal judge’s gun ruling (Updated)

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* News…


* The order

The district court issued an opinion holding that multiple state laws regulating assault weapons, large-capacity magazines, and associated matters are unconstitutional. The opinion contains some language in the nature of a permanent injunction, but this language does not appear in either an injunction (see Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d)(1) (”Every order granting an injunction… must: (A) state the reasons why it issued; (B) state its terms specifically; and (C) describe in reasonable detail- and not by referring to the complaint or other document —the act or acts restrained or required. )) or a Rule 58 judgment (which omits the relief to which the prevailing parties are entitled).

Defendants have appealed, and they request a stay pending appeal. Plaintiffs have responded, and defendants have replied. The parties also have filed memoranda addressing the problems created by the district court’s noncompliance with Rules 58 and 65.

Appellate jurisdiction exists, notwithstanding these errors, because it is plain that the district court is done with the case. Compliance with Rules 58 and 65 remains necessary -essential, if any litigant anticipates enforcing the decision through the contempt power —and we trust that the district court will enter appropriate orders promptly without the need for a formal command by this court.

Defendants’ request for a stay rests largely on the fact that this court already has held that the laws in question survive motions seeking preliminary injunctions. Bevis o. Naperville, 85 F.4th 1175 (7th Cir. 2023), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 2491 (2024). A decision at the preliminary-injunction stage is not dispositive when the plaintiffs later seek permanent relief; our opinion indicated some matters that needed further exploration. But the analysis in Bevis shows that the laws have enough support to remain in place pending the final resolution of plaintiffs’ suit.

Every other court of appeals that has addressed the validity of similar legislation in the wake of New York State Rifle Association v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1 (2022), has come out the same way as Bevis. See Ocean State Tactical, LLC v. Rhode Island, 95 F.4th 38 (1st Cir. 2024); Bianchi v. Brown, 111 F.4th 438 (4th Cir. 2024) (en banc); Hanson v. Smith, 120 F .4th 223 (D.C. Cir. 2024). The laws addressed by those decisions differ in some respects from the Illinois statute. Yet the absence of support in other circuits for the district court’s disposition lends strength to a conclusion that the Illinois statutes should remain in force until final appellate resolution.

At least two other essentially identical suits are pending in other district courts within the Seventh Circuit. The three suits were addressed jointly in Bevis, and they must be resolved the same way eventually. (The state laws cannot be valid in some parts of Illinois and invalid elsewhere.) This does not necessarily imply that the three cases will again be consolidated on appeal; we are reluctant to delay disposition of this appeal indefinitely just because similar litigation is pending in other districts. Still, the only way to preserve the status quo statewide is to enter a stay in this suit.

The judgment of the district court accordingly is stayed. The stay will remain in force until this court has issued its mandate.

…Adding… AG Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit stayed an injunction a district court entered regarding the Protect Illinois Communities Act. The stay will remain in place while the appeal is pending.

“I am pleased the 7th Circuit has stayed the district court’s injunction. My office will continue to prosecute the appeal, and the Protect Illinois Communities Act remains the law of the land as the litigation is pending in the lower courts. The Protect Illinois Communities Act is an important tool to prevent weapons of war from being used in our schools and on our streets, and I am committed to defending its constitutionality.”

* ISRA…

Please attribute the following to the Illinois State Rifle Association

Moments ago, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order extending the stay of Judge McGlynn’s decision finding the Illinois Gun Ban to be unconstitutional. The stay remains in place until the 7th Circuit can hear the case, which means that the unconstitutional gun ban continues to remain in effect.

While we are glad that Federal District Court Judge Stephen McGlynn’s stay would have expired on Sunday, December 8th, we are disappointed – but not surprised – that the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has extended that stay. Back in November, we were victorious when Judge McGlynn found the provisions of the Illinois ban on commonly owned firearms and accessories known as “PICA” to be unconstitutional. The State appealed immediately to the Seventh Circuit, so we also know that this battle is far from over.

When this unconstitutional bill was signed by Gov. Pritzker in January 2023, we promised to see the State of Illinois in Court – and we’ve held firm on that promise – and we won’t back down until our 2nd Amendment rights are restored in Illinois.

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago

More than two years ago, West Ridge’s state senator helped secure $5 million in funding to add an ambulance to the local fire station.

But the ambulance never arrived.

Frustrated by the delay, neighbors are calling on city officials to use the funds and expand first responder services on the Far North Side.

Currently, the Engine 71 fire station has no space to house an ambulance unit. Ellen Doppelt, executive director of the neighborhood development council, has been advocating for the renovation of the firehouse since 2021. State funding for the project was secured by state Sen. Ram Villivalam the following year, but the city has yet to use the funds.

* Pretty neat

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Accepts International Award for Illinois’ Leadership in Innovation: Illinois was one of just 35 organizations worldwide to receive the Startup Ecosystem Star Award. Additionally, Illinois was the only U.S. entity to receive favorable results across all award categories, not only “Outstanding Investment Boost”

*** Statewide ***

* ABC Chicago I-Team | Drug Lab Scandal: After investigating for months, the ABC7 I-Team exposes a statewide scandal at a forensic testing lab. The I-Team has uncovered hundreds of potentially wrongful convictions, testing troubles, and claims of a cover-up. Chuck Goudie and the I-Team investigate, Thursday at 10 p.m.

* NPR Illinois | Illinois’ deceitful path to statehood: Illinois celebrated its 206th birthday this week. When it became a state in 1818, it faced obstacles. Among them, the state lacked the population that was needed. But those determined to become part of the union found a way. “We cooked the books,” said author Tara McClellan McAndrew.

* KFVS | Illinois pork producers group says they suffer because of a California law: Illinois pork farmers say a California law that went into effect in 2023 is hurting business in the Midwest, and are hoping a new national farm bill could help. Proposition 12 went into effect in California in 2023, requiring pregnant pigs to have 24 square feet to themselves per female, and banning all sales from companies that don’t comply with those regulations across the U.S.

*** Chicago ***

* Fox Chicago | Illinois Labor Department files bankruptcy claims against Foxtrot, Dom’s Kitchen to recover unpaid wages: The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) is working to recover more than $3.8 million in unpaid wages and benefits for over 350 employees left jobless after their employers abruptly shut down earlier this year. On Oct. 30, IDOL, through the Illinois Attorney General’s Office, filed federal bankruptcy claims against Outfox Hospitality, LLC; Dom’s Kitchen and Market, LLC; and Foxtrot Market.

* NBC | Beware the fake George McCaskey account on Twitter: The issue came to a head this morning when fake George tweeted the team isn’t for sale. That came in response to a suggestion that Jeff Bezos will buy the Bears. This never happened before Twitter started selling blue check marks. Now that anyone can pay for an account, anyone can set up a phony account that might seem legitimate.

* Tribune | ‘I can smell a sale’: How notable Chicagoans shop for the holidays: Pappas, who has served as Cook County treasurer since 1998, usually finishes her holiday shopping in June. “I can smell a sale,” she said. […] Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, to whom Pappas gave one of her own jackets. (Pappas is known for collecting eclectic jackets that she features in her annual jacket calendar.) Also, Romanian monks she befriended while on a trip to discuss the country’s property tax system with officials there. “The monk in Bucharest wanted a pair of Cole Haans. So I bought the Cole Haans on sale,” she said.

* Sun-Times | Former White Sox star Bill Melton dies: “Bill and I shared many nights in studio talking baseball,” said Sox Hall of Famer Frank Thomas, who worked alongside Melton on TV. “He really knew how to light up a room. I loved his humor and stories. When he dropped ‘Laddy’ on you you knew something funny was coming. God Bless, Rest in peace Bill.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey settles FOIA lawsuit after denying police body-worn footage request related to arrest: Harvey paid $3,750 to settle a lawsuit alleging the city violated the Freedom of Information Act by denying a Harvey man’s request for body-worn camera footage related to his arrest, according to the settlement agreement. City Council members approved the payment to Brandon Collymore at a council meeting Sept. 9, which was set to be paid within 45 days. Part of the agreement also called for the city to give Collymore a copy of the body-worn camera footage. The Daily Southtown requested a copy of the settlement through FOIA after the meeting but did not receive it for more than two months.

* CBS Chicago | Store owners say new State’s Attorney O’Neill Burke’s tightening of felony retail theft rules is much welcome: “It’s going to help all business,” said Dave Garfield of Garfield’s Beverage Warehouse, which has locations in Old Town, Wicker Park/Bucktown, and several suburbs. “Certain products, we only put so much on the shelf—because we know they’re specifically targeted.”

* Tribune | Future of Northbrook’s Metra station coffee shop cast into doubt: After 30 years, the tiny coffee shop inside Northbrook’s Metra train station faces an unclear future, with commuters waiting to see whether they’ll still be able to get their morning java. The Village Board voted unanimously at its Nov. 12 meeting to grant the Grind Cafe a six-month extension of its lease at the current rent of $275 a month, but to end that lease after six months and issue a request for proposals, or RFP, from would-be tenants.

*** Downstate ***

* WTTW | Why There is a Movement in Some Downstate Counties to Split From Illinois: Some supporters said they disagree with a 1960s U.S. Supreme Court decision, Reynolds v. Sims, which established what’s referred to as “one person, one vote.” “Three wolves and a lamb aren’t supposed to decide what they’re having for dinner that night,” [Loret Newlin, advocate for the Illinois Separation Referendum] said. “Because the lamb is going to lose every time.”

* WICS | New details about Boys and Girls Club lost grant: The Illinois State Board of Education said the grant is supposed to be used to fund *new* afterschool programs, and not permanent funding for ongoing programs like the ones The Boys and Girls Club provides. The Boys and Girls Club of Central Illinois was awarded the 5-year grant in 2015. ISBE continued the grant in 2020 for another 5 years. Now ISBE said they can’t have it anymore.

* WCIA | ‘It’s priceless’: Champaign’s Pregnancy Resource Center and other organizations to receive Toys for Tots items: On Thursday, WCIA is bundling up in the back parking lot to collect toys for children across Champaign County. Trucks, dolls, Legos, and games will be distributed to families with kids of all ages, and some non-profits will also benefit. Eight groups in Champaign County will get some of the toys. One of those organizations is the Pregnancy Resource Center located behind the Salvation Army on Market Street.

* WMBD | Finding more affordable housing is a route to help the unhoused in Peoria: Affordable housing has been at the forefront of issues for many in Central Illinois after some municipalities, including Peoria, made public camping illegal. The moves have put the spotlight on the homeless crisis that is plaguing the area. But looking beyond that, there’s a much bigger issue, said Kate Green, who heads Home For All Continuum of Care. The goal, she said, is to get beyond the noise that has occurred in the past few months and focus on the real issue of the people who are living on the streets, in shelters or even staying on someone’s couch.

* WIFR | Household Hazardous Waste site opens in Rockford for Illinois residents: Illinois residents can dispose of common household hazardous waste items like aerosols, corrosives, oxidizers, solvents, oil-based paints, waste oil, pesticides, fertilizers, batteries (no alkaline), and fluorescent lamps. Items can be dropped off for free. “Worst thing people can do it either pour them down the storm sewer or the sanitary sewer,” says Robert Wilhelmi, Brownfields Redevelopment Specialist. “So, ultimately the best thing and most responsible thing for residents to do is bring them down here where products can be safely disposed of or recycled.”

* Illinois Times | Viper Mine announces closure: Operations at the Viper Mine in Elkhart are shutting down after the city of Springfield chose a cheaper coal supplier for its electrical power plant. The mine, which at its peak employed about 300 miners, now is down to a skeleton crew responsible for dismantling equipment, Jim Smith, president of Knight Hawk Coal, told Illinois Times.

*** National ***

* NYT | How One of the World’s Richest Men Is Avoiding $8 Billion in Taxes: It is just one sign of how the estate tax — imposed solely on a sliver of the country’s multimillionaires — has been eviscerated. Revenue from the tax has barely changed since 2000, even as the wealth of the richest Americans has roughly quadrupled. If the estate tax had simply kept pace, it would have raised around $120 billion last year. Instead it brought in about a quarter of that.

* Axios | Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield calls off surgery anesthesia cap: A major health insurance company is backing off of a controversial plan to limit coverage of anesthesia in at least one state, according to Connecticut’s comptroller. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield recently decided to “no longer pay for anesthesia care if the surgery or procedure goes beyond an arbitrary time limit, regardless of how long the surgical procedure takes,” according to the American Society of Anesthesiologists, which opposed the decision.

* CNN | California suspends distribution of Raw Farm raw milk products after bird flu detection: “All Raw Farm operations are currently under quarantine, from herds to bottled product, which means that all raw milk product distribution is suspended,” Steve Lyle, director of public affairs for the agency, said in a statement on Monday. “CDFA dairy inspectors sampled milk from bottled products and bulk milk storage at Raw Farm’s bottling facility on Wednesday, Nov 27, and laboratory test results made known on November 28 showed the presence of the bird flu virus. All milk tested by CDFA remained at the Raw Farm plant and was not released to consumers.”

  11 Comments      


Illinois Supreme Court: Raw cannabis smell is enough to trigger warrantless automobile searches

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From back on September 19

The stench of smoked pot doesn’t give a police officer the right to search an adult’s car without a warrant, according to a new ruling from the Illinois Supreme Court.

The searches were allowed when marijuana was illegal in the state. But in a 6-0 opinion issued Thursday, justices say that changed when it became legal for adults in Illinois to use cannabis due to a change in state law.

“Since Jan 1, 2020, the use and possession of cannabis is presumptively lawful, subject to certain restrictions,” Justice Scott Neville wrote in deciding the case (The People v. Redmond). “We hold that the odor of burnt cannabis, alone, is insufficient to provide probably cause of police officers to perform a warrantless search of a vehicle.”

Still unresolved is how far police can go if they smell raw cannabis, in potential breach of a state law that requires cannabis to be stored in an odorless container when a car is moving. […]

“The odor of burnt cannabis is a fact that should be considered when determining whether police have probably cause to search a vehicle, but the odor of burnt cannabis, standing alone without other inculpatory facts, does not provide probable cause to search a vehicle,” Neville wrote.

The earlier ruling is here.

* Today

The smell of raw cannabis is grounds for police to search a vehicle, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

The decision runs counter to the court’s previous ruling that the smell of burnt cannabis by itself is not sufficient reason for a vehicle search.

The two rulings create a situation in which, though it is illegal to smoke pot in a vehicle, drivers are protected from a search based only on the smell of burnt cannabis, but are not protected from a search based on the smell of raw marijuana. […]

“In short, while cannabis is legal to possess generally, it is illegal to possess in a vehicle on an Illinois highway unless in an odor-proof container,” the court wrote in the Molina case. “The odor of raw cannabis strongly suggests that the cannabis is not being possessed within the parameters of Illinois law. And, unlike the odor of burnt cannabis, the odor of raw cannabis coming from a vehicle reliably points to when, where, and how the cannabis is possessed — namely, currently, in the vehicle, and not in an odor-proof container.”

Today’s ruling is here.

* From the statute in question in both cases

(625 ILCS 5/11-502.15)
Sec. 11-502.15. Possession of adult use cannabis in a motor vehicle.
(a) No driver may use cannabis within the passenger area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State.
(b) No driver may possess cannabis within any area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except in a secured, sealed or resealable, odor-proof, child-resistant cannabis container that is inaccessible.
(c) No passenger may possess cannabis within any passenger area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except in a secured, sealed or resealable, odor-proof, child-resistant cannabis container that is inaccessible.
(d) Any person who knowingly violates subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this Section commits a Class A misdemeanor.

* From the conclusion to today’s ruling

In sum, we hold that the odor of raw cannabis coming from a vehicle being operated on an Illinois highway, alone, is sufficient to provide police officers, who are trained and experienced in distinguishing between burnt and raw cannabis, with probable cause to perform a warrantless search of a vehicle. See Hill, 2020 IL 124595, ¶ 18 n.2 (“the smell and presence of cannabis undoubtedly remains a factor in a probable cause determination”). Our finding of probable cause is consistent with the Vehicle Code’s odor-proof container requirement. In other words, an officer trained and experienced in distinguishing between burnt and raw cannabis who smells the odor of raw cannabis in a vehicle stopped on the highway would logically suspect that there is cannabis in the vehicle that is not properly contained as required by the Vehicle Code. See 625 ILCS 5/11-502.15(b), (c) (West 2020). Therefore, the circuit court erred when it granted the motion suppressing the raw cannabis confiscated from Molina. Accordingly, we affirm the appellate court’s decision reversing the trial court’s order suppressing the evidence seized in the warrantless search of Molina’s car.

* Justices Mary K. O’Brien and Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis dissented

We have concluded that neither the odor of alcohol nor the odor of burnt cannabis, absent any other factor, is sufficient to establish probable cause to search a vehicle. We should reach the same conclusion as to raw cannabis: the odor of raw cannabis, absent any other factor, is not a sufficiently inculpatory fact that reliably points to when, where, or how the cannabis was possessed

  27 Comments      


Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Place to Gather for Dinner During Session Weeks is Saputo’s

Feels like a cliche but even as I’ve pulled away from being as social as I once was during session evenings, I’ll never not walk out of Saputo’s with a new hilarious anecdote after running into someone there. It’s a reminder of the camaraderie that keeps us coming back to Springfield year after year even when things get tough.

Honorable mention goes to Illini Country Club.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Place to Gather for Drinks, Etc. During Session Weeks goes to JP Kelly’s

The number of relationships and issues that have been mended and solved at that bar as a result of people just being nice to each other and saying hello regardless of what they’re fighting about under the dome is reason enough to be faithful. But I also really love the folks who work there.

It got a lot of support, but that nomination sealed the deal. Honorable mention to Trish and Mary’s.

* Our two categories today…

    Best Senate Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager

    Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager

I know it’s often difficult to nominate in both categories, but please do your best. Also, please make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count.

* Meanwhile, I received this very nice email yesterday from Lutheran Social Services of Illinois

Good afternoon Rich,

My name is Maizee Miller and I am on the Advancement team with Mariah Heinz. I wanted to reach out and thank you for all that you do for LSSI as a whole, as well as for helping us make a difference in the lives of children in care. As a previous caseworker myself, I can attest that there is no better feeling than being able to provide Christmas wishes to children who would likely not receive them otherwise. Thank you for making that feeling a reality and continuously making an impact.

Sincerely,

Maizee Miller, M.A.
Advancement Gift Officer
Lutheran Social Services of Illinois

All I’ve ever tried to do is motivate the people who visit this website to help LSSI buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Without y’all, nothing happens.

Since Tuesday, we’ve raised more than $11,000, which is enough to buy presents for 440 foster kids. That’s 440 happy smiles at Christmastime for kids whose lives haven’t been so good.

But that’s only about 17 percent of the foster kids in LSSI’s care system. We need to do better, so please click here today and give what you can.

Thanks!

  47 Comments      


Carp-e Diem!

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW in July

After months of negotiations, Illinois finally signed onto a project partnership agreement this week with the state of Michigan and the Army Corps of Engineers to move forward with construction of what’s largely viewed as the last line of defense against invasive carp entering the Great Lakes.

The best chance to halt the carp’s progress into the lakes — so far the fish has relentlessly moved north up the Mississippi River — is a multi-layered barrier at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam near Joliet, Illinois, which has been identified as a critical pinch point. […]

But the partnership agreement was needed in order to release those federal dollars and begin the actual construction phase. (Design and pre-construction has been underway since 2020.) Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker balked at signing, as previously reported by WBEZ, due to what he viewed as the state’s disproportionate shouldering — finance-wise — of a Great Lakes region-wide crisis.

“While the federal government has determined this project is of the highest priority, the taxpayers of Illinois and Michigan should not be the only states to carry the burden of the non-federal share of funding when the entire Great Lakes region will certainly experience the devastating impact of inaction,” Pritzker told the Army Corps in documents obtained by WBEZ.

* WTTW today

On Wednesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is overseeing the project, announced it had awarded a $15.5 million contract to Miami Marine Services for site preparation and riverbed rock removal. […]

Brandon Road Lock and Dam — situated in the Des Plaines River near Joliet, roughly 30 miles southwest of Chicago — was identified as the critical pinch point where the carp could be stopped from entering the Great Lakes.

The fish have been making their way up the Mississippi into the Illinois River. Fears are that if the carp become established in the Great Lakes, they could outcompete native species, harm the ecosystem and decimate the Great Lakes’ $20 billion fishing and boating industries.

The barrier will use a multi-pronged approach, deploying various technologies to deter the invasive fish from moving closer to Lake Michigan.

* Meanwhile, Sierra Club

Silver carp particularly represent a huge threat to the fisheries in the Great Lakes. In June 2023, 408 carp were caught in Minnesota, stunning officials. Millions of dollars a year are spent on the construction of electric barriers to keep carp from invading the Great Lakes from the Mississippi River, with a $1 billion development plan in the works from the US Army Corps of Engineers in Illinois, but it still might not be enough. […]

Researchers say just 10 breeding pairs could inundate the ecosystem.

Silver carp are coming. Barriers might slow them down, but stopping them completely may be impossible. Officials and researchers think, however, that the creation of consumer markets for silver carp could work to manage their numbers.

“If you can create a successful market around the fish, then the markets can be a tool to manage them,” said Ben Meadows, an assistant professor of economics at the University of Alabama, Birmingham.
[…]

“A rebranding kind of campaign for them could potentially bring their price up, making it more economically viable for people to go fish for them,” he said.

One way to get the silver carp population under control seems relatively simple—eat the carp.

Thoughts?

  15 Comments      


Roundup: Jurors see Madigan’s list of recommended hires for Pritzker administration

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Courthouse News

Jessica Basham, onetime chief of staff to former Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan, took the stand Wednesday in Madigan’s ongoing federal corruption trial. Much of her testimony focused on lists of people Madigan’s office recommended for state board and commission positions to the then-nascent office of Democratic Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker between 2018 and 2019.

Basham testified she served as Madigan’s chief of staff between June 2018 and August 2021, following the departure of Madigan’s prior chief Tim Mapes — now convicted for perjury — amid sexual misconduct allegations. During that time, she said she communicated on multiple occasions with Pritzker’s staff regarding recommendations for state boards and commissions. Jurors also saw evidence that Madigan, through Basham, often requested updates on how Pritzker was leaning on the recommendations.

Among the Pritzker staffers that Basham kept in contact with regarding the state boards was Nikki Budzinski, previously one of the governor’s top advisors and now a U.S. representative for Illinois’ 13th Congressional District.

Local NPR news outlet WBEZ reported in June 2020 that Pritzker’s administration hired at least 35 of the then-speaker’s recommended personnel. Basham, per a document jurors saw Wednesday morning, found in 2020 that Madigan’s recommendations had a “47% success rate” — that the governor’s office acted on 43 of the 91 people Madigan’s office recommended.

* Tribune

On further questioning from prosecutors, [ Basham] noted that a handful of those recommendations actually came through Madigan from other legislators, including Emanuel “Chris” Welch, the current House speaker.

Defense attorneys also took the chance to boost Madigan’s image for jurors, eliciting testimony from Basham about his work ethic and values.

“I don’t think anybody works harder than Mike Madigan,” she said.

Jurors also heard evidence Wednesday that from 2019 to 2021, Madigan’s son Andrew earned some $43,000 in commission related to the Resurrection Project, a client of the insurance agency that employed him.

* Capitol News Illinois

Other evidence shown to Basham on Wednesday included handwritten notes Madigan and Basham took while they met with Pritzker on Dec. 4, 2018.

They discussed several major policy initiatives, according to the meeting notes. At the top of their agenda was a graduated income tax, which Pritzker had made a central campaign promise. Madigan helped push a proposed constitutional amendment to allow the tax change through the General Assembly in May 2019. To take effect, though, voters had to approve the amendment in November 2020.

Voters, however, rejected what Pritzker branded as the “Fair Tax” after opposition groups spent millions tying the idea to Madigan. By then, the speaker had been named “Public Official A” in charging documents in July 2020 alleging ex-lobbyists and executives of electric utility Commonwealth Edison bribed the speaker. One of those ex-lobbyists was McClain, who was indicted in the weeks following the November 2020 election and convicted along with his former colleagues last year.

The second item on the notes from the Madigan-Pritzker meeting was a hike in the state’s minimum wage, which Pritzker secured in February 2019, signing a bill gradually increasing minimum hourly pay to $15, which will take final effect on Jan. 1, 2025. It was the new governor’s first major policy win.

Other discussion items from the meeting – including legalizing recreational cannabis, green-lighting sports betting and authorizing a major infrastructure plan – were enacted during Pritzker’s first legislative session in spring 2019.

* Center Square

Basham said there were times when state Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, was somewhat inactive, and the speaker wanted Rita to be “more robust” in his discussions about gaming legislation.

Prosecutors played a recording of a conversation between Madigan and Basham on March 25, 2019.

“So, would you talk to Rita again and make sure that he understands that he should be an active participant in the discussion?” Madigan asked. […]

Madigan addressed the issue a second time during the same call.

“So, you see, if we just let Zalewski put on a sports betting show, well, then we’re gonna bring on another problem. All the pro-gaming people are gonna say, ‘What’s this all about?’ So, yeah, have a conversation with Rita and make sure he understands that he just can’t sit there like a bump on a log. OK?” Madigan asked.

* Sun-Times

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan’s son made $43,000 in three years after his insurance company landed a Pilsen social service agency as a client, jurors were told Wednesday, in a deal federal prosecutors have linked to Madigan’s alleged racketeering conspiracy. […]

During a follow-up conversation about the board seat on Aug. 2, 2018, Solis promised the speaker “I’m gonna help you.” Michael Madigan replied, “don’t worry about it.”

But moments later, Michael Madigan told him, “there’s one thing you can do.” […]

“Just ask him, ‘Give Andrew something … Give him a chance to show what he, what he can do,’” Michael Madigan said. […]

On Wednesday, prosecutors called Alliant Insurance executive Jennifer Gavelek to the witness stand. She testified that she’d attended a meeting with her colleague, Andrew Madigan, and an executive with The Resurrection Project in October 2019.

  16 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

(Don’t forget about our LSSI Christmas toys for foster kids fundraiser! Click here to contribute.)

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Our LSSI Christmas toys for foster kids fundraiser reached just over $10,000.

Thank you!

I cannot imagine what it’s like being a foster child, everything these children have known has been turned upside-down and they have no idea if a sense of normalcy in their lives will return.

Luckily we have people that want to help these kids. And a way for everyone to pitch in.

* ICYMI: Illinois organizations decry state’s convoluted process for overdose prevention money. Chicago Reader

In 2022, the last year for which data is available, 3,261 people in Illinois died from opioid overdose–related deaths. That same year, Illinois attorney general Kwame Raoul settled the first of multiple lawsuits against opioid manufacturers, dispensers, and distributors “for their unfair and deceptive practices in the marketing, sale, and distribution of these drugs,” according to the state opioid settlement website. Like the cigarette lawsuits of the 90s, these multistate suits are one attempt to hold large corporations that profited from opioid addiction and death accountable for their role in the crisis. The settlements with drugmakers and pharmacies collectively amount to billions of dollars and are divided between numerous states that were part of the lawsuits. Even so, Illinois is expected to get more than $1.3 billion by 2038. Fifty-five percent of that money will go to the Illinois Opioid Remediation Fund; the remainder is divided between state and local governments.

Most, though not all, decision-making powers for remediation funds are housed within the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) and its Division of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery (SUPR). A governor-appointed steering committee determines if these funds are distributed via intergovernmental agreements, expansion of existing programs, or competitive awards. The steering committee uses Illinois’s Statewide Overdose Action Plan (SOAP) guidelines, which include five priority recommendation categories: social equity, prevention, treatment and recovery, harm reduction, and “justice-involved populations and public safety.” The goal is to reduce overdose deaths and related harms. But the half-dozen harm-reduction leaders, large nonprofit directors, psychiatrists, state lawmakers, and former IDHS workers who spoke to the Reader for this story describe a confusing and burdensome application process, promises of feedback for rejected applicants that are not delivered on, and a lack of transparency around award allocation. […]

Midway through November, the Reader contacted IDHS for an update; spokesperson Daisy Contreras responded that the report would be out by the end of the month, but, on on December 1, I found an annual report that had been posted to IDHS’s website on November 2. I emailed Contreras to confirm whether this was the report she was referring to but, as of press time, have not received an answer.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Patch | With Mobile Driver’s License Deadline Looming, No Updates From Illinois Secretary Of State: With less than a month before Illinois’ new mobile driver’s license law is set to take effect, state officials have remained silent on how much progress has been made toward implementing it — or when the public can expect to start using the promised digital IDs. […] Giannoulias’s spokespeople have not responded to repeated requests for information about the program’s status or a timeline for its rollout, and public records requests for records and contracts related to the program remain pending.

* Columbia Journalism Review | Should a Student Reporter Face Prosecution for Embedding with Protesters?: Gohill and his editors thought he’d be treated with some deference. “I was told by my editors, ‘When they [deputies] walk in, step to the side and tell the police you’re press. They’ll let you go,’” he told me. “They said, ‘Once the protesters are out of the building, meet up with Greta outside and follow them in the car and take pictures.’ We never thought this would happen.” His editors couldn’t believe it either. He recalls that one of them told him, “It’s okay, Dilan, they have the right to relocate you, they don’t have the right to arrest you.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | High-stakes school board meeting overshadowed by power struggle with CPS CEO Pedro Martinez: The offer, made over the phone earlier this week, came after Martinez retained attorney William J. Quinlan to represent him in an ongoing power struggle with Mayor Brandon Johnson and the Chicago Teachers Union, which has waged a fierce campaign against the chief executive officer as the union negotiates a new contract with the district. Martinez’s contract limits the district’s ability to fire him without cause and could lead to an expensive lawsuit. So far, Martinez has resisted the buyout offer, sources said.

* WGN | ‘Frustrated’ CTU head on contract talks, getting dragged into city hall scandal: October 19th, Mayor Brandon Johnson sent Davis Gates a text message saying: “Ronnie! Call me. Message from the Elders.” The message refers to Ronnie Reese, the mayor’s former communications director who was fired over allegations including sexual harassment, misogyny and abusive behavior. Reese, like Johnson, used to work for the CTU. […] Davis Gates: “I don’t know what that text message means. If you followed the story you would know that I did not respond to the text message. And what I think people need to also understand is that the mayor and I, we have a relationship that goes beyond work and that there are boundaries to the work that I do here and the work that he does there.

* Sun-Times | City Hall braces for Trump assault on its minority set-aside program: At a City Council budget hearing Wednesday, newly-appointed city Chief Procurement Officer Sharla Roberts was asked what she intends to do to Trump-proof a program that Black alderpersons say is not doing nearly enough to share the wealth with companies owned by African Americans. The city spent $273 million on construction contracts this year, but Black-owned companies got just $18 million, or a 7% share. That’s compared to $52 million, or 19%, for Hispanics and $31 million, or 12%, for Asian Americans.

* WTTW | Potential Settlement Reached in Lawsuit Filed by Family of Dexter Reed Over Fatal Police Shooting: Records: That agreement must be approved by the Chicago City Council by Feb. 10, according to a joint filing from the lawyers representing the city and Reed’s mother, Nicole Banks. The exact amount of the settlement was not immediately clear, but the City Council is only required to approve settlements of more than $100,000. The City Council’s Finance Committee is scheduled to meet on Dec. 10, but it is not clear whether this proposal will be considered for approval.

* Sun-Times | First major cold snap of the season to send wind chills plunging to near 0 degrees: Thursday’s temps in Chicago could feel like 0 degrees when combined with wind chills and as cold as minus 10 in the suburbs. A 77-year-old man died from hypothermia in East Garfield Park, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said. Winds delayed flights at airports.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Illinois AG: Police ticketing at Palatine high schools violated law, unjustly applied to minority students: However, the 29-page report signed by Attorney General Kwame Raoul also found the practice had significantly declined at the Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 schools since the study began in late spring 2022. “OAG finds reasonable cause to believe that the district engaged in a pattern and practice of directing Palatine police officers to issue tickets to students in violation of state law, and that this practice imposed an unjustified disparate impact on Black and Hispanic students,” the report reads.

* Daily Herald | Bensenville president could make $135,000 a year if village changes form of government: If the ballot measure fails, Bensenville will revert to a president-trustee form of government, where the elected village president runs the town full-time as the executive and administrator. The board also approved an amendment to an ordinance that would increase the pay for the village president if that happens. DeSimone is set to receive a salary of $33,000 in 2025, according to the village.

* Daily Herald | None hurt in fire at Elgin homeless encampment: Residents should avoid State Street between Kimball and Wing streets, as well as the Kimball bridge, police said. Metra said service on its Milwaukee District West line was disrupted for several hours because the fire was close to the tracks near Big Timber Road. It was not immediately clear how the fire started and no suspects were in custody.

* Beacon-News | Aurora City Council to vote on establishing education savings accounts for kindergarten students: There are 128 similar programs in 38 states across the country, serving about five million children, Aurora officials said. This program would be the first in Illinois. “This is still a new idea; we’re doing a pilot program,” said Mayor Richard Irvin, who announced the program earlier this year. “We start small, and get bigger where we can include every child and every family that wants to participate.”

*** Downstate ***

* Herald-Review | A ‘new day’ in Shelby County as ‘more even’ board sworn in, lone bid for county farm withdrawn: It’s a new day in Shelby County. After years of long, heated Shelby County Board meetings that pitted an arch-conservative board majority against a vocal, bipartisan segment of residents on a number of topics impacting the future of the county, the county turned a new page Monday with the swearing in of a new board. And last week, the lone bid for the county’s publicly owned 240-acre farm was withdrawn, effectively ending an effort by the previous board majority to sell the land on constitutional grounds.

* WCIA | City of Decatur passes property tax levy: DECATUR, Ill. (WCIA) — The City of Decatur recently passed a new levy that will increase property taxes. But — City officials said this won’t have as big an impact as you might think. The City Council decided to raise the property tax earlier this week. The 6% increase will only apply to 16% of your total property taxes. The other 84% will not be impacted.

* WSIL | One shelter says they are at full capacity ahead of cold weather: Pastor Kent Jackson with the Family Life Church says their shelter on Sparrow Road in Mount Vernon has been at capacity for the last several days. “So we have a certain level of capacity that we could be at,” Pastor Jackson says. “However for people to just have a warm place to go overnight we’re letting a few extra stay just if that’s needed.” Jackson says they can have up to 28 guests that stay at the shelter 24/7 while they need a place to stay.

* SJ-R | Bridgestone grant provides Springfield Boys & Girls Clubs much-needed passenger van: The van from Bridgestone arrived, said club CEO and executive director Tiffany Mathis Posey, right around the time another new passenger van, made possible by the Boys & Girls Clubs of Springfield Foundation, also docked. The vans had been on Mathis Posey’s wish list, so now two-thirds of the club’s aging fleet is brand new.

*** National ***

* Status News | The Times They Are A-Changin’: Patrick Soon-Shiong is tightening his grip over the Los Angeles Times. […] Nevertheless, journalists at the Times respect that Soon-Shiong is entitled to his own political views. What has concerned them is that he has simultaneously started to exert more influence over the broadsheet’s operations, seeking to marry his worrisome views about the news media with how the newspaper carries out its work.

  22 Comments      


Live coverage

Thursday, Dec 5, 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. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Dec 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised just over $10,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.

  1 Comment      


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