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Question of the day

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

As the two articles below indicate, US AG Eric Holder criticized U.S. incrimination and rehabilitation policy of criminals because it does very little to combat the likelihood of a criminal re-offending.

* AG Eric Holder to States: Stop Building Prisons

The country’s top federal law enforcement official says there are too many people in prison. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder made the remark in Chicago yesterday to members of the American Bar Association.

* Prisons not the answer to crime problems: Attorney General

“Today, one out of every 100 adults in America is incarcerated — the highest incarceration rate in the world,” he said. But the country has reached a point of diminishing returns at which putting even greater percentages of America’s citizens behind bars won’t cut the crime rate.

That’s in part because once people spend time in prison, they’re likely to keep engaging in the kind of behavior that sends them back to prison, he said.

“Most crimes in America are committed by people who have committed crimes before,” Holder said. “About 67 percent of former state prisoners and 40 percent of former federal prisoners are re-arrested within three years of release. If we can reduce the rate of recidivism, we will directly reduce the crime rate.”

Prisoners who undergo drug treatment and/or work training in prison are 16 percent less likely to re-offend after their release, he said.


* If you want some anecdotal evidence
of the problem with criminals repeating their past mistakes, here is one that is also good for a laugh…

An 86-year-old Chicago woman was arrested for the 61st time over the weekend — for shoplifting anti-wrinkle cream from a North Side grocery, police said.

Ella Orko’s first arrest, for petty larceny, came in 1956.


So here is today’s question: Do you think there is a problem with the way the U.S. approaches criminal rehabilitation? If you have a problem with the current practice of incarceration as rehabilitation, please provide an alternative.

  50 Comments      


Kirk picks a fight with Obama on health care. Why?

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

Rep. Kirk held a press conference yesterday in which he attacked Obama’s health care plan and presented a competing plan of his own. This press conference was not a campaign event, but odds are good that this decision will have much greater impact upon the U.S. senate race for IL then it will have upon reform efforts in D.C. I am having a hard time finding the political end game in this decision, so perhaps some group discussion might help. Here are the facts as reported by the media…

* Kirk’s plan was apparently light on detail and the press conference was mostly focused at attacking Obama’s proposed plan instead of explaining his own alternative…

Kirk’s plan, formed with U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania and 34 members of the Tuesday Group of moderate Republicans in Congress, would pass a Medical Rights and Reform Act, intending in Kirk’s words to “guarantee your right to your doctor” and prevent government interference in that, and would attempt to cut costs through reforms in medical liability and health insurance. Yet, lacking monetary specifics, it was mainly an attack on the proposed $1 trillion plan for health-care reform now being debated in Congress.[…]

* A centerpiece to Kirk’s plan would be “lawsuit reform” to reduce the costs from defensive medicine
that are created when malpractice lawsuits are left unchecked…

U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) promoted what he called a “centrist” approach to health care reform he said could cut health care costs in half.

As proof he offered the difference between New Jersey, where health insurance costs $5,326 per patient, and California, where insurance costs $2,565 per patient.

Kirk attributes the difference in large part to the limits California has placed on the amount of money juries can award victims of doctors’ mistakes. Lawyers say California’s lower rates comes from state’s strict regulation of insurance companies.

Kirk backs both “lawsuit reform” and “insurance reform” as part of a three-pronged effort to reform health care funding.

* Kirk called his plan bipartisan, but in reality he meant the opposition to the president’s plan was bipartisan…

KIRK: The House bill is a very partisan bill at extraordinary expense, complication. And it’s the bi-partisan feeling is on the opposition to this bill, not in favor of it.

Kirk calls his proposal a centrist bill that would cut health care costs while covering the uninsured. The congressman says his plan is a bi-partisan measure, but he says no Democrats have signed on to it yet.

* More on bipartisanship…

Although he presented his plan as a “bipartisan” proposal, he admitted it had no Democratic backing, blaming Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

“At this stage, the speaker is extraordinarily authoritative,” Kirk said, “and the penalties for breaking ranks with her are severe.”

* Kirk is surely right on about the fact that Obama’s plan faces opposition from both sides of the aisle…

There’s no doubt there’s resistance to health-care reform, especially along party lines. U.S. Rep. Peter Roskam, a Wheaton Republican, said he’s heard “incredibly strong and forceful” criticism from constituents. “They’re just not convinced that the government-run option is going to be anything other than a prelude to a single-payer system,” he said.[…]

Even U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean, a Barrington Democrat, said she’s heard from voters on both sides and remains “unconvinced” the Democratic plan is worth the cost.

* Kirk claimed the number of uninsured people was drastically overestimated once illegal immigrants were taken out of the equation, though fact checks have not reproduced his figure of only 8 million uninsured Americans…

Kirk maintained that federal census estimates of 45.7 million uninsured Americans in 2007 were overstated, saying it included 9.5 million “non-citizens,” 12 million who were eligible for existing public health care coverage and another 16.4 million who were either in higher income brackets and didn’t purchase insurance or were temporarily uninsured. The real number, he said, was 7.8 million uninsured.

The non-partisan Web site Factcheck.org has tried to go through the numbers and notes that about 9.7 million uninsured are immigrants—but they are both legal and illegal. One group cited by the fact-checking organization suggested that 5.6 million may be undocumented.

* For good measure, here is an ABC 7 local piece on the press conference that hits on a variety of the issues discussed above…


* Also, in the fact column is that IL is considered a solid Democratically minded state (as discussed yesterday)

So what is the deal here? And I am not talking about whether you agree with his ideology or where you stand on health care. I do not question his beliefs. On a solely practical political level of ‘how do I get myself elected’, does this seem wise in IL?

Perhaps Kirk is just trying to cement his primary victory by reinforcing his conservative credentials after his vote for the Cap and Trade bill. Who knows?

I am not foolish enough to claim that it was a poor decision, and I am not wise enough to know what decision would be best.

Time, or should I say the voters, will be the judge.

* Related…

* Quinn, Ill. lawmakers to attend health care rally

* Kirk chirps apologetic tune over Twitter tweets

  45 Comments      


The Budget…OY…

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

First -even though Gov. Quinn cut the budget by an additional $1 billion on Friday- make no mistake, IL still has a gigantic budget hole…

The cuts announced Friday do not solve the problem. They only postpone the immediate crisis. The budget is still about $1.4 billion out of whack - and that doesn’t count the bills the state is leaving unpaid, which add up to nearly $4 billion.

* There is a very thin silver lining from Friday’s budget decisions; school funding will not be cut as drastically as originally feared…

In outlining $1 billion worth of budget cuts last Friday, Quinn also restored $85 million for early childhood education. The restoration largely offset a $123 million cut that was announced in July, when the Illinois State Board of Education stripped about $400 million from several programs because of state government’s overall budget troubles.

The $123 million reduction would have represented about a 30 percent decrease compared with a year ago. Advocates said it would mean that 30,000 kids couldn’t attend pre-school.

Now, the blow won’t be so harsh. State Board of Education spokesman Matt Vanover said Monday that the infusion of $85 million means early childhood programs will see about a 10 percent cut.

So while education funding won an important battle on Friday, it appears as if it’s fighting a losing war if the state can’t get its act together…

Sean Noble of Voices for Illinois Children said the partial restoration is an “important but very limited” victory.

“Cuts are cuts, and children and families are going to be feeling the effects of cuts, regardless of whether it’s one in 10 kids or one in three kids,” said Noble, director of government relations. “It’s still going to be felt, and it’s still going to be painful.”

The new state budget remains billions of dollars out of balance and relies heavily on borrowing, he said.

Diana Rauner, executive director of the Ounce of Prevention Fund, said that restoring some of the preschool funding “doesn’t mask the gaping hole in the state budget.”

* The IL Department of Corrections is with out question the hardest hit from the announced lay offs…

Now that Gov. Pat Quinn has announced his budget cut plans, layoffs of prison workers will take effect Sept. 30.

He plans to lay off more than 400 workers at the Decatur, East Moline, Lincoln, Logan, Vandalia and Vienna facilities in a first phase of job cuts. The second phase could bring the tally to more than 1,000 layoffs.

The exact number that will be laid off in the 1st round of cuts is 419. Legislators are working to soften the 2nd round of cuts

Illinois Representative Mike Boland (D) said Illinois Governor Pat Quinn and the AFSCME members are working to find a way to save some of those jobs by having employees forego pay raises and take furlough days. Boland pointed out less staff could put lives at stake. “The cuts, obviously, endanger people. Not only the prisoners in the prison but also the guards and other staff.”

* Carol Marin examines the impact of budget cuts on human service providers. There is plenty of hurt to go around, but the Lutheran Social Services of Illinois says they might have to stop providing state services. LSSI currently provide services to 70,000 people. It’s 15 minutes long, but its worth a look…


Horrible news all around it seems, but don’t shot the messenger. Someone is surely to blame, I would not presume to know, but some in the media feel confident they can identify the culprit.

* The South Town Star looks at who is really to blame for this budget nightmare…

Lawmakers willingly gave Quinn the job of making cuts. Rather than send him a specific spending plan with line item appropriations, they dedicated the money in lump sums. They rejected his call for an income tax increase, gave him the machete and headed back to their districts.[…]

State Rep. Kevin McCarthy (D-Orland Park), for example, is a big proponent of the state’s Monetary Award Program offered through the Illinois Student Assistance Commission. MAP funding provides nearly $400 million in interest-free tuition grants to low income students statewide. He has advocated on behalf of the program for years.

But it’s a program the state can’t afford right now, according to Quinn. No MAP funding will be available for the spring 2010 semester. Fall grants will be drastically reduced.

McCarthy voted against a temporary income tax increase proposal that came before the House. No income tax, no money for MAP.

* The Pantagraph editorial board also puts the blame squarely on the GA…

You can blame Gov. Pat Quinn for the impact from $1 billion in budget cuts he announced Friday - with few details.

But blame should also be shared with lawmakers - both Republicans and Democrats - who shirked their responsibility by not reaching agreement on specific cuts and, instead, chucking the hot potato in Quinn’s lap.

And unionized state employees who will be laid off or face additional burdens picking up the work of those who are laid off can place blame on union representatives.

Those representatives stuck to the “raise taxes” line instead of granting concessions, such as pay freezes or furloughs, that would have allowed the pain to be shared and minimized the impact on individuals.

* Related…

* PJStar : Cutting state aid to college kids carries high cost

* Hundreds of Illinois Prison Guards Will Lose Their Jobs

  42 Comments      


Chairman Shah resigns, Quinn close to cleaning house.

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[Posted by Mike Murray]

* U of I Board of Trustee Chairman Shah resigned on Monday in the wake of continuing fallout from the admissions scandal…

Niranjan Shah said in a letter to Gov. Pat Quinn that he decided to step down after members of a state commission investigating the admissions practices said they believed the trustees should resign.[…]

Quinn said Monday he accepted Shah’s resignation, which is effective in 90 days, or sooner if a successor is in place. He said the search for a successor would begin immediately.

* Shah is the second board member to resign, and pressure continues to mount for 6 of the remaining 7 members to follow suit. (The 7th member, Edward McMillan, only just joined the board in May) Quinn, however, might not give them the chance…

Sneed hears Gov. Quinn is this/close to cleaning out the detritus caused by the University of Illinois student admissions scandal. “He wants the students to return to a new fall semester at the university [Aug. 24],” said a source.

• • The buckshot: “The governor is this/close to using his eraser bigtime,” said a source, referencing the clout-wielding power of the university’s board of trustees.

* The Tribune believes the root of the scandal is much deeper then just the Board of Trustees itself…

But replacing the trustees doesn’t address the whole problem. More than half the applicants on the Category I list were sponsored by lawmakers, who horned in on the admissions process through the university’s lobbyists, not through the trustees. Herman and President B. Joseph White should have blocked both routes, but didn’t, which is just one reason why both should resign or be fired.

Firing the lawmakers is up to voters, though. We hope they’ll think long and hard about it. (You can check on your own legislator’s involvement by visiting the Tribune database at chicagotribune.com/requests.)

Purging the board of trustees won’t protect the U. of I. as long as governors and lawmakers regard admission to the state’s flagship university as an entitlement of office. How the trustees are chosen is the least of our problems. We should worry more about choosing our elected officials.

We don’t know a lot of specifics in this case, and I am not saying that unethical use of ‘clout’ did not happen with some or all of the U of I special admissions.

Sure, some politicians may have offered their recommendation as part of a quid-pro-quo. Much of the time, however, a letter of recommendation is simply a legitimate and normal constituent service.

I interned in a U.S. Congressional Office in 2007, and one of my duties was to write letters of recommendations for constituents (for college applications, military training programs, etc.). In no way was I involved in unethical clout peddling.

* Related…

* Dump the trustees and bring back Chief Illiniwek

  23 Comments      


Opposition to FOIA rewrite, what is the real reason?

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* Yesterday, the Illinois State’s Attorneys Association and the Illinois Municipal League sent separate letters to Gov. Quinn that lobbied against the proposed FOIA rewrite bill, which passed both chambers by a total vote of 174-1 and is currently sitting on Gov. Quinn’s desk.

The letters deal with different specific areas for concern, but in general, both organizations are opposed to the rewrite of FOIA if it creates a public access counselor…

In separate letters to Quinn, the Illinois State’s Attorneys Association and Illinois Municipal League portray the new FOIA bill as too costly, a threat to law enforcement, an undue burden on local governments and a usurpation of prosecutors’ duties by the Illinois Attorney General’s Office, among many other things.

Of particular concern to both groups is what we consider perhaps the most important part of the new Freedom of Information Act: the establishment of a Public Access Counselor within the attorney general’s office who would act as the final authority in cases where a government body has denied a request for records, documents or other information.

* There is a good deal of skepticism in in the policy community regarding the true motivations for their opposition to bill…

Under the bill, local governments can forward FOIA requests to the public access counselor, abide by whatever decision the counselor makes and be released from all legal liability. Citizens denied requests can also seek review from the public access counselor. That’s a good deal for citizens and for government, Smith said.

“In fact, this bill makes your [municipalities] life easier,” Smith said. “We are here and in need of this law because public bodies and municipalities and the state has thumbed its nose at FOIA on the backs of citizens for years and years and years and years.

“I think public bodies have gotten very comfortable with a toothless law,” Smith said.

* Phil Kadner also questions their motivations…

Brown said he was surprised the letter has generated “so much attention.”

Maybe he is unaware that for 20 years good government groups have been trying to rewrite the law. Maybe he’s unaware that powerful public officials in this state have always opposed it.

All I know for sure is that state’s attorneys throughout Illinois, who have never done anything to make the bad old law tougher, don’t like the new and improved one.

And that makes me wonder who they’re really representing.

* And the SJ-R Editorial Board does not pull any punches…

The Illinois Municipal League, meanwhile, tells Quinn that the new FOIA bill is nothing less than a threat to public safety.

“It is regrettable that there may be cases where municipalities will be forced to lay off firefighters and police officers so that they can afford more FOIA lawyers and other responders to help comply with this ‘primary duty,’” the IML writes.

The IML goes on for six pages listing details of problems it sees with the bill, but we will boil them down to this: This law will make it way more difficult for government bodies to deny citizen requests for government records, documents and information.

Likewise, we’ll summarize the state’s attorneys’ objection to creation of the PAC system: This law threatens our power, even though it’s power we’ve almost never used before.

I don’t know if their motivations are sinister or not, but it’s hard not to have questions.

* Related…

* Problems with Proposed Lobbying Changes: One of the hit-or-miss bills that passed the General Assembly this year was SB 54, which, among other things, made substantial changes to the Lobbyist Registration Act (LRA). The genesis of the LRA portion of the bill is plainly found in HB 736, which ICPR supported, but SB 54 differs in some key ways.

  19 Comments      


In case you’ve been on Mars…

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

[posted by Mike Murray]

* The 2010 election cycle is officially underway in IL today as candidates may begin to collect the signatures required to appear on the February 2nd primary ballot.

The Illinois primary is the earliest in the nation, and so is its filing process. Candidates begin filing petitions Oct. 26, effectively setting the stage for a shortened 14-week campaign season shoehorned around the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s holidays. Several candidates have decided to formally declare for office Tuesday, the first day their volunteers can circulate candidacy petitions.[…]

The campaign season is accelerated this time as a result of a change in Illinois election law that moved the primary elections up from March to February to help favorite son Obama’s Democratic presidential bid. While other states opted to leave their non-presidential-year primaries later in the calendar, Illinois made the move permanent for its statewide primary.

* If your are interested in running for public office, keep in mind that you can’t win if you are not on the ballot

But the regulars often count on one thing: They know how the election system works and ordinary citizens do not. A lot of well-intentioned would-be candidates get kicked off the ballot because they didn’t follow the rules. Many will sabotage themselves from the moment they begin collecting petition signatures.

The rules that govern petitions are complex and unforgiving. Lawmakers have crafted those hard-to-satisfy rules because — take your pick — (a) an aspiring candidate should have to demonstrate discipline and smarts, or (b) the more complicated the process, the more it’s as good as rigged to protect incumbents and their political parties.

Ah…I’ll have to go with option ‘a’ on that one. My youth could mislead me here, so someone please correct me if I am wrong, but Obama’s first political victory (his IL Senate seat) was obtained by getting his primary opponents, including the incumbent, kicked off the ballot for not following correct filing procedure. The rules are the rules, and candidates -incumbent or not- whom don’t know the rules will get no sympathy from me.

Of course, you need supporters to win regardless of how meticulously you follow procedure.

* Speaking of endorsements, the Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters threw their support behind Comptroller Dan Hynes for governor yesterday

“Dan is someone who possesses the integrity and trust we are looking for to lead the state as governor,” Carpenters’ union president Frank Libby said in a statement.[…]

The Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters represents 47,000 members in Illinois, southeast Wisconsin and eastern Iowa, including members in the 28 northernmost counties of Illinois.

While certainly not a make or break endorsement, the fight between Quinn and Hynes for union endorsements should be fun to watch

The backing of union labor, particularly trade unions, will be closely watched in the Democratic primary. Quinn pushed for the state’s first major public works construction program in a decade, urging lawmakers to act quickly to spur job creation and take advantage of the summer construction season. But Quinn delayed signing the measure in a failed attempt to try to gain leverage for legislative passage of a state income-tax increase.

Stay tuned.

* Other campaign news…

* Jacobs joins race to unseat Bean

* Excitement Builds in IL-10 Race With Possible Addition of Former Edgar Administration Official Renee Thaler

* The next governor may be a guy named Clayborne

* Chicago lawmaker running for lieutenant governor

  16 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Tuesday, Aug 4, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

I will be guest blogging today. I am certainly no ‘Rich Miller’, but stay tuned…

* Wal-Mart fight pits jobless vs. small business

The question is how do black aldermen justify turning down 500 jobs and a major construction project when there’s nothing else on the horizon?[…]

“There are two big concerns. When Wal-Mart comes into a rural area, Wal-Mart killed all the business in their area. In urban areas, you lose retail sales revenue in the surrounding area,” Lyle said.

“Because there is a finite amount of money in every community, if you have a change in the spending pattern and take on a new player, that means the other players are going to suffer,” she said.

In other words, Lyle is worried about what will become of the predominantly black-owned businesses that sell some of the items Wal-Mart will stock.

* International takes over Teamsters Local

Teamsters Local 726 — one of two hold-out unions to refuse Mayor Daley’s demand for cost-cutting concessions — has been placed in trusteeship amid allegations of financial malfeasance.

The surprise action by James Hoffa, general president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, swept out all seven elected leaders of Local 726, including union president John Falzone, secretary-treasurer Tom Clair and trustee Michael Marcantant.

* U of C hospital union members nix contract offer

* 24 city post office sites among 1,000 nationally that might close

The Postal Service is considering closing 24 retail sites in Chicago, among 1,000 closures being considered nationally as it faces a potential $7 billion loss this fiscal year.

The Postal Service has been struggling with a sharp decline in mail volume as people and businesses switch to e-mail both for personal contact and bill paying. No closure day was been set.

* New Law Derails CTA Notice Requirement

On June 1, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signed Senate Bill 84 into law, repealing the six-month notice requirement for victims of accidents involving the Chicago Transit Authority. Though the legislation received little attention in the press, it brings about a significant change for people injured due to negligent behavior by CTA employees.

The new law applies to CTA accidents that happened after the bill was signed into law. In the past, injury victims and their attorneys were required to notify the CTA within six months of an accident. In some situations, legitimate claims against the CTA were dismissed because of clerical errors or simple mistakes in pre-suit notices.

* Peoria County considering ban on video poker

“I think we ought to discuss it,” said Peoria County Board member Carol Trumpe. “What you don’t see is how much it costs on the other side. People that gamble away money, and families are left short. People least likely to afford it are the ones who are going to participate. So many problems go along with gambling.”

If approved, such a ban would apply to 53 taverns, restaurants and the like with liquor licenses in unincorporated Peoria County, though not all even offer video gaming. It would not apply to incorporated areas including Dunlap, Chillicothe, Bartonville and Elmwood.[…]

The state will collect 30 percent of net income from each machine in taxes. Five-sixths of that money goes into a state capital projects fund, and one-sixth goes to a local government fund, with money distributed in proportion to tax revenue generated from the machines within a municipality’s borders.

* Sales Tax Saga

If you made a purchase in the city of Peoria in July, you might just want to check that sales receipt. The city has found at least a dozen businesses were overcharging in sales tax.

PetsMart, Barnes & Noble, Best Buy and multiple stores inside Northwoods Mall are just some of the businesses that were charging 9% instead of 8% in sales tax.

* Winnebago County seeks wind direction

There is no solid wind farm proposal yet — no maps or legal descriptions have been drawn up — because the county does not have an ordinance that allows wind farms.

Still, Navitas has a project in mind.

It’s a 100-turbine farm that straddles Stephenson, Ogle and Winnebago counties. Forty of those turbines would be in Winnebago County.

* Eureka seeks grant for weather tower

Device would collect data to determine feasibility of a wind turbine at school

* ‘Compromise’ needed to fill Boone County Board vacancy

* New Lincoln Pk. look for DePaul

DePaul University wants zoning approval to overhaul its Lincoln Park campus — and dramatically improve its fine arts appeal — by building new schools for theater and music, a new academic center and by redeveloping Fullerton Avenue with a hotel and student and market-rate housing.

* Consulting Firm’s Stocks Plunge Following Accounting Scandal

A Chicago-based consulting firm is trying to grapple with plunging stocks amid an accounting scandal.

Huron Consulting Group’s stocks plummeted 69 percent Monday, down to $13.69 a share. That comes after the company announced it will restate its earnings starting from fiscal year 2006 through the first quarter of 2009.

* Midwest Banc to cut exec pay, eliminate 100 positions

* Electronics recycling profits take hit

“Ninety percent of the value of the commodities fell overnight,” said Brian Dickerson, one of BLH’s owners. “It’s now about 50 percent of what it was earlier in 2008. I’ll be happy when it gets to 70 percent.”

* Cell phones? ‘Everyone has them’

A growing number of children are becoming part of the cell phone nation at young ages. According to national data from Chicago-based C&R Research, only 7 percent of children ages 8 to 11 had cell phones in 2003. But by last year, that had grown to 26 percent.

In the same period, the percentage of children 12 to 14 with their own cell phones nearly tripled, rising from 21 percent to 58 percent, according to C&R Research.

* 10 charged in scam that allegedly used inmate IDs for tax refunds

Six Chicago area men have been charged in a family-affair tax fraud scheme that allegedly involved using federal inmates’ identities to file for $35 million in tax refunds.

* S. Sider faked calls as CTA controller, feds allege

A South Side man is accused of endangering thousands of lives by allegedly impersonating a CTA traffic controller and radioing bogus instructions to train operators.

* Local congressmen call for immigration reform

U.S. Reps. Luis Gutierrez, Mike Quigley and Danny Davis have signed a letter to Obama that says laws need to be passed that keep immigrant families together, protect workers and provide safe migration opportunities.

Four other Democratic Illinois congressmen also signed the letter, which is circulating in the U.S. House of Representatives.

* Reviving Immigration Bill This Year a Long Shot

* Illinois soldiers return to Soldier Field cheers

* BlogPeoria site beats Journal Star on Delta story by ONE MONTH

* Catching up on Bartman, Peavy

Steve Bartman documentary: Really, is this necessary? Why does ESPN feelcompelled to do a documentary on Steve Bartman? [LOL]

  28 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What do you think of the Jake Peavy deal?

  32 Comments      


Just when you think you’ve seen it all…

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What the heck was Chicago State University President Wayne Watson doing when he was Chancellor of City Colleges of Chicago? Well, according to a Chi-Town Daily News report, one thing he did was allegedly use state and federal grant money to produce promo videos for his pals, including former Senate President Emil Jones

Under orders from then-Chancellor Wayne Watson, the PBS television station at City Colleges of Chicago used its budget to produce free videos of powerful politicians and friends of the chancellor, an internal college e-mail shows. […]

The political programs showcased golf events, a fundraiser and a “State Senate California Trip” in connection with then-State Senate President Emil Jones. […]

The report lists at least 15 programs that were never broadcast and were allegedly “distributed only to friends and associates of the Chancellor.”

The programs showcasing Jones included “Emil Jones fundraiser,” “Emil Jones State Senate California Trip,” “Emil Jones St. Francis Hospital” and four editions of “Emil Jones Golf Promo.”

It truly never ends.

* The online news outlet has been scoopalicious lately. Go check out their story about unlicensed flophouses for the mentally ill. And then there’s this interesting story posted a few hours ago about Latino activists protesting parking meters

Protesters are now standing atop the holes drilled to install the meters, preventing workers from affixing the meters to the sidewalk.

Heh.

  16 Comments      


Too cute by half

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune tackles the state’s new law to tax candy in a cutesy way. Entitled: “Candy or food? Confusion grows as new tax looms,” the article seems to be looking for a problem that probably doesn’t exist.

But as often happens with stories like this, the author editorializes throughout, goes through a whole hand-wringing rigamarole over what is and what isn’t candy, claims the General Assembly “carved out gaping exceptions” to what is and what isn’t candy, then finally reveals near the bottom of the story why the Legislature drafted the language the way it did…

Illinois is hardly the first state to take on the “if it’s got flour, it’s not candy” conundrum. The language was copied straight from a model law drafted by a multi-state organization called the Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board, which aims to makes sales-tax rules more uniform across the nation.

Scott Peterson, executive director of the Nashville-based group, said the organization struggled over how to define candy for tax purposes because many products that some states saw as cookies, other states saw as candy bars. “It finally came to us throwing up our hands and saying, ‘What in the world can we use as a definition that would be relatively straightforward and easy for a retailer to discern?’” Peterson said.

So, uh, this wasn’t a special “carve-out” done by goofy Illinois legislators after all? Then why were we subjected to the rest of that story?

* And after a whole lot of “this is gonna hurt retailers” stuff, we discover…

But Dave Vite, president of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, said his trade group covets inter-state uniformity in tax laws and pushed lawmakers to adopt the compact’s definitions of candy and soft drinks when the tax issue was up for debate a few months ago.

So the retailers’ own Statehouse lobbying group pushed the idea.

This is the law’s actual language

For purposes of this Section, “candy” means a preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial
sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or
pieces. “Candy” does not include any preparation that contains flour or requires refrigeration.

So, bars, drops or pieces that have flour or require refrigeration - not candy. Seems reasonably straight-forward. And other states do it this way as well, so I’m not sure there’s a big deal here.

* And this part of the Tribune story baffles me…

To make things more complicated, outside Chicago the tax will vary from town to town and county to county. Interpreting the new rules may not be a big deal for giant chains such as Wal-Mart or Walgreens, which have large staffs of legal and product experts on the payroll. It’s a different story for small grocers and mom-and-pop convenience shops.

I would hope that local grocery store owners already know their local sales tax laws backwards and forwards since they have to abide by them every day. But unless local governments have exempted food from their own sales taxes, then it won’t matter at all.

* Yes, there will be some confusion. No doubt. But is paying an extra 5.25 cents for a dollar candy bar really worth this sort of silly journamalism?

* Related…

* Gov. Quinn carts purple and navy tie around state: Since becoming governor, Quinn has worn the ties, on average, two to three times apiece each month. In April, May, June and July, he’s worn them in the same week.

  12 Comments      


Madigan’s legacy and other stuff

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s has an interesting piece on House Speaker Michael Madigan this week. The money graf

If Mr. Madigan is like many other pols in wanting to keep his power and help his family, what’s rare is how little he uses his power elsewhere. Mr. Lawrence recalls once asking Mr. Madigan if he was passionate about any issue or cause. “His answer was that he was more about being a political strategist.”

As I’ve said many times before, Madigan’s only real legacy so far is that he’s been Speaker longer than anybody else. And that’s a big reason why he opposed Gov. Quinn’s tax hike.

This is also a decent graf…

Former Republican Gov. Jim Edgar and other Springfield vets like former Senate President Philip Rock, a Democrat, say Mr. Madigan does have a bit of an ideology, not untypical of what you might expect from an Irish Catholic from the Southwest Side: mildly conservative, both on fiscal and social issues. “At times, he was my only ally (among the four legislative leaders) in trying to hold the line on the budget,” Mr. Edgar says.

But that can change, as the article rightly points out. Madigan has also pushed to underfund the pension systems and borrow way too much money.

* Patrick Collins is right, but he sometimes acts as if he’s the first person to ever notice this stuff…

“It’s all about protecting (Mr. Madigan’s) majority, his power,” says former federal prosecutor Pat Collins, who headed a reform commission that expected much more. “On things that affected his power base, the reform was slight at best.”

A good point…

Some Madigan allies say privately that the state is better off with a speaker who reins in members who might otherwise go astray. In Illinois, it has been governors and Chicago aldermen who have tended to get in legal trouble — not Mr. Madigan’s minions.

Go read the whole thing.

* Collins, by the way, is dipping his toe into politics….

A Winnetka attorney eyeing a run for Congress as a Republican may be the first to land a coveted endorsement from the prosecutor who put GOP Gov. George Ryan in prison.

Bill Cadigan, who was raised in Arlington Heights and once worked for U.S. Rep. John Porter, is a longtime friend of Patrick Collins, the federal prosecutor who led the Ryan trial and went on to become a statewide ethics advocate. […]

“If he throws his hat in the ring, he is someone who I think will be a great candidate,” Collins said. “I think he would be good on the issues that are important to me, such as ethics.”

* Meanwhile, since we’ve brought up the governor’s ethics commission, Pat Quinn dropped more hints the other day that he may use his amendatory veto powers on the campaign finance reform bill

“Well when I testified for it I said it’s a good bill, but it’s not a perfect bill and I suppose you want to get as close to perfection as we can,” Quinn said late last week. “So, I certainly want to strive toward that goal and by working as a team I think we can go pretty far.”

Quinn has repeatedly pointed out to reporters that he has the power to strengthen the bill by rewriting it — a so-called amendatory veto. Pushed about whether that’s his plan, he said “that could be.”

A veto would send the bill back to lawmakers, where it would face an uncertain future amid competing political agendas. The bill would die if lawmakers don’t vote to agree to the changes or else override the changes with a supermajority vote that would require help from Republicans — who refused to support the bill the first time.

But remember how the reform commission and others demanded that local state’s attorneys be given broader powers to investigate political corruption? Well, the state’s attorneys have turned another reform argument upside down, and are working against the FOIA bill. Why? One reason

Prosecutors are also leery of granting the attorney general new powers to enforce the Freedom of Information Act.

* Speaking of ethics and the like, I actually wholeheartedly agree with this Tribune recommendation for cleaning up the U of I admissions mess…

The university needs an objective liaison to field claims that an application was erroneously rejected. Lawmakers, trustees and others who are asked to intervene would then have a legitimate channel for those requests — and no excuse for meddling themselves.

Good idea.

* And, on a somewhat related note, the Daily Southtown slams a local mayor for not opposing video gaming in his town…

THE ISSUE: Tinley Park Mayor Ed Zabrocki said in last Sunday’s SouthtownStar that he does not oppose video poker machines in the village, an expansion of gambling recently approved by Gov. Patrick Quinn and the Legislature.

WE SAY: Zabrocki is not taking the negative effects of video poker or the community as a whole into account. Let him know you don’t want it.

Um, what if they want it?

* Related…

* Black Caucus Springfield office tagged with racial graffiti

* Illinois must act on racial profiling : The response has been silence. On the legislative front, efforts to ban consent searches stalled in legislative committees, despite consistent evidence of the racial disparity in these searches. Rather than take action in the face of “indisputable” evidence, some legislators suggest studying the problem for a longer time before taking any action.

* The angry vote works

* Indignation no match for curiosity

* Blagojevich’s name still towers over a bit of Chicago

* Sources: Hull wanted Obama’s Senate seat : But this time, he worked behind the scenes, quietly angling to get appointed by then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned.

* Lawmakers to probe tollway scandals: “We feel strongly that taxpayers need to have a far clearer understanding of certain patterns of behavior that emerge from the tollway,” said state Sen. Jeff Schoenberg, an Evanston Democrat and longtime tollway critic who is organizing the hearings with state Sen. Susan Garrett.

* Edgar keeps on giving

* Commission Drafts U of I Admissions Recommendations

* Redeeming the U. of I.

* Entire U of I board should resign

* System has helped to fuel problems at the U of I

* Here’s why U of I scandal matters to you

* Quinn presents more budget cuts, seeks tax hike

* Governor: Budget plan won’t fund the full fiscal year

* Area lawmakers: Plan will worsen deficit

* State continues to ride borrowed money merry-go-round

* State’s unpaid bills in the billions

* Agencies say Illinois’ unpaid bills are crippling

* Unions, Service Providers React to Gov’s Budget Cuts

* Government’s role as protector of disabled at issue

* Legislative uncertainty for Illinois Fiscal Year 2010, but where are the student voices?

  18 Comments      


Interesting times if Clayborne makes the jump

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My syndicated newspaper column this week is about a possible gubernatorial candidacy by Senate Majority Leader James Clayborne

While fellow Democrats Gov. Pat Quinn and Comptroller Dan Hynes were hurling insults at each other several days ago about the state budget, I picked up the phone and called Illinois Senate Majority Leader James Clayborne.

Were the rumors true? I said. Was he really thinking about running for governor in the Democratic primary?

Over the previous several days, quite a few people had said they’d spoken with Clayborne, of Belleville, and all claimed that he sounded like a candidate to them.

But Clayborne would only say that he was still just talking to people, mulling it over and considering his options. No decision yet.

Clayborne has floated his name for statewide office on more than one occasion. Four years ago, for instance, he indicated that he might run for lieutenant governor. We’ll see if he pulls the trigger this time. But it’s an interesting proposition.

On paper, Clayborne would be a fascinating candidate, especially if he is the only African-American in the contest.

Sen. Clayborne is not the sort of Democrat that Chicago media types are accustomed to seeing. He’s a downstate attorney with a pretty solid pro-business voting record who is also regularly endorsed by organized labor.

He’s pro-gun, but he’s also pro-choice. He ran and lost for senate president last year, and the campaign exposed some rifts with his fellow black senators, partly over his strong rating from the National Rifle Association.

Gun owner rights are not usually very popular with Democratic primary voters, and particularly with Chicago blacks. Pro-gun southern white Glenn Poshard was able to win the Democratic nomination in 1998, although that issue was used against him in the fall by Republican George Ryan. Just about every likely Republican nominee strongly favors the National Rifle Association’s view of things, so that issue might not hurt Clayborne as much as it did Poshard if he manages to win the primary.

Clayborne’s record on guns will set up an interesting choice for Chicago-area black voters and this black candidate. He’s known to be a solid friend of utility companies, which will also test his popularity with black voters.

African-American talk radio hosts did, however, warm to Clayborne during his race for the Senate presidency last year.

During last year’s presidential primary, exit polling showed blacks were about a quarter of the primary vote - and 93 percent voted for Barack Obama. If Clayborne runs against two white, Chicago-based candidates who split that vote, his gun stance and geography might help him pick up some downstate white voters -although his skin color may give some of those folks an interesting choice as well.

Clayborne’s fundraising during the senate president’s race wasn’t bad. He raised about $580,000, compared to the ultimate victor John Cullerton’s million dollars or so. Clayborne raised $113,000 during the first six months of this year, but had over $650,000 in the bank.

Clayborne will have some trouble explaining why he tried to move a bill this year which would have called for a referendum to consolidate a school his son attends with another school. Clayborne introduced the legislation after his son was reportedly expelled for what appeared to be a minor infraction (allegedly waving around part of a broken pair of scissors).

Questions about whether he used his office for personal revenge with that bill would go directly to his gubernatorial temperament. After all, we don’t need another governor who will put revenge at the top of his “to do” list. Clayborne has denied any revenge motive, saying that if he really wanted payback he would’ve pushed through the consolidation without a referendum.

Unlike Hynes, Clayborne supported a tax increase to balance the state budget. The legislation Clayborne backed included an expansion of the state sales tax to an array of services, plus an income tax hike. Quinn initially supported that bill, then said he was for a different tax hike plan.

Hynes repeatedly has slammed Quinn for proposing a tax hike during an economic meltdown, and that’s part of what the two men were whacking each other for when I called Clayborne. Hynes can differentiate himself against both Quinn and Clayborne on this issue, but supporting big cuts to government programs and services hasn’t exactly been a popular issue in statewide Democratic primaries.

This could be a lot of fun.

* Meanwhile, Paul Merrion of Crain’s looks at Democratic gubernatorial prospects of the two frontrunners…

Despite a prime opportunity to turn the Blagojevich years and the state’s fiscal crisis into the issue of failed Democratic leadership, Republicans are facing in Gov. Pat Quinn a rival who raised more money in the last few months than all of them combined.

“As the incumbent who’s not Blagojevich, he can run as the anti-Blago, too,” Mr. Keiser says. “He will be tough to beat.”

Or if Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes is the nominee, the GOP message will bounce off his fiscal-watchdog credentials.

* And Greg Hinz takes a quick look at the top Democratic US Senate hopefuls, Illinois Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias and Chicago Urban League President Cheryle Jackson, and declares them to be “frankly, kind of weak”

Both are bright, young and articulate. But, at age 33, Mr. Giannoulias may be too young, whatever the comparison to Mr. Obama. And, while he remains tight with the prez, he’s picked up some baggage from the family bank and his running of the state’s college-loan program. Ms. Jackson, in turn, never has run for statewide office, and Republicans (and Mr. Giannoulias) will keep reminding voters that she once served as press secretary to former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. But she reportedly is getting help from ex-Democratic National Committee Chairman David Wilhelm.

That doesn’t necessarily mean either can’t win. After all, Illinois is a deep blue state. It does mean that, at least as of now, it looks like Illinois has a real contest for the U.S. Senate.

* Rep. Art Turner is running for lieutenant governor. From a press release…

House Deputy Majority Leader Arthur Turner (D-Chicago) announced Sunday that he will seek the Democratic nomination for Lieutenant Governor and pledged that he would run an issues-based campaign centered on how to put the state on more solid economic, ethical, and budgetary footing, and ensure that it is able to meet its obligations to Illinois’ citizens.

“I intend to campaign vigorously in the coming months, listening and learning directly from people across our state about what is important to them and how state government can be more responsive to their needs,” Turner said. “We’ve learned firsthand, and seen in other states recently, how much the office of Lt. Governor matters. I believe I have the right combination of legislative, professional and life experiences to do the job effectively and serve as an advocate for the people of Illinois and an ambassador for our great state.”

The issues that Turner would most like to make the centerpiece of the office are the promotion of volunteerism, spurring job creation opportunities and industry growth and sustainability.

* Rep. Dan Burke to get Latino challenger

Rudy Lozano Jr. vs. Daniel J. Burke. The 2010 matchup for the 23rd Legislative District on Chicago’s Southwest Side is shaping up as a struggle between two storied political families.

Or peg it as the post-Obama generation taking on what’s left of the Richard J. Daley Machine.

On Tuesday, Lozano will launch a petition drive to challenge longtime legislator Burke. The challenger is the son and namesake of a slain progressive hero, Rudy Lozano Sr. The incumbent, Dan Burke, is the clout-heavy brother of one of Chicago’s most controversial and sartorial pols, 14th Ward Ald. Edward M. Burke, chairman of the City Council Finance Committee.

On the surface, Lozano’s challenge looks hopelessly naive at best. While Lozano boasts name recognition among Latino voters and a compelling story line, his opponent, a state rep since 1991, is part and parcel of a political Machine rich with influence and decades of electoral know-how.

Thoughts on all this?

  32 Comments      


Gallup has Illinois solidly “blue”

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The numbers just naturally work against the GOP in Illinois. Gallup has this state near the top of “Blue” states…

So, despite all that happened this year with the wild-eyed moron Rod Blagojevich, the new governor’s tax hike plan, the failed spring session, the fight over ethics reform and everything else you can think of, this is, according to Gallup, a solid 56-30 Democratic state.

I’d like to see the monthly trend lines on those polls (5,383 interviews), but the end result can’t be heartening for the Republicans.

* So, Paul Merrion is rightfully bearish on the GOP’s gubernatorial chances…

A yearlong effort by big Illinois GOP donors to find and back a strong pro-business candidate for governor has failed, with no consensus in sight for the party’s first wide-open gubernatorial primary in decades.

With business support split among the half-dozen Republicans in the race, the keepers of the party’s purse strings are sitting tight. In fact, party leaders continue to look for candidates who would be widely acceptable to the business community, and two high-level Illinois executives are still pondering a jump into the race, says Chicago attorney Ty Fahner, who, as chairman of the GOP’s finance committee, has been leading efforts to vet potential candidates. […]

By failing to back a single candidate, the GOP risks a messy, expensive primary at best. At worst, some fear a fractured primary could result in a victory for the party’s conservative wing, producing a candidate with an uphill battle to win a Democratic-leaning state such as Illinois.

It’s the same refrain every year with the GOP.

* Speaking of that race, Dan Proft takes a big whack at fellow gubernatorial candidate Sen. Kirk Dillard…


* And Greg Hinz is bullish on the Republicans’ US Senate prospects…

On the Republican side, the big news is that GOP leaders were able to snag what most insiders consider to be the only horse who could carry the party to victory. That’s North Shore Congressman Mark Kirk, who mixes moderation on hot-button social issues with fiscal conservatism and a hawkish streak on military and foreign affairs.

Now, Mr. Kirk will have some primary opposition. Several little-known conservatives are preparing to challenge him, and almost every one of them is making a huge deal out of the fact that Mr. Kirk was one of only eight GOP House members to vote in favor of President Obama’s proposed cap-and-trade carbon tax.

But you don’t get to Congress, much less the Senate, without being able to emphasize and de-emphasize at the right time. So ever since that vote, Mr. Kirk has been winking and nodding about how he really likes drill-baby-drill and nuclear power, America’s security depends on energy independence and the Senate surely will amend what the House sent it. And when November rolls around, most of that dance will have been long forgotten because being pro-environment is a good general election position in Illinois.

More important, the GOP high-rollers have made their selection: Mr. Kirk. Snatching away Mr. Obama’s old Senate seat would put a smile even on Newt Gingrich’s face. And Democrats know that, too, which is why I’ve started to receive a steady stream of Democratic e-mails knocking Mr. Kirk a full 16 months before the election.

Thoughts?

  36 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

* ACLU, courts prepare for abortion notification

The American Civil Liberties Union and courts throughout Illinois are preparing for what could be several hundred pregnant teenagers each year seeking judges’ approval for abortions without notification of their parents.

“We’ll be ready,” Patrick Kelley, Springfield-based chief judge of the 7th Judicial Circuit, said Friday.

He said he has e-mailed administrative guidelines to judges in all six counties in the circuit — Sangamon, Scott, Morgan Greene, Jersey and Macoupin — regarding requests for waivers to the Illinois parental notification law that takes effect Tuesday.

* Outer-ring suburbs got fewer trains, not more: CN

But according to the most recent CN report to the federal Surface Transportation Board, fears about freight traffic on the 198-mile line haven’t yet materialized.

That’s because the bad economy has resulted in freight traffic volumes that have been lower than they were before the EJ&E purchase, according to CN spokesman Patrick Waldron.

* CTA card extension ending

The grace period is ending — CTA Chicago Card Plus customers with expired cards have until Aug. 12 to use them.

* ‘Just believe’ bus ads fire back at atheists

* Legionnaire’s disease closes CTA vehicle washers

* State accuses Wells Fargo of mortgage discrimination

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan filed a lawsuit Friday accusing Wells Fargo & Co. of discriminating against black and Latino homeowners by employing racially biased lending practices.

“As a result of its discriminatory and illegal mortgage-lending practices, Wells Fargo transformed our cities’ predominantly African-American and Latino neighborhoods into ground zero for subprime lending,” Madigan said Friday at a Chicago news conference announcing the lawsuit.

The suit filed in Cook County Circuit Court accuses Wells Fargo & Co., based in San Francisco, of selling high-cost subprime mortgage loans to minorities while white borrowers with similar incomes received lower-cost loans.

* Lowest Illinois tuition hike in a decade

The 11 campuses are raising tuition by an average of 7.1 percent, the smallest average increase this decade.

The “break'’ comes after the schools walloped new students with tuition bills that were double and triple those from just a decade ago, a Chicago Sun-Times analysis of state data finds.

* 7.6 percent tuition hike at Illinois State

* Child support collections up

* Daley gives vote of confidence to Huberman

Responding to a report that federal authorities are investigating admissions practices at Chicago’s selective schools, Mayor Daley said he has “full confidence” in schools chief Ron Huberman, who is already looking into the problem.

* Grade-changing scam spurs CPS changes

* Youth Take Survey on Violence

* Battle-hardened vets see it all from front lines

High school kids share ideas on fighting youth violence

* No free check for the 2016 Summer Games

* Fill your recycling bin, win a prize

* Signs aid safety, hurt tickets: Safety up, revenue lags with warnings

Red-light camera warnings cut crashes along with cash. And just 1 suburb has them.

* 2 wards to see stepped-up enforcement of bike rules

* Power restored at Will Co. nuclear reactor

* Crime hot spots shifting

But the city’s nearly 9 percent across-the-board crime decrease touted by police — including a 3 percent dip in violent crime — doesn’t tell the whole story about crime in Chicago neighborhoods, a Chicago Sun-Times analysis of district-by-district crime data shows. […]

• • A collection of West Side neighborhoods in the Harrison District (11th) became Chicago’s new top murder hot spot.

• • Robbers and burglars were so busy in the Chicago Lawn District (8th) that there was an average of 186 burglaries and 106 robberies reported each month between January and June.

• • The Shakespeare District (14th) — home to parts of gentrifying Bucktown and Logan Square — saw violent crime spike by nearly 30 percent. There were double-digit percentage increases in murders, robberies and assaults and batteries with weapons.

* Six wounded after shooting at West Side funeral

Police said the funeral was for Cornelius Robinson, 28, of the 1200 block of North Cicero, was a “self-admitted gang member.” Robinson had died at his home on July 26 from heart problems, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office.

* Second trial set in 1993 Brown’s Chicken massacre

* Illinois soldiers return home

About 135 Illinois Army National Guard soldiers have returned home after a nine-month deployment to Afghanistan.

* Illinois soldiers to be welcomed home in Chicago

  5 Comments      


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Monday, Aug 3, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

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