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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Southtown

Prairie State College leadership announced Tuesday it will no longer plan events at Victory Apostolic Church in Matteson after the Daily Southtown published concerns from students and community members over the church’s opinions of same-sex marriage.

“Prairie State College is committed to finding a new venue that respects and honors the rights of all individuals without any religious affiliation for all future events,” a statement from the president’s office reads.

Victory Apostolic Church does not recognize marriage that is not between a man and a woman, and believes the Bible teaches that homosexuality is a sin and does not “condone the homosexual lifestyle,” according to its website.

These comments led Rebecca Fassbender, a graduating student from Park Forest and the president of the school’s Pride Club, to file a complaint with Prairie State College’s Department of Equity and Inclusion.

* South Side Weekly

When mayor Brandon Johnson announced in February that Chicago would stop using the gunshot-detection system known as ShotSpotter by year’s end, local activists were elated. […]

But ending the contract may not be enough to remove the company’s more than 2,500 sensors from neighborhoods on the city’s South and West Sides, where they’re disproportionately located. Internal emails reviewed by South Side Weekly and WIRED suggest ShotSpotter keeps its sensors online and, in some instances, provides gunshot detection alerts to police departments in cities where its contracts have expired or been canceled. The emails raise new questions about whether the sensors in Chicago will be turned off and removed, regardless of Johnson’s decision. […]

An organizer who’s been active in the push to cancel ShotSpotter’s contract in Chicago wasn’t surprised the company has continued to work with police behind the scenes in cities where contracts have ended.

“I think it’s exactly what cops and corporations do,” says Nathan Palmer, an organizer with the Stop ShotSpotter Campaign and Black Youth Project 100. “Especially when we’re thinking about Chicago, it would benefit ShotSpotter to keep the mics up and working so that they can also throw lobbying money at whoever’s gonna oppose mayor Brandon Johnson in the next election.”

* Sun-Times

Maybe you’ve noticed some little cicada-like creatures on the ground while gardening or after flipping over a log lately. […]

“They are preparing to emerge,” said Negin Almassi, a resource management training specialist with the Cook County Forest Preserve District. “I have not seen any reports, nor have I myself seen any adults yet. The soil is not warm enough yet for that.

“It’s a fun wait-and-see game right now to see when the firsts start to emerge, so they’re getting ready, and they generally do that about three weeks before they start coming out.”

The periodical cicadas should start to appear once the soil reaches 64 degrees, which is expected by late May.

*** Statewide ****

* WICS | Senator urges residents to ‘hog’ all the bacon on new Illinois Bacon Day celebration: On May 1st, the Illinois Pork Producers Association will gather at the Illinois State Capitol to celebrate the commemoration of Senate Joint Resolution 50, sponsored by Senator Tom Bennett (R-53), designating May 1st as Illinois Bacon Day. Illinois pig farmers, IPPA staff, and FFA state officers will be handing out BLT sandwiches to legislators at the Illinois State Capital to discuss the role that pork production plays in Illinois.

* Center Square | Measure to provide freed prisoners with naloxone advancing in Springfield: The Illinois House recently passed House Bill 5527 that would provide naloxone to people leaving incarceration if they were behind bars for drug-related charges or have a substance abuse problem. The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, said studies have shown overdose is the leading cause of death for people recently released from incarceration. He said funds from Illinois’ share of the nationwide opioid settlement will cover the cost.

* Center Square | Illinois federal judges rescind ‘discriminatory’ policies after complaint: The rules that gave newer, Black female attorneys more time in oral arguments were discriminatory and illegal, he said. “Oral argument is not something the court has to give somebody, but the standing orders of the judges said that they will give oral argument to litigants that have either a female or minority lawyer, pretty much illegal,” said Shestokas.

*** Chicago ****

* Tribune | Lawyers for indicted Ald. Carrie Austin say she’s medically unfit for trial, plans to retire in March: In a motion Friday afternoon, Austin’s attorney, Thomas Anthony Durkin, asked that her case be severed from Wilson’s and that she be declared medically unfit for trial due to chronic and worsening heart failure, as well as a breathing condition “that makes her feel like she is drowning when she lays down, so she can only sleep in a recliner.” Durkin wrote that the request was made “out of an abundance of concern that Ms. Austin simply will not make it through the stress of trial or the difficult pretrial preparation.”

* Tribune | April Perry nominated for federal judge, nixing bid to be Chicago’s first female U.S. attorney: Perry is being nominated to fill a seat being vacated by U.S. District Judge Nancy Maldonaldo, who has been nominated to the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago, the White House announced Wednesday. Meanwhile, the search for Lausch’s replacement will likely have to begin anew and almost certainly won’t be decided until after the 2024 presidential election in November.

* Sun-Times | Family of Dexter Reed files federal civil rights lawsuit over his killing by Chicago police: The lawsuit accuses Chicago police of promoting “brutally violent, militarized policing tactics,” and argues that the five officers who stopped Reed “created an environment that directly resulted in his death.” Reed, 26, was driving in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand Street in Humboldt Park on March 21 when tactical officers in an unmarked car stopped his GMC Terrain. Video footage released by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability shows the officers drawing their guns as they yelled for Reed to lower his window and open his door.

* Crain’s | Foxtrot, Dom’s facing lawsuit one day after shuttering stores: The proposed class-action lawsuit was filed this morning in federal court in Chicago. It alleges that Foxtrot, Dom’s and parent company Outfox Hospitality violated the federal and state Worker Adjustment & Retraining Notification acts. The WARN acts, as they are commonly called, require companies to give employees 60 days’ notice of a mass layoff or plant closure, and provide compensation during that notice period.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ****

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan’s mayor says invitation to Bears was worth a shot: ‘We have to explore every opportunity for economic development’: As the Chicago Bears embark on a plan to build a new stadium near their current Soldier Field home, Waukegan Mayor Ann Taylor said she has no regrets about having invited the team to relocate 50 miles north to her city’s lakefront. Taylor said she knew when she invited the Bears to explore putting a stadium on undeveloped lakefront property in June it was a longshot, but the team responded and she also heard from other developers who wanted to be part of any such project.

* ABC Chicago | Des Plaines’ St. Zachary School closing after more than 60 years: St. Zachary School in Des Plaines reportedly had only 20 students enrolled for next year, and the school will be closing at the end of this year. A spokesperson from the Office of Catholic Schools called the news “heartbreaking,” saying the decision “only came after thoughtful exploration of multiple options to keep the school sustainable.”

* Daily Herald | Judge: Accused Highland Park shooter gets some phone privileges restored: Rossetti ordered Robert Crimo III be allowed to speak by phone with his parents and siblings. The defendant’s phone privileges were suspended last year after authorities say he violated jail rules by using another inmate’s PIN number to call his mother, after his phone privileges were suspended for threatening corrections officers.

* Daily Herald | With new campaign contributions in tow, Elk Grove mayor announces reelection bid: Already Elk Grove Village’s longest-serving mayor, Craig Johnson announced Tuesday he will seek an unprecedented eighth term in next year’s election. At the same time, longtime Trustee Chris Prochno — who has been Johnson’s right hand on the village board as long as he’s been mayor — announced she won’t seek another term, wrapping up a 28-year tenure a year from now.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | Tech entrepreneur Tom Siebel gives U of I another $50M to fund data science: Tom Siebel, one of the most famous tech entrepreneurs to graduate from the University of Illinois, is doubling down on his support of the school’s computer science program as it gears up to handle the next big thing: artificial intelligence. Siebel, 71, is giving another $50 million to the school, bringing his total donations to $110 million, the university says. The U of I is naming its computer science department the Siebel School of Computing & Data Science.

*** Sports ****

* Tribune | 2024 NFL draft: Everything you need to know, including when the Chicago Bears pick and how you can watch: It’s all happening in downtown Detroit, where top prospects will walk the red carpet at Campus Martius Park and Hart Plaza before Round 1 — and the traditional booing of Commissioner Roger Goodell — starts at 7 p.m. Thursday CDT. Rounds 2 and 3 will happen Friday beginning at 6 p.m., with Rounds 4-7 kicking off at noon Saturday.

*** National ****

* Business Insider | Threads just dethroned X, according to this key metric: Meta’s newest app, launched last summer on the back of Instagram’s tech, has seen daily active users grow consistently since November, according to usage estimates from Apptopia. Threads is a direct rival of X, formerly Twitter, which has struggled to maintain its user base since Elon Musk acquired the platform about 18 months ago.

* Missouri Independent | Bill ending Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood clears Missouri Senate: A bill that would make Planned Parenthood ineligible to receive reimbursements from the state’s Medicaid program passed out of the Missouri Senate early Wednesday morning after an 11-hour Democratic filibuster. The bill now returns to the House, where it can be sent to Gov. Mike Parson to sign into law.

* AP | Airlines will now be required to give automatic cash refunds for canceled and delayed flights: The Transportation Department said airlines will be required to provide automatic cash refunds within a few days for canceled flights and “significant” delays. Under current regulations, airlines decide how long a delay must last before triggering refunds. The administration is removing that wiggle room by defining a significant delay as lasting at least three hours for domestic flights and six hours for international ones.

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Pritzker says he ‘remains skeptical’ about Bears proposal: ‘I’m not sure that this is among the highest priorities for taxpayers’ (Updated)

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked today about his thoughts on the Bears’ domed stadium proposal

Well, let me start out by saying I’m a Bears fan.

But you know, before I became governor, I was a businessman, and I’ve tried to be a good steward of taxpayer dollars throughout my term in office. And as you know, I’ve been very active in attracting businesses to Illinois and helping companies in Illinois expand. So that’s something that I do with, again, the role of protector of the Illinois taxpayers dollars in mind at all times.

But I remain skeptical about this proposal. And I wonder whether it’s a good deal for the taxpayers. It’s early and I have not even heard the announcement today, but obviously read your reporting and others. But it’s very important to me that with all the state needs to accomplish, that, you know, we think about what the priorities are of the state. You know, here we stand talking about the Health Care Protection Act. Later today I’m going to be talking more about birth equity, and helping to build birth centers in areas of the state where people don’t have options for their for giving birth, that are outside of hospitals. And that requires capital. There are a lot of priorities the state has and I’m not sure that this is among the highest priorities for taxpayers.

Q: …I know you’ve also said you’re open to listening to proposals from sports teams. What would it take to put the Bears over the finish line with this? Given, you know, are there any lessons to be learned from the last 20-30 years and state governments familiarity with this topic?

Pritzker: Well, maybe one lesson that can be learned just from the last few years is stadium deals and taxpayers putting money forward for stadium deals, not particularly popular around the country.

Take note that the winner of the Super Bowls this year, the team went out to try to get a stadium financed by the public and it was rejected by the public in a place where the Super Bowl champions reside. And I think this is, you know, a recognition that these are private businesses, that the owners of these private businesses need to put a lot more forward in order to get, you know, have their dreams fulfilled and not just rely upon the taxpayers of Illinois to make that happen for them.

Having said that, I think all of us want success for the state. We want more commerce, we want more jobs, we want our teams to be successful. So you know we share all of that in common, but we’ve got to use our dollars wisely.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

You can watch the team’s press conference today on the Bears’ homepage.

…Adding… Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren was introduced as the man who shepherded Minnesota Vikings’ new stadium project. From a recent local newspaper story

U.S. Bank Stadium, the home of the Minnesota Vikings, will require some $280 million in maintenance to remain in top condition over the next decade, including nearly $48 million next year, according to an architectural assessment released Friday.

…Adding… Mayor Johnson is going all-in with effusive praise, and claimed: “This project will result in no new taxes on the residents of Chicago.” Except, nobody has yet said how that new capital spending will be paid for.

…Adding… The mayor just said the new venue would host several events. What he doesn’t say is that the plan allows the Bears to keep the revenues from those events.

…Adding… Is it weird that they’re doing a splashy news media briefing before briefing the governor?

…Adding… This is the capital plan. The Bears claim they’ve worked “closely with the state” on funding sources, but the governor’s office says they haven’t talked to them about it…

That’s $1.5 billion in capital longterm.

Also note the fine print at the bottom. “Financial forecasts subject to change.”

…Adding… $15 million for the state ain’t much. Just sayin…

…Adding… Click here for the full press release. Renderings are here. Economic impact study is here.

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker just pointed out during another press conference that three professional sports teams are hoping to build new stadiums, but the Bears plan uses all the available bonding authority for this project, leaving nothing for the other two.

…Adding… Isabel just asked how the capital plan will be funded. “There are dollars that we believe exist at the state level, at the potentially federal level, [and] at the city level,” CEO Williams said. So, he didn’t answer the question.

Isabel asked a follow-up about specific funding from the state, but Williams would only say “We do look forward to having some detailed conversations with the state here in the near future.”

…Adding… Senate President Harmon react…

Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) issued the following statement regarding the Chicago Bears’ stadium proposal unveiled Wednesday:

“At first glance, more than $2 billion in private funding is better than zero and a more credible opening offer. But there’s an obvious, substantial gap remaining, and I echo the governor’s skepticism.”

…Adding… House Speaker Chris Welch…

The Speaker is happy to continue engaging in conversations regarding the future of our Chicago teams, and is encouraged by the private investments being proposed. In the current legislative environment, with many important budget pressures, there hasn’t been a strong appetite for these projects. Environments can and do often change in Springfield, but the Speaker’s priority is to stay focused on passing a balanced budget and continuing the positive outlook we saw announced by Moody’s yesterday.

Welch also told reporters today that if he put this plan on the big board today it would fail miserably.

…Adding… Asked if he thought the plan could run this spring or if they would wait until the veto session, Warren said…

I mean, we feel that the time is now. I mean, every year that we wait, it’s 150 to $200 million of increased costs. That ultimately will, we’ll have to figure out, but we don’t think that’s prudent The time is now. So our expectation is in this session. And the reason why we’re staging that now and not even in a fall veto session is because even if we’re approved in a veto session, we wouldn’t be able to get into the ground because of the weather, we would push it back a year. If we’re approved in May, then that will allow us to be able to start construction to put people to work next summer. and that would allow us 36 months later to open up our building in 2028. So this truly is one of those adages that time is money, and we do need to figure figure this out. And that’s why we’ve put forward such a robust program and plan.

…Adding… Mayor Johnson was asked: “You have a host of progressive priorities in the capital such as more education and migrant funding. How are you going to make a progressive case for a publicly funded sports stadium?” The response…

Well, because of the public benefit, you know. I mean, again, the best way to grow our economy really requires partnerships with public and private entities. That’s exactly what this does. We’re investing in people. You know, look, these these pictures are miraculous. We’re talking about thousands of lives that will benefit from this investment. You know, the fact that we have not just a storied history with this franchise, but with the McCaskey family, with Kevin Warren’s leadership with the entire Bears organization, my administration. We know that the sooner we can put shovels in the ground and put people to work, that is our surest way to secure a better stronger, safer Chicago and it benefits the entire region. We’re talking about $8 billion of economic vibrancy as a result of this investment. The time is now for that. Think about how long people have been waiting for investments like this.

…Adding… A top Pritzker administration official says the Bears “have no risk under this scenario. The risk is 100% on the state.”

…Adding… Asked about the White Sox plan, Warren admitted the Bears’ plan “doesn’t include any money for what they want. But it doesn’t mean that money does not exist for what they want. So that’s why we’re continuing conversations.” Um. OK. Magic money?

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker went from saying he remained skeptical this morning, to saying he is “highly skeptical of the proposal that’s been made” this afternoon. He continued: “I believe strongly that this is not a high priority for legislators and certainly not for me, when I compare it to all the other things when we’re talking about health care here, even when you talk about capital for health care as they’re asking for capital for a stadium.”

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker said he could eventually support a plan, but this plan “can be a lot better for taxpayers than what they put forward.”

…Adding… Speaker Welch told reporters today what he said he told the Bears privately last week: “If we were to put this issue on the board for a vote right now, it would fail and it would fail miserably. There’s no environment for something like this today. Now in Springfield environments change. Will that environment change within the next 30 days? I think that’s highly unlikely.”

…Adding… More from Welch today…

Again, environments do change in Springfield. I mean, people’s minds can be convinced, there’s gonna be a lot of conversations. But as the governor noted, there’s three teams in Chicago. You have the Bears, the White Sox and, and the Chicago Red Stars, the women’s soccer team. They’re all wanting a share of this pot. And I think you have to seriously have those conversations as well. You know, in sports, equity is very important. Equity is at the center of everything we do in the House and so I don’t think anyone can be left out of that conversation. And so I think what’s happening today is really the kickoff, no pun intended.

…Adding… Sen. Peters…

State Senator Robert Peters (D-Chicago) released the following statement in response to the Chicago Bears’ proposal for a new domed lakefront stadium:

“I haven’t had the opportunity to thoroughly examine every aspect of the proposal just yet. I do want to give the Chicago Bears credit on putting forth private dollars. However, I remain skeptical using public dollars to fund private sports teams.

“Illinoisans are facing many challenges, and my job first and foremost is to take on those challenges and improve the lives of everyday Illinoisans. I’ll always keep the door open for further conversations, especially as I look more into the details of this proposal.

“Chicago is a world-class city and we must do all we can to maintain a strong tourism and entertainment culture but I just want to make sure I do that responsibly.”

And Sen. Lewis…

Officials with the Chicago Bears unveiled a new stadium plan on Wednesday that has Illinois taxpayers on the hook for half of the cost of the multi-billion-dollar project. In response to the new stadium details and cost, State Senator Seth Lewis (R-Bartlett) issued the following statement:

“For the past several months, Illinoisans have heard stadium proposals from the White Sox and Chicago Bears, but what has been missing has been statements of accountability for taxpayers and the fans. As Minority Spokesperson for the Appropriations-Public Safety & Infrastructure Committee, the Sports Finance Authority will be coming before us with their Fiscal Year 2025 budget request. During this hearing, I will be very interested to hear if they are seriously considering this proposal, and if so, how they are planning to protect taxpayers and ensure a positive return on their investment. Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, I will be interested to learn if they have the ability to hold the team’s ownership accountable for producing results that will satisfy the team’s fanbase. These issues could include protecting seat license-holders, ticket prices, and perhaps even producing a playoff-contention team.”

  103 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg

A new bill expected to be passed by the Illinois legislature would likely defang the contentious Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) by drastically changing the risk associated with litigating an alleged violation for both parties.

The proposed amendments (S.B. 2979) would lower the potential damages per privacy violation and possibly dissuade individuals from bringing suits altogether.

The law’s intent is to protect the public from misuse of their sensitive personal information. It imposes harsh fines on entities who fail to safeguard the biometrics they collect. By including a private right of action, BIPA gives the public the right to hold an entity that was careless with their biometric information directly responsible.

The bill would, among other things, limit damages to one recovery per plaintiff of $1,000 or $5,000 for a finding of negligence—no matter how many violations occurred. Previously, plaintiffs could recover this amount for each violation.

If passed, employee plaintiffs may consider these damages too small to outweigh the cost, time, and potential workplace fallout of litigation. And employers might simply find it cheaper to break the law than to change their operations or technologies.

* Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, Illinois Retail Merchants Association, Illinois Restaurant Association and more…

The United States has one of the safest, most efficient, and affordable food systems in the world, in no small part due to the commitment of and close coordination between industry and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Federal regulatory standards and programs – which offer an opportunity for stakeholder input through the rulemaking process and are grounded in science - provide consistency for industry as we produce innovative products while meeting consumers’ expectations for a safe food supply.

Collectively, our organizations represent America’s food, beverage, ingredient, agricultural, and retail industries. Our members source, manufacture, distribute, and sell safe and wholesome products across the United States.

The safety and quality of what we make and sell to our customers is of the highest importance, and we share a common commitment to a strong, unified federal food safety system. Unfortunately, SB2637 would supplant FDA’s authority to regulate the safety of the American food supply by prohibiting an entity from manufacturing, selling, delivering, distributing, holding, or offering for sale products that contain certain specified ingredients in the state of Illinois.

With regulatory oversight of approximately 80% of the nation’s food supply, FDA prioritizes its review of food and color additives through the rigorous evaluation and application of the entire body of scientific evidence to make safety determinations. Those reviews are continuous and ongoing; as recently as March 4, 2024, FDA updated its list of substances currently under the agency’s review to provide more insight on the status of post-market assessments regarding these ingredients. At present, all substances identified in HB 2637 are under active, current review by FDA. It is imperative that FDA be permitted to conclude its review process before action is taken to remove these ingredients from the marketplace.

Legislation such as SB2637 shifts food safety decisions away from qualified scientists and regulatory experts and creates a state-by-state patchwork of inconsistent requirements that will increase costs, create confusion around food safety, and erode consumer trust. By creating two different regulatory standards for the food industry - one enforced by Illinois and one by the federal government - this legislation would inject additional costs into the food supply chain at a time when we should be doing everything we can to bring prices down for consumers.

The organizations above therefore express our opposition to SB2637. We urge you to allow FDA to perform its responsibilities as mandated by Congress to oversee the safety of our nation’s food supply. It is critical that we maintain a national system for determining the safety of food ingredients that is grounded in science and adheres to the process FDA has in place for the appropriate and ongoing review of ingredients.

* WAND

The Illinois House could soon pass a plan to help law enforcement and retailers keep electronic cigarettes away from young people. Sponsors told WAND News that Illinois must hold bad actors accountable for bringing illegal and potentially dangerous vaping products to retail stores. […]

There are roughly 300 vaping products approved by the FDA, but state lawmakers and advocates have seen a significant rise in unregulated products hitting the shelves. […]

“What type of products are they selling,” asked Rep. Bob Rita (D-Blue Island). “You know? When you start looking at these different products, they’re geared towards younger kids. As you dug deeper into it, a lot of these products are illegal that are being sold.” […]

House Bill 5069 could require vaping manufacturers to provide product certifications to retail stores to ensure the vaping products meet safety standards set by the state and federal government.

* WCIA

If you’ve ever booked a hotel room or bought concert tickets, you might have been surprised to find the amount you had to pay at the end was more than you expected because of those additional charges tacked on at checkout.

These are considered so-called “junk fees” – labeled as processing or service fees you don’t see until it’s time to pay. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, these fees cost an average family of four $3,200 a year. […]

A bill in the Capitol would ban those fees. Instead, consumers would pay the advertised price for the item or service. The proposal passed out of the House Thursday and is now in the Senate for further consideration. […]

There have also been efforts at the federal level for this. In October, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced a proposed rule change to ban businesses from using junk fees.

“But a lot of times at the federal level, it takes a long time,” Anna Aurilio, the senior campaigns director at the Economic Security Project, said. “And that’s why we were really happy to be there with representatives from four different states that are working on state level junk fee legislation because we think, number one, states know what the experiences of their own citizens [are], they’re much closer, and number two, they can act much more quickly.”

* SJ-R

House Bill 5057 introduced by Rep. Sue Scherer, D-Decatur, is a bill that would slightly change the process to become a teacher. It would allow the State Board of education to create a content test for those seeking to teach first through sixth grade.

The test would include content on foundational teaching skills and methods that would be appropriate for students first through sixth grade.

The test will have elements that cover areas such as biliteracy, bilingualism, oral language development and foundational literacy skills. The bill would also allow people to retake parts of the test where they previously scored low on, but they will not be allowed to teach until they pass the full test. […]

The bill passed through the House last week and is now headed to the Senate for further consideration.

* Robert Mensch

As the principal of an elementary school that has been providing free breakfasts to students during school hours for six years, I see firsthand the difference a morning meal makes. Kids who eat breakfast perform better on tests, take fewer trips to the nurse and attend more school days per year. What I witness every day at my school reinforces what years of research tells us — providing kids with breakfast helps reduce their risk of developing health issues and increases their chances of academic success. They have better brain function, memory and attention and score 17.5% higher on standardized tests than kids who skip the morning meal. […]

I believe that most schools want to offer breakfast after the bell. However, many can’t afford the start-up costs needed to get the program off the ground. A new bill proposed in the state Senate authorizes the Illinois State Board of Education to provide some schools with a modest one-time grant of $7,500 to purchase equipment such as kiosks, portable coolers and storage, cited by schools as one of the main obstacles to making the switch from cafeteria meals.

The bill also makes school breakfasts and lunches free for working families living just above the poverty line. The reduced price of a daily breakfast and lunch can add up fast, creating continued hardship for families. Our state’s children living in households earning barely above the poverty line still struggle with having to pay for reduced-price school meals, often incurring school meal debt. Committing to covering this cost would not only provide peace of mind for these families but would also ensure all low-income children have access to the nutrition they need to thrive.

These are the main reasons why I wholeheartedly support the bill. I urge members of the Illinois General Assembly to support and approve funding in the budget to help schools start or expand flexible breakfast programs so that all children have access to the morning nutrition they need to thrive. Currently, Illinois ranks 41st in the country when it comes to school breakfast participation. We can and must do better.

SB2209 has not made it out of Senate Appropriations.

* Rep. Harry Benton…

State Rep. Harry Benton, D-Plainfield, is working to increase workforce development opportunities for people with autism by passing legislation to expand workforce training programs for people on the spectrum.

“Our disability accommodations and services need to include folks with autism,” said Benton. “People with autism are fully capable of doing important work when given opportunities, which we all need to learn and develop. Making sure our training programs for differently abled people including those with autism will be beneficial to both them and our state.”

Benton’s House Bill 5256 will allow state agencies to hire individuals with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) through existing trainee programs for people with disabilities. These trainee programs exist throughout state agencies to give people with disabilities work experience. The bill received unanimous support in the house, and now moves to the Senate.

* Rep. Laura Faver Dias…

State Rep. Laura Faver Dias, D-Grayslake, is continuing to fight for families with her measure to guarantee extra days of leave for the parents of children in the neonatal intensive care unit, which recently passed the House with strong bipartisan support.

“Denying parents of seriously sick children the ability to spend time with their kids is unthinkable, but it has been the reality to far too many,” Faver Dias. “Some parents have had to continue to work through their child’s serious illness for fear of losing the source of the income paying for lifesaving medical care. This measure allows for well-deserved time off for these parents to be by their children’s bedside, something I think anyone with children can understand is vital.”

House Bill 5294 is a parents’ rights measure Faver Dias passed with the support of Planned Parenthood of Illinois, and Illinois Education Association and AFSCME Council 31. It gives parents unpaid time off to attend a child who is a patient in a neonatal intensive care unit in addition to leave provided under the Family Medical Leave Act. Employers with 15 or fewer employees are exempted from the 10-day requirement, while employers with 51 or more employees must provide 20 days.

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It sure looks like lawmakers were right to be worried

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW last week

An increased moratorium on closing Chicago Public Schools – including charters – for an additional two years easily passed the state House Thursday night over the objections of the Chicago Teachers Union, which described the measure as “racist,” and despite protestations from Mayor Brandon Johnson’s appointees to the city’s school board.

The Chicago Board of Education would also temporarily lose the ability to change admissions standards for selective enrollment schools and to reduce selective enrollment schools’ budgets out of proportion with cuts made to other CPS schools – restrictions intended to protect selective enrollment schools, but which critics say is a de-facto undercut of neighborhood schools. […]

“The district has no plans to close selective enrollment schools, as the board and district have continually repeated. Let me repeat, we are not closing selective enrollment schools,” Board President Jianan Shi told a House committee last week]. “The small number of selective enrollment schools in the district are well-enrolled, well-supported, well-resourced and we’re going to continue to support those schools.”

That bill passed 92-8.

* Well, Sarah Karp and Nader Issa crunched the numbers and found that CPS - which also appears to be playing a game of “Hide the ball” - is indeed cutting budgets for selective enrollment and magnet schools

Parents at selective enrollment and magnet schools were already on edge before the budget season. Amid a bus driver shortage, transportation to these schools, which had been provided for decades, was eliminated last year so buses could take disabled and unhoused students as required by law. Then, the school board in December passed a resolution that called for a shift away from school choice and toward neighborhood schools. […]

A WBEZ analysis using the new funding formula appears to back up the contention that these budgets have been cut. Two-thirds of the city’s 32 magnet and selective enrollment elementary schools, such as LaSalle, did not receive enough staff positions to keep all current teachers. Schools will receive an additional pot of flexible funding that officials say should be used to make up the difference. But those funds need to cover all sorts of expenses, from recess monitoring to teacher assistants — and some LSC members say they’re inadequate.

Almost all selective enrollment and magnet high schools also lack positions to cover all current teachers, but they’re getting three times the flexible funding as selective and magnet elementary schools, making it more likely they can afford their current staffs. […]

While CPS officials dispute the concerns and trends identified by schools and the data, they refuse to release school-based budgets until they’re approved by LSCs in late May or early June. Until last spring, CPS regularly released budgets to the media in April.

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Flashback: Candidate Johnson opposed Bears stadium subsidies (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mayor Johnson will attend the Bears’ press conference today unveiling plans for its new domed stadium. From a media advisory…

Mayor Brandon Johnson will attend the Lakeshore Redevelopment Press Conference.

Location: Soldier Field, 1410 S. Museum Campus Dr.
Time: 12:00 p.m.

* From a mayoral runoff debate in early March of 2023

Mary Ann Ahern: The Chicago Bears. Mayor Lightfoot wants to keep them by renovating Soldier Field. Do you agree? And if so, how do you pay for it?

Paul Vallas: I don’t support the billion-dollar subsidies for sports teams and I certainly don’t support putting billions of dollars into Soldier Field.

Brandon Johnson: Of course, I want the Bears to say in the city of Chicago. You know, I grew up with the Super Bowl Shuffle. We need another one in Chicago. And so I’m prepared and willing to sit down and and work with the ownership. And let’s see what we can figure out. I’m asking the ownership of the Chicago Bears just to hold tight, a better, stronger, safer, Chicago as possible. And give the new administration, I’m going to bring an opportunity to make the case. But of course, not subsidizing but finding creative ways in which we can make sure that the Super Bowl Shuffle lives on and my son gets to see a Super Bowl in Chicago.

…Adding… From the Chicago Public Schools’ 2024 capital plan document

The CPS facility portfolio includes 522 campuses and over 800 buildings. Our average facility is over 83 years old, and the total CPS critical facility need is over $3 billion.

And yet the mayor is supporting hundreds of millions of dollars in capital spending to build a domed stadium for a wealthy NFL franchise on Lake Michigan.

…Adding… SDG supports using state capital money for sports stadiums? Unreal

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$117.7B Economic Impact: More Than Healthcare Providers, Hospitals Are Economic Engines

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois hospitals and health systems are essential to economic growth across the state. A new report illustrates the hospital community’s role as strong economic contributors who fuel $117.7 billion in economic activity every year, resulting in good-paying jobs and more vibrant communities.

While hospitals are first and foremost providers of life-saving care, their role stretches farther. They are innovators; community partners in addressing challenges of food insecurity, homelessness, health disparities and more; and major employers serving as the hub of economic activity in their communities.

Illinois hospitals and health systems create 445,000 direct and indirect jobs, and they support working families through over $50 billion in direct and indirect payroll annually. What’s more:

    • One in 10 jobs in Illinois is in healthcare;
    • Illinois hospitals directly employ 190,000 Illinoisans; and
    • Every $1 in hospital spending leads to another $1.40 in spending.

As larger purchasers of supplies and services, Illinois hospitals and health systems spend nearly $62 billion to have on hand for every patient the medical equipment and supplies needed to care for patients in any circumstance. In addition, the hospital community spends over $5.5 billion in capital projects yearly that benefit patients, and provide good jobs to Illinois workers. Learn more about the hospital community’s economic impact.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Bears want taxpayers to help pay for their new stadium, experts say city unlikely to get revenue. ABC Chicago

According to the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, since 2020 taxpayers have paid about $750 million toward construction costs of eight new stadiums or arenas across the four major sports leagues.

“That is usually the selling point, we can have development we can have whatsoever. The evidence is overwhelming: these make very poor investments,” said Allen Sanderson, University of Chicago economics professor.

Sanderson said cities rarely get a return on their investments, especially with football stadiums because there are so few games a year and ticket holders tend to be local.

“The Chicago Marathon probably generates more revenue than most these facilities because two-thirds of the runners are not from Chicago,” he said.

* Related stories…

Subscribers know more.

Governor Pritzker will be at Silver Cross Hospital Conference Center in New Lenox at 10 am and Loyola University’s Stritch School of Medicine at 12:15 pm promoting the Healthcare Protection Act. Click here to watch.

Bear’s Lakeshore Redevelopment press conference at noon in Soldier Field. You can watch here. Mayor Brandon Johnson will attend the news conference.

* Press release…

On Tuesday, several labor unions representing workers in Cook County announced their endorsement of Monica Gordon for Cook County Clerk. The group supports the Cook County Democratic Central Committee to slate Gordon for both the vacancy in office and to the ballot for November, citing her sterling track record working for the Illinois Black Caucus, as a Trustee at Prairie State Community College and most recently as Cook County Commissioner. The unions supporting Gordon include SEIU Local 73, Operating Engineers Local 150, Operating Engineers Local 399 and LIUNA.

“We believe Monica will bring election integrity, protection of vital records, and safeguard property deeds for the people of Cook County,” said Dian Palmer, President of SEIU Local 73. “Cook County Clerk is a critical role in the functioning of our county government, and Monica Gordon is uniquely suited to that role. We look forward to working with her as County Clerk as we continue to improve the public services our members provide in the Clerk’s office.”

Monica Gordon has years of experience managing budgets and complex projects and programs similar to those seen at the County Clerk’s office. As Executive Director of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, Monica oversaw the disbursement of over $100,000 in college scholarships to deserving African American students. She served as a Trustee at Prairie State Community College and worked for at Chicago State University improving the lives of hundreds of students. She is the Bloom Township Committeeman and has served on numerous boards for local not-for-profit organizations over the past two decades. As County Commissioner, she has focused her efforts on bringing services to local residents, including healthcare and social services.

“Monica has decades of experience improving the lives of local residents, whether that be students working towards a better life or the residents of her district in Cook County,” said Jim Sweeney, President of Operating Engineers Local 150. “The County Clerk’s office impacts hundreds of people’s lives each and every day. From helping students explore their college options one-on-one and managing multi-million dollar budgets to picking up the phone and personally helping constituents, Monica has the right experience to continue Karen Yarbrough’s legacy.”

The Cook County Democratic Central Committee is scheduled to meet on Friday, April 26, 2024 to fill the vacancy left by the passing of the late Karen Yarbrough.

* From Sean Tenner…

Hi Rich,

Sean here - am a longtime friend of Che “Rhymefest” Smith and helping out on the Chicago School Board campaign; just wanted to let you know we now have the endorsements of:

    * Congresswoman Robin Kelly
    * Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias
    * State Representative Kam Buckner
    * Cook County Commissioner Stanley Moore
    * Cook County Commissioner Monica Gordon
    * Alderman Andre Vasquez

*** Isabel’s top picks ***

* Illinois Answers | For Many Illinoisans in Flood-Prone Areas, Buyouts Are the Only Way Out: In Illinois, there are two buyout programs: one run by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and funded through state legislative allocation, and another run by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Buyouts offer people in distress significant help, but they often come with long wait times and bureaucratic complications. And they often don’t prevent people from moving into other flood-prone areas, experts who evaluate these programs told the Illinois Answers Project.

* ABC Chicago | Recycle plastic bags? New information about where they really end up: ABC News and the I-Team first glued trackers to plastic bags in May 2023 and dropped them off at Target and Walmart stores with plastic bag recycling. Out of the 46 trackers deployed by ABC News and ABC stations, a majority of the bags ended up at landfills or incinerators.

* Sun-Times Editorial Board | Time for a leadership change at CTA: Show Dorval Carter the exit door: Everyone agrees, it seems, except Mayor Brandon Johnson, who so far has resisted the idea of replacing Carter despite the overwhelming hue and cry from aldermen, CTA riders, transit advocates and now the governor to do so. But with the CTA, Metra and Pace together facing a $730 million shortfall once federal COVID-19 funding runs out in 2026, a Carter-run CTA is a potential liability to the city’s efforts to seek state funding to shore up the agency’s finances.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Top general for Illinois National Guard retiring after joining military nearly 40 years ago: On May 4, Neely, the adjutant general for Illinois and commander of the Illinois National Guard, will be giving the flag back, marking his retirement from the military after nearly 40 years of service. “It’s the symbology of one leader giving the flag up and one leader taking the flag,” Neely said, referring to his successor, Maj. Gen. Rodney Boyd, the assistant adjutant general. “One…of my priorities was to ensure the continuity of leadership.

* WTVO | Pritzker touts Healthcare Protection Act as ‘lifesaving’ bill in Rockford visit: Pritzker was at OSF St. Anthony Medical Center on Tuesday to explain what the bill, which has been passed in the House, could mean for patients, doctors, and insurance companies. “With this bill, we’re putting power back in the hands of doctors and patients,” Pritzer said.

* Illinois Farmer today | Farmland values increase at slower rate with tighter profits: While farmland remains a stable long-term investment with a long track record of growing in value, tight profit margins could mean a few years of stepping back in land values, Purdue University ag economist Michael Langemeier says. “Farmers are just more cautious for obvious reasons when they start seeing signs the margins are tighter,” he says.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Most of Chicago’s mass shootings involve young victims: More than half – 53% – of mass shootings in Chicago involved at least one victim younger than 20. Mass shootings have occurred in 56 of the city’s 77 community areas, but nearly three-fourths of them have happened in just 16 communities on the city’s South and West sides.

* Tribune | Police Department rules Officer Luis Huesca died in line of duty: The designation was announced Tuesday, on what would have been Huesca’s 31st birthday, and it entitles his family to survivor’s death benefits. In a message to all CPD members, Superintendent Larry Snelling said he’s recently spent time with those closest to Huesca.

* WBEZ | CPS’s selective and magnet schools appear to take a hit under new equity funding formula: So with no clear sources of new revenue, it appears CPS is redistributing existing funding from some schools to others, based on a WBEZ/Sun-Times analysis and interviews with school leaders. The district has so far refused to publicly release the budgets for broader analysis. Jen Johnson, the deputy mayor for education, told WBEZ that the mayor’s office instructed the district to protect programming at all schools, even as it looks to prioritize high-poverty schools.

* Tribune | Chicago-based Dutch Farms makes bid to buy bankrupt Oberweis Dairy: Brian Boomsma, owner of Chicago-based Dutch Farms, made a stalking horse bid for nearly all of the operating assets of the company, with plans to “operate and grow the business” when it emerges from bankruptcy, Adam Kraber, president of Oberweis, said in a news release.

* Tribune | Water quality has improved dramatically in the Chicago River. But how safe is swimming?: “A lot of people think about the Chicago River as being super gross, super polluted,” Elsa Anderson, an assistant professor of environmental science at Northwestern University, said. “And at one point in time, that was true. But with the Clean Water Act in the early 1970s, it’s not.” Anderson said scientists have been able to measure the river’s improvement by looking at the vast increase in fish and plant species. The river has become a thriving wetland, according to Anderson.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally calls his surprise decision to step down ‘agonizing’: He also said that there is someone who is going to take his place, although he declined to identify whom. Who would replace him on the November ballot will also be a decision involving the county’s Republican Party. :

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board Republicans sue county executive over 143rd Street project veto: Bertino-Tarrant inadvertently signed the resolution that stopped the widening Feb. 16, realized her mistake and then vetoed it the next day. The County Board did not have enough votes to override the veto. The lawsuit, filed April 18 by attorneys Steven Laduzinsky, John Partelow and Jeff Tomczak, said there is no authority in Illinois law that allows a county executive to sign and approve a resolution and then subsequently veto it. The lawsuit cites the Illinois Counties Code that says when the executive approved the resolution on Feb. 16 it became law.

* AP | College students, inmates and a nun: Unique book club meets at Cook County Jail: For college senior Nana Ampofo, an unconventional book club inside one of the nation’s largest jails has transformed her career ambitions. Each week, the 22-year-old drives a van of her DePaul University peers to Cook County Jail to discuss books with inmates and recently, the well-known activist Sister Helen Prejean. Ampofo comes prepared with thought-provoking questions to launch the conversations at the Chicago jail about the most recent books they’ve been reading together.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | State senator weighs in on Champaign School Board ‘chaos’: It’s not very often a state senator gets involved with a school board’s inner workings, but Rose had been reading about frustrations within the district. He decided to reach out to the State Board of Education’s Superintendent Tony Sanders about a month ago. “You maybe just pick up the phone and suggest mediation for this board, maybe organize some facilitators to come down and have a sit-down, and try to put Humpty-Dumpty back together again,” Rose said.

*** Sports ***

* Sun-Times | Ken ‘Hawk’ Harrelson on White Sox: ‘It’s been ugly, and I feel bad for our fans’: No one lived and breathed the White Sox more than Ken Harrelson, the retired Hall of Fame broadcaster. There is no bigger fan. Maybe it’s a good thing he and his wife, Aris, had been at their Florida home until they returned to Granger, Indiana, two days ago. Until watching the 7-0 loss to the Twins on Monday, Harrelson had followed his beloved online, reading box scores and reports and communicating via other channels as his South Side nine crumbled to an embarrassing 3-19 start.

* Daily Herald | Illinois PGA tournament season to feature team play: Team play will make its debut on May 13 at the first stroke play event at Schaumburg Golf Club. This is real team play, not best ball or foursome competitions. With nine six-player teams and a seven-tournament schedule, it more closely resembles what the LIV Golf League started doing three years ago at its tournaments.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Bird flu virus found in grocery milk as officials say supply still safe: Viral fragments of bird flu have been identified in samples of milk taken from grocery store shelves in the United States, a finding that does not necessarily suggest a threat to human health but indicates the avian flu virus is more widespread among dairy herds than previously thought, according to two public health officials and a public health expert who was briefed on the issue.

* WaPo Op Ed | You don’t want immigrants? Then tell grandma she can never retire: To put a finer point on it, there’s so much demand for workers now that even the most marginal American workers, such as teenagers and people with disabilities, are doing unusually well in the labor market. Ironically, some parts of the country complaining loudest about immigration today are the same places trying to loosen limits on child labor because their worker shortages are so acute.

* AP | Cicadas are so noisy in a South Carolina county that residents are calling the police: Some people have even flagged down deputies to ask what the noise is all about, Newberry County Sheriff Lee Foster said. The nosiest cicadas were moving around the county of about 38,000 people, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) northwest of Columbia, prompting calls from different locations as Tuesday wore on, Foster said.

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

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here 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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Nearly 200 years after Native Americans were forced out of Illinois, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation has become the first federally recognized tribal nation in the state after a decision from the U.S. Department of the Interior last week.

The move represents the first victory in the tribe’s larger effort to regain the approximately 1,280 acres of its ancestral land in Illinois via legislation in both the General Assembly and Congress.

But the tribe first had to spend $10 million over the last 20 years to repurchase the first 130 acres of the Shab-eh-nay Reservation, located in what is now DeKalb County, that the federal government illegally sold out from under Chief Shab-eh-nay around 1850.

Nearly two centuries later, Prairie Band Chairman Joseph “Zeke” Rupnick – a fourth-great grandson of Chief Shab-eh-nay – signed paperwork on Friday that allows the Department of the Interior to place those 130 acres into a trust, which gives the tribe sovereignty over the land.

* Shaw Local

Andrew Sosnowski, an Elgin attorney who is running against incumbent Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser in the Nov. 5 general election, implied in a social media post that her campaign received donations from George Soros, a billionaire who supports the Democratic Party and progressive causes.

The March 30 Facebook post by Sosnowski, a Republican, does not name Mosser, but asks, “Where does your elected State’s Attorney get her campaign money? … Many elected State’s Attorneys around our great nation are funded by Open Society and George Soros.”

“His monies are funneled into other organizations with names touting justice, equity, and expression; follow the money. We see these monies funding prosecutor’s campaigns in bigger cities and our own suburban communities too,” according to Sosnowski’s post. “Who gives money to your State’s Attorneys’ political campaigns - follow the money!”

In a text message, Mosser, a Democrat from Campton Hills, said she saw Sosnowski’s post and chose to ignore it. […]

According to the Illinois State Board of Elections, Soros donated to the campaign of former Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Fox in 2016. Neither he, nor his nonprofit, Open Society Foundations, is listed as donating to other candidates in Illinois, according to the website.

* HuffPost

The Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday voted 3-2 in favor of adopting a historic and far-reaching ban on noncompete agreements, potentially giving more leverage in the job market to millions of U.S. workers. […]

When proposing the rule, the FTC noted that noncompetes could hurt low-wage workers in particular, citing use of the contracts at the sandwich chain Jimmy John’s, which HuffPost had revealed in 2014.

The Jimmy John’s noncompete barred workers from taking a job at a competing business within two years of leaving. It defined a competitor as any business that is located within 3 miles of a Jimmy John’s and derives at least 10% of its revenue from “submarine, hero-type, deli-style, pita and/or wrapped or rolled sandwiches.”

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | Debate on IHSA transfer policies seems likely to intensify: It has been in the Rules Committee since March 2023. State Rep. Camille Lilly, D-Chicago, became the chief sponsor on April 15, 2024, the day the committee approved it for consideration and sent it to the Elementary & Secondary Education Committee. Lilly filed the floor amendment that has the IHSA on high alert: “An association or other entity that has as one of its purposes promoting, sponsoring, regulating, or in any manner providing for interscholastic athletics or any form of athletic competition among schools and students within this state may not adopt any policy restricting a student from participating in interscholastic athletics when the student transfers from one school to another school.”

* KWQC | Illinois ranks 2nd highest in number of tornadoes so far this year in the US: Iowa has had 15 tornadoes so far this season, all of which occurred during the severe weather outbreak on April 16. Illinois, on the other hand, has had 40 preliminary reports of tornadoes so far this year, trough April 22.

* NBC Chicago | Multiple Chicago, Illinois high schools land on new ranking of ‘Best High Schools’ for 2024: While suburban schools didn’t rank as high on the national list, many topped the report’s list of best high schools for 2024 in the state of Illinois, including Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Lincolnshire, Vernon Hills High School in Vernon Hills New Trier Township High School in Winnetka and Hinsdale Central High School in Hinsdale.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat | Chicago’s low-income families of students with disabilities eligible for new $500 grants: The Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities is partnering with Ada S. McKinley Community Services to distribute $5 million through the new Diverse Learners Recovery Fund, supported by American Rescue Plan dollars, which the federal government distributed to help cities and states recover from the pandemic. Chicago received nearly $1.9 billion in those funds, which must be allocated for spending by December 2024, according to the city.

* Block Club | Only Half Of Black Seniors Approved For Home Repair Or Refinance Loans To Age In Place: Between 2018 and 2022, Black neighbors 62 and older were twice as likely to be denied home loans as their white counterparts in Chicago, an analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data by the Investigative Project on Race and Equity shows. Over that time, 48 percent of older Black residents across the city were denied a mortgage loan compared to 23 percent of white applicants, the data shows.

* Crain’s | With precious few existing homes for sale, buyers shift to new construction: When they bought a Wicker Park site a year ago with a plan to build 10 condos there, one of the development principals expected that when the units were ready to go up for sale, they would take about six months to sell. Wrong. It took three months to get buyers under contract for all 10 units of the Crystal Street condos, at asking prices of $650,000 to $1.25 million.

* Sun-Times | Loop’s weekend foot traffic exceeds level before pandemic, but retail vacancies still at record high: The average weekend pedestrian activity on State Street was 107% of 2019 levels. During the work week from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m., foot traffic was about 91% of pre-pandemic activity. Total pedestrian activity on State Street was up 7% compared to the first quarter of 2023, representing 1.5 million “impressions” per week, and 94% of 2019 levels. The impressions are counted by analytics firm Springboard MRI, which collects data daily from counters on top of buildings along State Street, from Ida B. Wells to Wacker Drive, that track silhouettes of people but not any identifying features.

* Crain’s | Paris Schutz to join Fox 32 Chicago after departing WTTW: He will help fill the void left by recently retired political editor Mike Flannery. “I’m really excited about the opportunity at FOX to do creative and unique things . . . like long-form interviews, roundtables and enterprise stories,” said Schutz. “I was really excited by the management at FOX, talking about how they wanted to be really entrepreneurial, and they really wanted to move into the future of local TV news.”

* WBEZ | Here’s how some Chicagoans are taking an eco-friendly approach to funerals: Green burial is a catchall term for many new far-out interment options, including human composting and aquamation, also called water cremation or alkaline hydrolysis. But for many, green burial simply means placing a body directly into the ground, according to Sam Perry, a mortuary science professor at Southern Illinois University. He is also president of the Green Burial Council, a nonprofit that sets burial standards.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chicago Daily Law Bulletin | Suspend attorney over baseless lawsuits, ARDC board says: An attorney who filed frivolous lawsuits against the village of Tinley Park and one its attorneys after being denied employment should be suspended for six months, according to the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission hearing board.Stephen E. Eberhardt was charged with filing frivolous claims and engaging in conduct that had no substantial purpose other than to embarrass and burden the village of Tinley Park and several of its officials, in violation of the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct.

* Daily Herald | Controversial Downers Grove library trustee removed from board: Bill Nienburg’s controversial tenure as a Downers Grove Library Board trustee ended last week when the village council voted 4-3 to remove him from the board. The April 16 vote came roughly six weeks after library trustees censured Nienburg and recommended his removal from the board.

* Sun-Times | Finding early morel mushrooms is underway: Ryan Leonard found morels in the past week, noting, “I think they were the earliest I have found them. Found four tiny ones Thursday. This morning I found about 20 on my Sunday morning walk in Park Ridge. They were fresh and I think with more rain this week they should really come out. I’m hoping for a good season.”

* Daily Herald | ‘A transformative force’: Lurie Children’s Hospital breaks ground on outpatient center in Schaumburg: The project is an expansion for Lurie in the Northwest suburbs as well as a replacement for its smaller facilities in Arlington Heights, Hoffman Estates and Huntley, which will close upon its completion. In a letter outlining the project last year, Lurie officials cited a 150% increase over the past decade in patient visits to their satellite locations, which have limited access and extended wait lists.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Generation X nostalgia exhibition earns top honors at Illinois State Museum: “Growing Up X” won an Award of Superior Achievement, the highest award given in the exhibits category, and the Innovation Award for the interactive rec room component of the exhibit. The exhibit explored the toys, technology, and cultural touchstones familiar to those born between 1965 and 1980 in their youth. It was the first museum exhibition in the country to focus on Generation X.

* SJ-R | Springfield-area man who is part-time police officer slams Jeep into school, leaves scene: McIntire insisted he was sober at the time of the crash. McIntire, who was driving westbound on Temple Street and crossed North Miller Street, said he swerved to avoid a collision with “a bunch of deer and dogs” in the road. McIntire stated he had a case of beer in the trunk of the jeep and started drinking on his way home. He told deputies that he had drunk around 10 beers and consumed “a large amount of vodka” before deputies arrived at his home.

* SJ-R | Springfield school district employees to have choice of insurance plans as costs rise: School District 186 Superintendent Jennifer Gill insisted it wasn’t the district that was responsible for increased health insurance rates for employees who take the plan. That came from the carrier, Cigna, because of high claimants in the district and the overall spiraling costs of health care in the country, she said.

* WICS | Jacksonville hospital hosts flag-raising to emphasize organ donation importance: According to Gift of Hope Organ and Tissue Donor Network, which serves Illinois and northwest Indiana, nearly 5,000 Illinoisans are currently waiting for an organ transplant. “April is National Donate Life Month,” said Carrie Carls, chief nursing officer at JMH. “We hold the flag-raising ceremony each year as a way to honor organ and tissue donors for giving the gift of life to others.”

*** Sports and Entertainment ***

* Tribune | Navy Pier announces summer 2024 music, fireworks and sports events: Chicago: Home of House Exhibit (May 1 to Oct. 31): Commemorating the 40th anniversary of house music, an exhibit devoted to the artists from Chicago’s South and West Sides who helped create the style. Presented in partnership with the Design Museum of Chicago and Vintage House Show Collective.

* STL Today | Busch Stadium food: Which menu items score and which strike out?: Farmtruk chef and owner Samantha Mitchell knows how to feed a stadium. Her food truck has already established a presence at Enterprise Center for the Blues and Citypark for City SC. And beginning this season, you can find Farmtruk in the right-field upper deck at Busch (429). Yes, you’ll need to make a pilgrimage there if you’re sitting elsewhere, but Farmtruk will repay the effort with the best food in the ballpark — by far.

*** National ***

* AP | US government agrees to $138.7M settlement over FBI’s botching of Larry Nassar assault allegations: The U.S. Justice Department announced a $138.7 million settlement Tuesday with more than 100 people who accused the FBI of grossly mishandling allegations of sexual assault against Larry Nassar in 2015 and 2016, a critical time gap that allowed the sports doctor to continue to prey on victims before his arrest. When combined with other settlements, $1 billion now has been set aside by various organizations to compensate hundreds of women who said Nassar assaulted them under the guise of treatment for sports injuries.

* Capitol B | Flint’s Warning to America: The federal Environmental Protection Agency and officials with Flint’s mayor’s and city attorney’s offices did not respond to multiple requests from Capital B for comment. Residents argue that even though they’ve brought the country’s water woes to the forefront, they’re in a worse position today despite hundreds of millions of dollars of investment — and they want you to know that your city can be next.

* WaPo | Why this summer may be especially hot in the United States: The hot summer forecast is linked to the probable switch from the El Niño to La Niña climate pattern by the summer’s second half. While La Niña has a small cooling effect on the planet overall, it has boosted summer heat in the United States, especially in recent years when human-caused climate change has also fueled higher temperatures.

* Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi | Countering Chinese cyber threats of tomorrow demands we prepare today: Recent reports revealed that the Justice Department and FBI were authorized to disable hundreds of U.S.-based routers hijacked by Volt Typhoon. This operation protected everyday citizens from malicious PRC-sponsored cyber actors and is exactly the type of action necessary to counter cyber threats before they escalate. Second, we must deter our adversaries. As the “father of information theory” Claude Shannon once said: “assume the enemy knows the system.” Although malicious Chinese code has yet to disrupt our networks, any cyberattack leading to physical harm or loss of life would invoke our inherent right to self-defense.

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McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally abruptly aborts reelection bid without explanation

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Shaw Local

McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally said Tuesday that, “after nonstop agonizing,” he has chosen not seek reelection in November.

It would have been his third term as State’s Attorney and he was running unopposed, having just won his Republican primary last month.

“It is with sadness that I write to inform McHenry County residents that I have decided to remove myself from the 2024 race for McHenry County State’s Attorney,” he said in a news release. “I will leave the office at the end of my term, November 30, 2024.” […]

Reached by phone Tuesday afternoon, Kenneally declined further comment.

* Here’s a February, 2023 op-ed by State’s Attorney Kenneally

We in McHenry County, like much of forgotten Illinois, are exhausted after being forced to wear like an albatross similar kinds of culture-war legislation — elimination of cash bail, abortion expansion, sanctuary immigration — that exhibit contempt for our sincerest convictions. […]

Public officials swear to uphold the Illinois and United States constitutions. However, not enforcing a law because one subjectively believes it to be unconstitutional betrays a fundamental misapprehension of constitutional law. A law duly passed by a legislative body is constitutional. It remains constitutional until a court declares it not to be, not before and no matter how convinced one may be of a particular court outcome.

* That’s… not how he has always behaved. From a CBS2 story on November 30, 2020

Dining out in Illinois will continue to be off limits for at least the next few weeks, according to an announcement from Gov. JB Pritzker Monday. But some restaurants continue to flout the rules and get away with it. For example, in McHenry County, the risk of criminal charges just isn’t there.

The state’s attorney in McHenry County feels the governor has overstepped and the legislature has underdelivered, creating what he calls a “dangerous combination.” He won’t be enforcing the ban. […]

Elsewhere in Illinois establishments have been issued misdemeanors for failing to comply.

That won’t happen in McHenry, State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally says.

* I also don’t recall him speaking out about this

More than two dozen sheriffs around Illinois, including in Kane and McHenry counties, said they won’t enforce the state’s new bans on assault weapons by checking for compliance or arresting offenders.

Except to say this

In McHenry County, State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally has a pending lawsuit challenging the law on the grounds the measure is unconstitutional. With that case still pending, Kenneally said they’ll follow the law.

“We recognize that it is the law and we respect it. We also have limited resources and have to set priorities for the office, and this will not be one of our top priorities,” Kenneally told The Center Square, noting that each case will have unique circumstances.

Without criminal referrals from law enforcement, Kenneally said they can’t prosecute.

* And then there was this 2023 op-ed by State’s Attorney Kenneally that undercut state cannabis laws

Cannabis dispensaries in McHenry County will now be the first in the country to warn customers through in-store signage of the mental health dangers associated with cannabis use, which include psychosis, depression and suicidal ideation.

Dispensaries will also be required to scrub their marketing and websites of any suggestion that their products have medical benefits. They agreed to these consumer protections as part of a settlement with the McHenry County state’s attorney’s office in lieu of a consumer fraud action. Dispensaries that have refused to warn consumers will face litigation.

Since Illinois’ legalization of recreational marijuana in 2020, the defining feature of the dispensaries’ sales strategy has been marketing cannabis as medicine and the antidote to many maladies, including depression, anxiety, insomnia, post-traumatic stress disorder, attention-deficit disorder, immune disorders, chronic fatigue and inflammation.

In furtherance of its strategy, dispensaries have appropriated the scientific lexicon to create their own fraudulent field of medicine, such that one no longer does a “bong rip” but rather receives a specific “dose” measured to the milligram by the cashier. (Or, should I say, “dispensary health care professional”?)

Gov. Pritzker’s office released a statement in part saying that the governor, “is disappointed to learn that the McHenry County State’s Attorney prefers focusing on spreading disinformation instead of tackling the issues that keep actually keep residents safe.”

* He has, however, filed his share of lawsuits. 2022

McHenry County’s chief prosecutor has joined his name to the growing list of Illinois state’s attorneys suing to block the so-called SAFE-T Act from taking effect on Jan. 1, saying the end of cash bail under the law violates the rights of crime victims within the Illinois state constitution, as well as other state constitutional provisions.

On Sept. 19, McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick D. Kenneally filed suit in McHenry County Circuit Court against Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as the state’s representatives.

He lost that suit.

* ABC 7

A challenge to the Illinois assault weapons ban by McHenry County has been transferred up to federal court after a hearing Monday.

McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally filed the challenge to the Illinois assault weapons ban.

  12 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I still call it “pop.” You?…

>

  59 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

A bill placing a moratorium on significant changes to Chicago Public Schools’ selective enrollment schools is heading to the state Senate, where the legislation would already have political cover from Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Still unclear is whether the 92-8 vote in the Illinois House last week represents growing fatigue with the Chicago Teachers Union’s fiery tactics. Ahead of the floor vote, CTU Legislative Director Kurt Hilgendorf called the bill “racist,” WTTW-TV/Channel 11 reported. A statement from CTU President Stacy Davis Gates employed similar rhetoric. […]

Privately, some lawmakers acknowledge it wasn’t wise of the CTU to use the term “racist,” but they wouldn’t comment publicly for fear of stepping into the powerful union’s crosshairs. When Crain’s asked whether he was concerned with the CTU’s use of the term “racist” in their statement, progressive state Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, avoided answering the question directly.

State Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago, sponsored the House bill and did express concerns with the union’s comportment.

“I was disappointed in that rhetoric and I think everybody was,” she said. “I don’t think that was the best approach.”

* KSDK

Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker’s plan to crack down on lengthy delays and coverage denials in the health insurance insurance industry sailed through the House of Representatives with bipartisan support last week, and it has “great momentum” heading into the Senate, he said at a Monday morning stop in Belleville. […]

Lobbyists representing health insurance companies and the pharmaceutical industry opposed the regulations in the House. Their last stand in the Senate could come in the Insurance Committee where State Senator Napoleon Harris serves as chair.

The insurance industry has invested significantly in Harris’ political pursuits. According to 5 On Your Side’s review of public campaign finance records, the insurance lobby has given Harris’ campaign $197,750 since 2013. That accounts for more than 14% of all outside donations to his campaign, more money than any other industry.

Pritzker said he’s already spoken to Harris about the proposal and praised the Dixmoor legislator for “wanting to lift up particularly patients and those who may be suffering.” […]

“I am a strong supporter of ensuring accessibility and availability to health care services in Illinois,” Sen. Harris said. “If the Healthcare Protection Act comes before the Senate’s Insurance Committee, I’ll treat it fairly as I do with everything that comes before the committee. It is vital that affordable and quality health care is available for all Illinoisans.”

* SJ-R

As state lawmakers weigh carbon capture and sequestration regulations, federal officials are trying to woo support in Illinois — an area they see ripe for investment thanks to its geologic features.

Following visits to Archer Daniels Midland facilities in Decatur and Springfield, U.S. Department of Energy Assistant Secretary Brad Crabtree touched down in the Illinois State Capitol on April 16. The state, he said, plays a major role in helping the Biden administration’s goal of net-zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. […]

Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago, said “regulatory gaps” existing at both the state and federal levels need to be addressed before moving forward. She is in support of the moratorium legislation, House Bill 4835, currently awaiting a full chamber vote in the House in addition to her recently filed bill clarifying pore space ownership.

“We are simply not prepared yet to protect Illinois citizens in the way they need to be protected from the risks of this relatively unproven technology,” Williams said during a press conference last week. “With capturing, transporting and injecting fossil fuel pollution, that’s a big deal and we need to make sure we get it right.”

* Center Square

An Illinois Secretary of State initiated measure that seeks to enhance penalties for those convicted of threatening libraries stalled after the Democrat sponsor pulled the bill from the record.

Long pauses were taken by state Rep. Anne Stava-Murray, D-Downers Grove, when she was questioned by a fellow Democratic representative on the House floor Friday. The bill would enhance penalties for those who transmit lewd or offensive behavior against a librarian in any manner.

State Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, said Murray didn’t have a clear definition for lewd and offensive behavior. […]

Ultimately, she pulled House Bill 4567 from the record after being questioned by Tarver.

* The Real Deal

An Illinois Senate bill to lift the rent control ban, introduced in February by state Sen. Natalie Toro of Chicago’s 20th District, is on ice after it was not called in time to meet a legislative deadline.

The bill was not assigned to a committee before April 12, meaning it will not move forward this session, Toro’s spokesperson, Natalie Bak, said in an interview shortly before the deadline. It could still move forward if it is called in one of the body’s special sessions or resurrected in the fall.

Toro was not available for comment Monday, but said in a written statement that the bill continues to await assignment to committee. […]

Toro’s bill, SB3484, seeks to repeal the Illinois Rent Control Preemption Act, passed in 1997 to prohibit municipalities from enacting measures that exert control over the amount of rent charged to tenants in their area.

* Riverbender

State Representative Kevin Schmidt (R-Cahokia Heights) has co-sponsored several important pieces of legislation aimed at supporting the well-being of women and families across Illinois. These bills, recently passed by the House and moving to the Senate, address crucial issues such as healthcare access, caregiver support, and the protection of pregnant women. […]

House Bills Co-Sponsored by Rep. Schmidt:

    HB4055 - Ensuring Healthcare Access:House Bill 4055 ensures equitable access to essential medical treatments by mandating coverage for specific healthcare services under insurance policies.

    HB5643 - Affordable Maternal Care: House Bill 5643 mandates coverage for at-home pregnancy tests under insurance policies, aiming to remove barriers to prenatal care and empower women to make informed decisions about their health.

    HB4677 - Supporting Caregivers:House Bill 4677 establishes the Illinois Caregiver Assistance and Resource Portal, a one-stop shop for families that helps them navigate caregiving resources.

    HB5431 - Protecting Pregnant Women:House Bill 5431 expands healthcare provisions for pregnant women in correctional facilities.

* Rep. Sharon Chung…

State Rep. Sharon Chung, D-Bloomington, is ensuring fair employee rights to educators and other higher education employees by passing legislation that affirms that higher education employees can receive compensation and benefits beyond what is established in their collective bargaining agreement (CBA).

“Both employers and employees can be hesitant to agree to terms of employment that differ from what was agreed upon through collective bargaining,” said Chung. “Explicitly clarifying that schools should treat their employee’s collective bargaining agreement as a minimum will allow both employees to receive greater rights and benefits, and allow school employers greater freedom to find and keep top talent.”

Chung’s House Bill 5079 clarifies existing law that employees of Illinois state universities can agree to employee rights that exceed those acquired through a CBA subject to the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act. Chung led the bill to bipartisan support in the House, and now moves to the Senate.

“From community colleges to four-year universities, our state has some of the best schools in the nation,” said Chung. “Many of the fantastic employees that make our schools run deserve not only all the rights acquired in their collective bargaining agreement, but further compensation beyond that. This bill will help higher education employees understand the benefits they are able to receive.”

* WSPY

The Illinois House of Representatives unanimously passed legislation on Tuesday that would have Illinois recognize June 27th as National PTSD Awareness Day. House Bill 4928 is sponsored by State Rep. Harry Benton of the 97th district in Plainfield.

Benton says that people across the state suffer from PTSD, or post traumatic stress disorder, and his bill aims to promote better recognition of the effects that it can have on individuals. Benton says that it is also important to recognize those who provide assistance to PTSD patients, including friends, family and other caretakers.

Millions of Americans suffer from PTSD, which can affect individuals who were a part of or near a traumatic event. Many PTSD cases involve veterans, assault victims and first responders.

After passing the House, the bill now heads to the Senate.

  13 Comments      


Protect Illinois Hospitality – Vote No On House Bill 5345

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

“Making the Southland a destination for people visiting Chicago is a top priority for the groups we represent. We are building a new casino that will employ hundreds, bring in millions in local revenues, and increase employment opportunities for our community in the hospitality industry. This is why we need to find ways to help support these businesses – the restaurants, hotels, and now casinos, but eliminating the tip credit is not the answer. Instead of passing unnecessary solutions for a problem that doesn’t exist, let’s work together to find better options that will benefit our local businesses, help reduce the possibility of empty storefronts, and support our neighboring communities.”

Cornel Darden, Jr.
Chairman, Board of Directors
Chicago Southland Black Chamber of Commerce

Tell your state legislators to VOTE NO on House Bill 5345 and Protect Illinois Hospitality

  Comments Off      


You gotta be kidding me

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s back in February

In an hourlong talk over lunch Feb. 21, Reinsdorf consistently argued that his goal is not to make money but field a winning team — in Chicago.

Hilarious. He’s doing neither right now.

* More from that February story

Regarding his own team’s fortunes and his hopes for a state-sponsored stadium, Reinsdorf notably:

• Said financing the stadium would require not only $1.1 billion in subsidies from an existing tax on Chicago hotel rooms but also up to $900 million in infrastructure work that already has been authorized but not funded by a tax-increment financing district that covers The 78 property. Such a move, however, will require legislative and possibly City Council approval.

* Three wins and 19 losses later, here’s Crain’s again

A source close to Reinsdorf said that, despite earlier media reports indicating that Reinsdorf wants the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority to front the entire $1.25 billion said to be needed for the new ballpark, “We never said there would not be White Sox investment in the potential development.”

Wait, what happened to the $2 billion in total public funding that Reinsdorf himself talked about?

Anyway

“To the contrary,” the source continued. “We have been looking at several scenarios which would, under the right conditions, involve significant private investment. But as everyone knows, this is an evolving situation. And once we have a clear, definitive path, we will have a clear, definitive commitment.” […]

The source did not define “significant.” But people close to negotiations say Reinsdorf has mentioned a figure of $200 million or more.

$200 million in private funding for a publicly owned stadium is not “significant.” It’s an insult.

* Frankly, I’ve begun to believe that the White Sox are only floating this South Loop idea to prevent the Bears from tapping into the excess bonding authority at the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority.

All we’ve seen so far from the team is a couple of quickie AI renderings (complete with misspellings).

And then a few hours after the Bears announced that they’ll lay out an actual stadium plan on Wednesday, supposedly with $2 billion in private money, the Sox come up with this little press pop.

Makes you wonder.

  54 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Beth, who serve their communities with dedication and pride. For more information, click here Happy Dog Barkery - We Are RetaIL (irma.org)

  Comments Off      


Moody’s revises Illinois outlook from stable to positive (Updated)

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Moody’s Investors Service revised the state’s outlook from stable to positive yesterday, affirming the state’s A3 issuer rating. That positive outlook hinged on the possibility of continued growth in state revenue, Moody’s said in a written statement.

“Revision of the outlook to positive is driven by continued improvement in fund balance and budget reserves, which has been supported by stability in revenue and state decisions to shore up financial health,” according to Moody’s. “Affirmation of the ratings recognizes lingering downside risks to the state’s credit profile, including outsize liabilities stemming from unfunded pensions.” […]

Moody’s latest outlook on Illinois is a rosier report than the one it issued last year, when the credit reporting agency described Illinois’ financial position as weak and pointed to underlying challenges like the state’s constitutional protection of pension benefits.

…Adding… Comptroller Mendoza…

“Bond rating agencies notice when Illinois puts more money toward the Rainy Day Fund and the Pension Stabilization Fund, as we have been and must continue to keep doing,” Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza said Tuesday.

Moody’s Analytics changed its outlook on Illinois bonds from “stable” to “positive” Tuesday, citing Illinois’ “continued improvement in fund balance and budget reserves, which has been supported by stability in revenue and state decisions to shore up financial health,”

“I thank the General Assembly and Governor Pritzker for keeping their focus on responsible budgeting and I urge legislators to support my Rainy Day bill, HB2551, which would require the state going forward to make regular deposits into the Rainy Day and Pension Stabilization funds,” Mendoza said.

In raising its outlook on Illinois, Moody’s noted among factors that could lead to more credit upgrades to Illinois: “Further increases in pension contributions that accelerate reductions in outstanding liabilities relative to current projections.”

“We’ve had nine consecutive credit upgrades and we want to keep going,” Mendoza said. “Better ratings from the bond rating agencies mean lower costs for Illinois taxpayers on infrastructure projects like roads and bridges.”

  21 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  3 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago Bears to announce plans Wednesday for new domed stadium on lakefront. Tribune

    -The Chicago Bears have set noon Wednesday to announce plans for a new domed stadium on the lakefront.
    - The team said it plans to present a “state-of-the-art, publicly owned enclosed stadium, along with additional green and open space with access to the lakefront for families and fans, on the Museum Campus.”
    -The team has pledged to spend $2 billion in private money for the project. The cost of the stadium is estimated at $2.5 billion to $3 billion, plus $1 billion for associated roads and other infrastructure.

* Related stories…

At 11:45 am, Governor Pritzker will be at the Rockford OSF Saint Anthony Medical Center on his state-wide tour to promote the Healthcare Protection Act. Click here to watch.

* Sierra Club Chicago calls for new CTA leadership


*** My top pick ***

* Tribune | Illinois residents encouraged to destroy the eggs of invasive insects to slow spread: The spongy moth, formerly known as the gypsy moth, has been in Illinois for decades and can strip leaves and kill trees, sometimes defoliating large swaths of land. Kathryn Bronsky, a national policy manager with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said while it’s important to stop spongy moths from killing trees in the 20 states in which they are currently established, it’s even more important to limit the insect’s expansion across the United States.

*** Statehouse ***

* STLPR | Pritzker, local lawmakers tout health insurance reform in Belleville hospital visit: Dr. Jennifer Neville, an internal medicine specialist based at BJC’s location in Shiloh, treats women with osteoporosis who have an increased risk of fracturing their bones. Often Neville prescribes a higher-tier medication to her patients, but it’s usually denied right away, she said. “Unfortunately, this process is the norm,” Neville said. “I spend an inordinate amount of time and resources fighting with the insurers to get the patients the care they need.”

* SJ-R | As Illinois weighs carbon dioxide pipeline moratorium, feds recommend technology: Following visits to Archer Daniels Midland facilities in Decatur and Springfield, U.S. Department of Energy Assistant Secretary Brad Crabtree touched down in the Illinois State Capitol on April 16. The state, he said, plays a major role in helping the Biden administration’s goal of net-zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. Carbon capture can help in its aim, Crabtree added, while not hindering manufacturing.

* Capitol Connection | Keicher gives update on Republican priorities heading into final month of session: Lawmakers are preparing to head into their last month of the Spring Legislative Session. The budget will take center stage, as the state deals with a tight fiscal year. Representative Jeff Keicher (R-Sycamore) joined Capitol Connection to talk about the rest of session, the role Republicans will play in the final days, and a couple of his own legislative priorities.

* Center Square | Bill enhancing penalties for threats against librarians stalls: Long pauses were taken by state Rep. Anne Stava-Murray, D-Downers Grove, when she was questioned by a fellow Democratic representative on the House floor Friday. The bill would enhance penalties for those who transmit lewd or offensive behavior against a librarian in any manner. State Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, said Murray didn’t have a clear definition for lewd and offensive behavior.

* High Times | Illinois Governor Cites Cannabis Reform While Campaigning for Biden: At a campaign stop in Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday, Pritzker said that cannabis policy reform can have significant economic benefits in states that legalize marijuana for adults. “I wanted to come up here on 4/20, because we, too, legalized cannabis in the state of Illinois, and I know that’s been a boon to not only state revenues but also to business and job creation in the state of Michigan,” said Pritzker, according to a report from Michigan Advance.

* Daily Herald | Congressional primary winners vastly outraised and outspent their opponents: The fundraising front-runner of the group, Democratic U.S. Rep. Bill Foster of Naperville, already has raked in more than $2 million and spent more than $1 million to retain his 11th District seat. Foster’s primary challenger, fellow Naperville resident Qasim Rashid, was the only defeated candidate in either district to spend in the six-figure range. Even so, he lagged far behind Foster.

* Capitol Connection | Rape Crisis Centers in dire need of life raft from the state: The Illinois Coalition Against Sexual Assault is asking the state for $20 million dollars, which is more than double what they get from the state currently. They need additional money because the federal government cut down the amount of money going to a fund for victims of crimes. Several facilities have already closed their doors because of the shortfall.

* Austin Weekly News | Rep. La Shawn Ford spotlights opioid crisis with Harm Reduction Solidarity Week: At a news conference in Springfield April 17, Ford was joined by the director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, Sameer Vohra, and the Illinois Harm Reduction and Recovery Coalition, along with other advocates, to spotlight the crisis and efforts to stop it and to save lives. “We were educating the Springfield members, and all those that listen, about how important it is to have what you call harm reduction tools in our community,” Ford said.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Senators show confidence in Johnson’s O’Hare rebuild plan: Johnson wants to change the sequencing of construction on the long-awaited Global Terminal and two new satellite concourses. That idea had initially drawn pushback from the congressional leaders when first reported earlier this month. But Durbin and Duckworth rallied behind the plan Monday. “We’re in a better place. There’s been an effort to increase the conversation,” Durbin said at a groundbreaking for a separate O’Hare redevelopment project. “I think we have a proposal that will reach our goal of 25% increased capacity.”

* Sun-Times | Makeover of O’Hare’s Terminal 3 takes off as airlines mull deal on expansion, Global Terminal: The project calls for wider concourses, renovated restrooms, a revamped baggage claim area, more concession space and a host of other passenger amenities. Transportation Security Administration security checkpoints will also be reconfigured into a single screening area.

* Sun-Times | Chicago police union files notice of appeal in case that would open serious discipline cases to the public: At the Police Board’s meeting Thursday, President Kyle Cooper announced that the board would hold off on making final decisions on disciplinary matters in anticipation of an appeal. Cooper noted that 16 officers with pending disciplinary cases have filed motions to transfer their cases to arbitration.

* Sun-Times | Chicago police release photos, video of person of interest sought in probe of Officer Luis Huesca slaying: A community alert asks for help in identifying the male “subject,” noting that he “should be considered armed and dangerous.” Meanwhile, those who knew Huesca have been left reeling. Rocio Lasso said she leaned on Huesca after her own son, Andres Vásquez Lasso, was killed in the line of duty last year.

* Illinois Review | Steve Boulton Says he’s not Running for Chicago GOP Chairman After IR Exposes his Past Comments Comparing Trump to Hitler, Blames “Far Right” for his Downfall: The embattled chairman lost his election to save his 27th Ward Committeeman seat this past March after he was originally knocked off the primary ballot for submitting an “insufficient number of valid signatures.” Boulton then tried to run as a write-in candidate, but only received 24 votes – falling far short of the 111 required to remain a committeeman.

* Sun-Times | Judge OKs $12.25 million class-action settlement over Hilco’s Little Village dust storm: One resident, Elizabeth Rodriguez, told U.S. District Judge Young B. Kim that her husband still has difficulties breathing four years after the event. She and her family were left out of the agreement because she was just outside of the agreed boundaries for payouts. Rodriguez said she lives directly across the street from residents eligible for payments for either property damage or personal injury. Kim told Rodriguez that although she cannot benefit from the agreement, she is not bound by its restrictions, meaning that she can individually sue the companies because she’s not part of the class action.

* Crain’s | Raising Cane’s in talks to lease Fulton Market space: The Baton Rouge, La.-based fast-casual restaurant chain is in talks to lease the space at 820 W. Randolph St., formerly home to the Little Goat diner, according to people familiar with the negotiations. A Raising Cane’s spokesperson confirmed that the chain has “a deal moving through out process, but it is still very early to share timeline or anything involving the lease.”

* NBC Chicago | Are cicadas already emerging? Images, videos show large sightings in Chicago area: Sightings of cicadas, many still in the ground, have already been reported in numerous parts of the city and suburbs. A wall of what may be cicadas was spotted over the weekend on Wisconsin Avenue in Chicago’s Lincoln Park and Old Town Triangle neighborhoods. In Downers Grove, gardeners reported seeing several just underneath the surface in the soil.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBEZ | Toni Preckwinkle is unanimously re-elected head of the Cook County Democratic Party: In a brief victory speech, Preckwinkle touted how well Democratic Party-backed candidates did in the March primary, winning 21 out of 23 races — the best “win ratio” for the party in at least 25 years, she said. She acknowledged some narrowly defeated candidates, including Clayton Harris, III, whom she and the party backed for State’s Attorney. He lost to retired judge Eileen O’Neill Burke. Preckwinkle also made a nod to the preparation the party will take on for the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August, and November’s general election.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk won’t attend board meeting to discuss no-bid contracts: DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek says she will not attend a Tuesday meeting to answer questions from county board members about two no-bid contracts, totaling more than $250,000, for materials related to the April primary. In a letter sent Monday to DuPage County Board Chairwoman Deborah Conroy, Kaczmarek said she is not an employee of the county board and that she has the authority to make decisions about how she spends her budget. She also suggested that a courtroom, not the county board room, is the proper venue to discuss the issue.

* Tribune | Logistics Campus at former Allstate headquarters off to slow start, with plans for lab-grown meat plant on hold: The slower-than-expected start for the $500 million project, one of the largest urban logistics developments in the U.S., may reflect both waning post-pandemic demand for warehouse space and perhaps an overly optimistic bet on when lab-grown chicken would be ready to land on your kitchen table. In October 2022, Allstate sold its longtime north suburban corporate campus for $232 million to Dermody Properties. The Nevada-based developer is turning the 232-acre property, which was annexed by Glenview, into a 10-building, 3.2 million-square-foot industrial park dubbed The Logistics Campus.

*** National ***

* Route Fifty | Justices debate whether cities can make sleeping outside a crime: But much of Monday’s hearing centered on whether the city’s law punished people for who they are or for what they did. That’s because in 1962, the Supreme Court ruled that people could be punished for a discrete act, but not for their “status.” The 1962 case involved a California law that punished both drug use and drug addiction. The Supreme Court ruled that the Eighth Amendment prohibited people from being punished for their addiction because it was a status.

* USA Today | Contact restored with NASA’s Voyager 1 space probe: For the first time since November, the spacecraft is now returning usable data about the health and status of its onboard engineering systems, NASA said in a news release. The 46-year-old pioneering probe, now some 15.1 billion miles from Earth, has continually defied expectations for its lifespan as it ventures further into the uncharted territory of the cosmos.

* Illinois Humanities | Can the Public Humanities Help Prepare Us for Global Warming?: For many, Katrina was the first large-scale extreme weather event clearly borne of global warming. It also highlighted the trademark points that so many had predicted: the vulnerability of low-lying coastal communities; the heaviest burden falling on the poor; the economic disruption; the displacement that results and in many cases becomes permanent. But also the powerful role of grassroots groups and organic networks in response.

  17 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here 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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*** UPDATED x1 - Equality Illinois ‘alarmed’ over possible Harris appointment *** Personal PAC warns Democratic committeepersons about Sen. Napoleon Harris

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was wondering if this was coming. Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…

As the Cook County Committeepeople consider the slating and appointment of a new Cook County Clerk this week, Personal PAC would urge them to examine each candidate’s record on protecting abortion rights. The Cook County Clerk’s office serves an enormous role in both the health of our democracy, and the most personal moments of our lives, administering birth, death, and marriage records. It is important that the candidate appointed to, or slated for, this position supports the fundamental right to bodily autonomy.

One candidate, Senator Napoleon Harris III, has repeatedly shown through his no votes in the General Assembly on the Reproductive Health Act, HB 40, and the repeal of parental notification that he does not support the right to bodily autonomy. He has not stood with Personal PAC and our many allies and partners as we have worked to expand abortion access in Illinois.

Moving forward, Personal PAC intends to endorse in committeeperson races, as the slating and appointment processes are vital components of keeping Illinois 100% pro-choice. Committeepeople who support Senator Harris’s candidacy for such an important role will not be considered as 100% pro-choice incumbents in their next race for Committeeperson.

Expect a vote this Friday. I’m hearing that Cook County Board President and party chair Toni Preckwinkle wants to appoint Chief Deputy County Clerk Cedric Giles to fill the office vacancy through the end of the term.

Other candidates for the ballot appointment include Cook County Commissioners Kevin Morrison and Donna Miller, as well as MWRD Commissioner Kari Steele, although there might be a legal issue with doing that.

By the way, the office vacancy vote will be one vote for each committeeperson. The ballot appointment will be done on a weighted vote.

*** UPDATE *** Equality Illinois CEO Brian C. Johnson…

“It is with great alarm that we hear that Senator Napoleon Harris is under consideration for appointment to the vacancy for Cook County Clerk.

“Senator Harris has one of the worst voting records for LGBTQ+ equality among current Democratic Senators. In particular, he has failed to vote for some of the most essential bills advancing full equality for LGBTQ+ people, including:

    • Marriage Equality (SB 10) 2013
    • Gender identity in Death and Funeral Instructions (HB 3552) 2015
    • Birth certificate modernization (HB1785) 2017
    • Panic Defense Ban (SB 1761) 2017
    • Inclusive Curriculum Bill (HB 246) 2019
    • LGBTQ+ Older Adults Bill (SB 1319) 2019
    • HIV decriminalization (HB 1063) 2021
    • Birth certificate modernization (HB 9) 2023

“As you can see, Sen. Harris has refused to vote for marriage equality, either birth certificate modernization laws, or the gender identity in death law. Given his refusal to support the full dignity of LGBTQ+ people in these critical areas, we are alarmed over the possibility that he might serve in a position with tremendous authority over birth, death, and marriage certificates.”

  22 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago

As calls to oust the leader of the struggling Chicago Transit Authority grow louder, Mayor Brandon Johnson appointed a politically connected pastor who has no professional transportation experience to the CTA’s oversight board last week. […]

Eaddy served on the Chicago Police Board for a decade until last fall, when the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability didn’t recommend retaining him. He also serves on the Illinois Medical District Commission, a post he was appointed to by Gov. JB Pritzker. He supported Johnson in the mayoral election.

Calls and emails to Eaddy’s church weren’t returned Friday. The Mayor’s Office didn’t respond to questions about how Eaddy was identified for the position and how his background helps the CTA. […]

Out of more than 50 appointments to the CTA board over the past 40 years, only three were transportation experts, Block Club reported. The city and governor’s office won’t explain how they identify and interview prospective board members.

Eaddy replaces Rev. Johnny Miller of Mt. Vernon Baptist Church, whose term had expired. Miller was appointed to the CTA board by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016.

* Healthy Illinois…

The Healthy Illinois Campaign is releasing a report on The Benefits of Health Coverage for Immigrants in Illinois that shows how two state programs for uninsured immigrant adults and seniors, provide financial, health and social benefits to individuals, their communities and society at large. The research briefing by the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois Chicago, which authored the data review report, will be presented at an in-person event hosted at the North Lawndale Employment Network. GCI’s presentation will be followed by a panel discussion on the report’s contents, its significance and next steps.

WHO: Program Presentation: Samantha Sepulveda, UIC Great Cities Institute
Panel Moderator: Ere Rendon, vice president of Immigrant Justice, The Resurrection Project
Panelists:

    - IL State Rep. Lilian Jimenez, D-4
    - IL Senate District 20 Democratic nominee Graciela Guzman
    - Glo Choi, organizer, HANA Center
    - Edith Avila Olea, MPP, policy manager, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant & Refugee Rights

WHEN & WHERE: 8:30 a.m., Friday, April 26, Registration & Light refreshments
- Program 9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m
- North Lawndale Employment Network, - 1111 S. Homan Avenue, Chicago
- The briefing will also be accessible online. To attend either one, register here.
WHY: The report analyzes data that demonstrates the value of health coverage programs for immigrants excluded from federal Medicaid. Providing health coverage benefits not only individuals who can’t get coverage, but their children, their families, the communities where they live and the state healthcare infrastructure.

The report found that Illinois was once a state that led in providing health coverage to low-income immigrants, including being the first state to expand coverage to undocumented children in 2006. But the state’s pause in enrollment for immigrants ages 42-64 and capped benefits for those 65 and older take away Illinois’ recent status as a nation-leading state in providing these benefits to immigrants, regardless of their immigration status.

* WICS

The Illinois State Fair invites the public to a 100 Days Out celebration on Tuesday, April 30 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Reisch Pavilion on the Illinois State Fairgrounds.

The celebration will be a preview into the food and drinks sold at the Illinois State Fair, which will run August 8-18. […]

Discounted State Fair mega passes, jumbo passes, admission booklets and parking passes will also be available for purchase during the event.

“We are proud to showcase the Illinois State Fairgrounds following a $58 million investment in improvements,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “This 100 Days Out celebration offers a preview of the 2024 Illinois State Fair, which promises to be the biggest and best yet.”

*** Statewide News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker says state ‘obviously’ needs to change 2010 law that shrunk pension benefits: “We need, obviously, to make some changes to Tier 2 to make sure that we’re meeting the Social Security Safe Harbor,” the governor said at an unrelated news conference late Thursday night in his Capitol office. “We don’t yet really know what that’s going to cost.” Earlier in the day, Pritzker’s top budget advisor, Governor’s Office of Management and Budget Director Alexis Sturm, told a House committee that the governor was “open to that conversation” about increasing the cap on Tier 2 pension earnings to match Social Security.

* Cook County sheriff Tom Dart | I support Karina’s Bill to help police protect domestic violence survivors: Orders of protection, also called restraining orders, suffer from one obvious shortcoming: They do not allow police to search for and seize firearms; instead, they usually rely on the subject to voluntarily turn them in to police or give them to someone else. That is why I strongly support Karina’s Bill, legislation drafted by domestic violence advocates that provides police with real authority to remove firearms from the subject of an order of protection.

* Tribune | Kroger and Albertsons propose selling off more Illinois stores in bid for merger approval: In September, the grocery companies said they planned to sell off the Mariano’s brand name and 14 Kroger-owned grocery stores in Illinois. At the time, a spokesperson for Kroger-owned Mariano’s confirmed that at least some Mariano’s stores would be sold. On Monday, the company said its Illinois divestitures would include a total of 35 Kroger and Albertsons-owned stores. […] The companies now plan to sell a total of 579 Kroger and Albertsons stores in markets where they overlap to C&S Wholesale Grocers, a New Hampshire grocery supplier and operator, for $2.9 billion. Under the initial divestiture plan, announced in September, C&S had planned to purchase 413 stores for $1.9 billion.

* Crain’s | J&J, Kenvue ordered to pay $45M to Illinois family in baby powder suit: Jurors hearing the case in Chicago late Friday concluded Kenvue was 70% responsible for the death of Theresa Garcia, a mother of six and a grandmother, who died in 2020 after developing mesothelioma, a type of cancer linked to asbestos exposure. Her family alleged J&J and Kenvue’s predecessor firm sold their talcum-based baby powder knowing it was tainted with asbestos, according to court filings.

* SJ-R | Passover begins April 22. Here’s everything you need to know about the 8-day celebration: Passover commemorates the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt as told in the Torah, or the first five books of the Old Testament. The name “Passover” comes from the Israelites marking the doors of their homes with lamb’s blood so an avenging angel, sent by God, would know to pass over them.

*** Earth Day ***

* 21st Show | Earth Day 2024: The current state of our environment: To start our show off, we’ll cover the current state of Illinois’ environment, followed by the biggest environmental challenges we’re facing worldwide. We’ll also look back to the 70s and see how environmentalist movements have changed since then, and learn if nuclear energy is considered green energy. To close off our show, we’ll hear from our guests if doomers are right about Earth’s future, or if you should remain optimistic.

* ABC Chicago | Registration for Aurora free electronics recycling event opens Monday: Mandatory registration for the recycling drive starts Monday at 9 a.m. The city says registration capacity is typically reached in 24 hours. The first 2,000 people to register will get a spot in the drive-thru, which is happening on May 4 at the Route 59 Metra Station.

* NBC Chicago | Earth Day: How one grocery shopper takes steps to avoid ‘pointless plastic’: Nature wraps bananas and oranges in peels. But in some modern supermarkets, they’re bagged or wrapped in plastic too. For Judith Enck, that’s the epitome of pointless plastic. The baby food aisle is similarly distressing for her, with its rows and rows of blended fruits, vegetables and meat in single-use pouches that have replaced glass jars. Less than 10% of plastic is recycled. Most is buried, burned or dumped. Recycling rates for glass, aluminum and cardboard are far higher. And cardboard or paper packaging is biodegradable.

* Students: Earth Day was born on college campuses. Now our universities must divest from fossil fuels: The fight against fossil fuels is a fight against the cycles of injustice that uphold and are sustained by extractive industries, including the military-industrial complex, which is fueling the genocide in Gaza, and prisons and jails — which are in the 90th percentile or more for pollution-related cancer risk and proximity to hazardous waste. We follow in the footsteps of the first Earth Day, not to repeat it but to reclaim it. We are building a multiracial, cross-class movement to destroy fossil fuel influence in our politics and institutions and center the communities most affected by the climate crisis.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | UChicago Promised $15 Million For South Side Violence Prevention. It’s Given Less Than $3 Million: The Violence Intervention Fund — launched following the deaths of three students — was a commitment to groups that organize youth activities, mentorship and more. Two years in, grantees say the university stopped communicating about the program.

* Crain’s | With the DNC approaching, Johnson puts Dems in a tight spot on Gaza: “We have not experienced any rift with the mayor’s office,” DNC Chair Minyon Moore said when asked whether there was a rift between the official party platform and the host mayor when it comes to the war in Gaza. “They have been great partners to us,” she added. “And we expect that to go on to the end of the cycle.”

* Block Club | $70 Million More For Migrant Housing, Services Approved By City Council: Alderpeople on Friday voted 30-18 in favor of the added spending, which will come from the city’s “assigned fund balance reserve” from 2022, according to budget officials. The allocation follows a joint $250 million pledge in February from the state of Illinois and Cook County for shelter and other services for migrants coming to Chicago and Illinois.

* Block Club | Police Watchdog Defends Handling Of Dexter Reed Case Amid Criticism From City’s Top Cop: Following the release of body camera footage of the shootout earlier this month, Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten has commented publicly on the incident multiple times, including during an appearance on a sports commentator’s show. Her comments — some of which raised questions about the officers involved — have come as her agency leads the investigation into the fatal shooting. The body cam footage, released April 9 by COPA, shows police stopping Reed’s car in Humboldt Park March 21 before a gunfight ensues. Reed shot first, injuring an officer, the agency said. Four other tactical officers on the scene returned fired, shooting 96 bullets in 41 seconds, including three shots after Reed was laying “motionless” on the ground outside his car, Kersten said.

* WTTW | Taxpayers Spent at Least $5.6M to Settle, Defend Lawsuits Accusing CPD Officers of Misconduct During Protests, Unrest in 2020: Analysis: Nearly $2 million of that toll went to pay private lawyers to defend the conduct of CPD officers from late May until mid-August 2020, one of the most tumultuous periods in Chicago history, according to records obtained by WTTW News through a Freedom of Information Act request. Chicago taxpayers paid a premium to hire private attorneys to defend the conduct of CPD officers even though two probes found officers beat protesters with batons, doused their faces with pepper spray, used racial slurs and mocked the push for racial justice and police reform. In many cases, that conduct violated protesters’ First Amendment rights and involved unjustified and excessive force, according to the probes.

* Block Club | Off-Duty Officer Luis Huesca Fatally Shot In Gage Park: “Our city is grieving, and our condolences go out to their entire family as well as Luis’ fellow officers and community,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said in a statement. Snelling said Huesca was on his way home after working. He was in his uniform, though wearing something that “covered it up,” Snelling said.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago Police Officer Luis Huesca, shot and killed Sunday, had eulogized fallen colleague last year: Just a year ago, Huesca eulogized one of his best friends – a fellow Chicago Police officer who was shot and killed in the line of duty. It was just last year when Officer Huesca appeared in a tribute video for his good friend and colleague, Officer Andrés Mauricio Vásquez Lasso, who was shot and killed while responding to a domestic violence call on Spaulding Avenue near 53rd Street March 1, 2023.

* Tribune | Chicago police officer killed in Gage Park had spoken just last year at memorial for fellow officer: According to Tribune reports, Huesca is the third Chicago police officer to be shot — and the first fatally — this year. On Jan. 8, a veteran police officer was shot in the leg during an exchange of gunfire with a burglary suspect in the Gold Coast neighborhood. On March 21, an officer was shot by a civilian who was also critically wounded during an “investigatory stop” in Humboldt Park.

* Crain’s | Housing affordability in Chicago lowest it’s been in 17 years and likely longer: For condos and townhouses, aka attached housing, the index showed affordability was at its second-lowest on record. But combined with a dip of several points in the affordability of houses, it brought the city’s housing market overall to a 17-year low. It’s likely that the March figure is also lower than affordability was in the years before CAR’s data, because mortgage interest rates, a key component of affordability, have been higher in recent months than any other time since early 2000.

* Crain’s | Ex-Citadel exec’s trading firm expanding, moving to revamped Loop tower: The lease adds to recent momentum for a Canadian developer Onni Group, which is in the middle of a bold $140 million overhaul of the Randolph Street tower, recently rebranded as The Bell. Onni bought the historic 853,000-square-foot Illinois Bell building in late 2021 for $166 million, then began a massive renovation to add new amenities and lease it up, despite office demand getting hammered by the pandemic-fueled remote work movement. The downtown office vacancy rate recently topped 25% for the first time ever.

* WGN | Answering questions about climate change using exhibits at Chicago’s Museum of Science & Industry: Great Lakes ice was the lowest ever recorded at only 3% for the season, a stunning value considering the average since 1973 has been about 40% coverage. The chance of a white Christmas is going down, and both this year and last, the seasonal snowfall total has been about half of the average.

* Crain’s | Could Chicago become the next backdrop for the iconic Sundance Film Festival?: The city’s tourism arm, Choose Chicago, announced a partnership with Sundance set to take place in June that will include free and paid programming as well as four film screenings. With the partnership, the organization says that it seeks to elevate and highlight Chicago’s film community and bring more cinema enthusiasts to show the city “as an essential hub for independent film,” the organizers said of the event.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | LGBTQ+ students, parents frustrated about Prairie State College’s graduation venue: On its website, the church writes that it does not recognize marriage that is not between a man and a woman, believes “the Bible teaches that homosexuality is a sin,” and does not “condone the homosexual lifestyle.” When she found out in December that her school had chosen to hold graduation at a venue that opposes non-heterosexual relationships, graduating student Rebecca Fassbender filed a complaint with the school’s Department of Equity and Inclusion. “I received what I see as a generic response and quite dismissive,” said Fassbender, of Park Forest, who identifies as lesbian and is president of Prairie State College’s Pride Club. “It included some things about their budget and that this location needed to be within district and within their budget.”

* ABC Chicago | Cook County Democratic Party accepting County Clerk applications following death of Karen Yarbrough: The Cook County Democratic Party has told interested candidates to email their resume by Wednesday. The party will then host a meeting on Friday to hear from the candidates and take two votes. One vote will be for an interim clerk, and another vote will be to place a Democratic candidate on the November ballot to serve the final two years of Yarbrough’s unexpired term.

* Daily Herald | ‘Like losing a friend’: Shoppers say goodbye to Stratford Square Mall on final day: Officials now hope to redevelop the 275-acre property with restaurants, entertainment venues, retail outlets, housing and pedestrian-friendly green spaces. The village is working with an architect to develop a plan and officials say they will incorporate community feedback in their decisions.

* Crain’s | Wayfair opening its first-ever retail location in Wilmette: The 150,000-square-foot store in Wilmette — about half the size of an average Ikea — will be located in Edens Plaza at 3232 Lake Ave. and will feature an on-site restaurant called The Porch, the company announced. The space will also include a design studio, where customers can get home design advice, according to the company’s website.

* ABC Chicago | Arlington Heights square dancing club celebrates 75 years: “It’s phenomenal that a club has lasted for 75 years,” Arlington Squares President Denise Hopkins said. “We started in 1948. We’ve been continuously dancing since then. We’re actually the longest continually dancing club in the state of Illinois.” On the occasion , the nationally-renowned Jet Roberts called the shots, which was a treat even for those who’ve danced for decades. “Well I’ve been dancing for over 40 years, and I love the caller,” square dancer Cynthia Suchy said. “He’s fantastic. His voice is great. He’s exciting.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘A very emotional day’: Arcola pays tribute as lost sailor finally laid to rest: Charles D. Brown enlisted in the Navy in 1938. He was just 19 years years old when he started working aboard the U.S.S. West Virginia. Brown was among the 2,400 men that were killed during the attacks on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The U.S. Navy was unable to identify him, so he was buried in Hawaii as an unknown. In 2022, a Department of Defense search resulted in a DNA match: Charles Darling Brown of Arcola, Illinois.

* WSIL | Over 140,000 people visit Poplar Bluff during eclipse: The Poplar Bluff Chamber revealed that 145,000 people visited Butler County in four days surrounding the eclipse. The day of the eclipse accounted for 45,900 of those people. The Chamber partnered with a company to use geofencing and cell phone data to come up with these numbers. Poplar Bluff further reported it saw a $9.6 million boost to the economy from the increased tourism.

* WCIA | EIU announces plans to offer direct admission to more high school seniors: More schools in Central Illinois have agreed to allow Eastern Illinois University to guarantee direct admission for its “high-achieving” students after completing six semesters. University officials announced an agreement with the Regional Office of Education District #12 on Monday. ROE #12 includes schools in Clay, Crawford, Jasper, Lawrence, and Richland counties.

*** National ***

* NYT | Justices Appear to Side With City Trying to Regulate Homeless Encampments: The justices appeared split along ideological lines in the case, which has sweeping implications for how the country deals with a growing homelessness crisis. The conservative majority appeared sympathetic to arguments by the city of Grants Pass, Ore., that homelessness is a complicated issue that is best handled by local lawmakers and communities, not judges.

* Politico | Tax breaks to hire local journalists approved in New York, a national first: Lawmakers and independent media companies praised the tax break, which will designate $30 million a year to the program, called the Local Journalism Sustainability Act. “A thriving local news industry is vital to the health of our democracy,” bill sponsor Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal, a Manhattan Democrat, said in a statement. “It’s our responsibility to help ensure New Yorkers have access to independent and community-focused journalism.”

* WaPo | They fled Venezuela — and transformed D.C.’s food delivery scene: For most, food delivery offers far more autonomy over their schedules and pay than other industries. But they acknowledged numerous hurdles — for instance, the lack of access to health insurance, which heightens the financial risks of any accident. Expenses such as “renting” food-delivery accounts and financing mopeds add to their burdens. And while some drivers say that their ability to deliver food quickly has been praised by customers and restaurants, some D.C. residents have publicly expressed frustration at what they say is erratic and unsafe behavior on the mopeds.

* WSJ | States Aim to Combat Private-Equity Healthcare Takeovers: Statehouses across the country are enacting laws to curtail private-equity healthcare acquisitions, part of a political backlash against corporate consolidation in the medical sector. More than a dozen states have passed laws to require corporate buyers such as private-equity firms to notify states of planned healthcare acquisitions. In some cases, these laws let state authorities block deals if they consider them against the public interest.

* WaPo | California wants Big Tech to pay for news. Google is fighting back: Now, Google is taking its resistance a step further, by completely blocking news links for California-based news organizations from showing up in search results for some Californians. Google won’t say how many people it is blocking news for, but called the move a “short-term test” in a blog post announcing it earlier this month. Politicians and news publishers have shot back. “This is a dangerous threat by Google” that is “clearly an abuse of power and demonstrates extraordinary hubris,” said Mike McGuire, a Democratic state senator in California who is sponsoring the bill.

  6 Comments      


A helpful White Sox disaster visualization

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ungood indeed…

Use this as a Major League Baseball open thread.

  37 Comments      


Pritzker addresses ‘hysteria’ over asylum-seekers

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s second Q and A of the day

Q: You’ve said Illinois is a sanctuary state, but counties are passing anti-sanctuary measures. How do you respond?

Pritzker: I don’t think I’ve ever used that language, and you can go back, six years, five and a quarter years in office, and when I ran. But if I have, forgive my, it would be once perhaps.

The truth is that the Trust Act, which is a bill, a law that went into effect before I became governor, signed by the prior governor, is what’s in place in Illinois. And essentially, the idea here is that someone who is living here, who has been undocumented, may have been here for years, getting pulled over because they were speeding, should not be a reason to now pull somebody out of their car, arrest them and send them to ICE, the federal level, and have them deported.

That oftentimes people are living here not just peacefully but productively. And that over time, people have applied for and gotten permanent residency, or citizenship, we should have a system like that - once again, by the way that people can apply for go through a process and it’s not a very good one as it is we need comprehensive immigration reform. But I believe that that’s a law that’s been good for Illinois, the Trust Act.

Now, one other comment that I would make. There’s a lot of hysteria that’s going around about the fact that we have legal asylum seekers, they have papers, they’re here legally in this country while they get a hearing, while they wait for a hearing. And that we’re, you know, trying to provide them, those who don’t have work authorization and we’re trying to get more work authorizations for them because there are jobs available in Illinois for them. But we’re just trying to provide them with some basic humanitarian care. And we’ve done that, I believe.

I’ve seen the hysteria on Facebook and gets promoted sometimes about that. ‘Oh busloads of people are being shipped from Chicago to some other places in Illinois.’ That’s not happening. It hasn’t happened. It’s not going to happen.

We are receiving busloads of people from the state of Texas without any prior notice of their arrival sometimes in the middle of the night. Why do they do that? Because they want to cause chaos. We have managed to rein it in so that it’s not chaos.

And indeed, our goal here is to help people get to their hearings to get determined whether they actually can have legal asylum and stay in the United States or be deported by that hearing. But it’s our job, I believe, to act in a humanitarian fashion. It’s what Illinois, I believe stands for, it’s who we are as Illinoisans. And we will care for them. You know, we believe that comprehensive border security as well as immigration reform will help us manage this in years going forward, but we’re going to do everything we can right now.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  7 Comments      


*** All clear *** Capitol Building evacuation order issued (Updated)

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an email…

IL Capitol Police: This is an evacuation alert for the Capitol Building. Please evacuate the building in a calm manner.

Stay tuned. This is the third incident in recent weeks.

…Adding… A bit more info…


…Adding… All clear…

ILSOS Capitol Police: IL Capitol Police: An all clear has been given for the Capitol Building. Resume normal operations.

  11 Comments      


Illinois Credit Unions: Member Driven Financial Cooperatives

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Feigenholtz predicts Healthcare Protection Act will ‘fly out of the Senate’

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Our old buddy Mark Maxwell questioned the governor today about the Senate prospects for his Healthcare Protection Act, which passed the House with a bipartisan majority last week….

Q: I don’t know that you can get through the Senate without the approval of the Insurance Chair Napoleon Harris. The insurance industry has invested a lot in his political career. In fact, no other industry has given more to his campaigns than insurance has. How do you convince him that he should put your political agenda before that of his and his allies?

Pritzker: Well, let’s be clear, first that Senator Harris fights hard for the people of his district. And we share a lot in common in terms of wanting to lift up, particularly in patients and those who may be suffering.

And I’ve talked to him about this bill. He understands and believes that there are important advances that need to be made. So I’m anticipating, actually his support for this bill. I’m hopeful that the people that are on the committee, or on the committees that will consider this all understand that this is something that is very popular, it’s something that’s very important for the future of health care in the state of Illinois and that it will pass one way or the other.

And I’ve said, I’m not going to give up on this. We’re putting shoulder to the wheel. I don’t think we’re going to have to go into another session in order to get this done.

I actually think there’s great momentum for this. And as we’ve seen, there’s bipartisanship, too, and I’m very pleased about that.

The bill could also be sent to the Senate Executive Committee.

* Sen. Sara Feigenholtz was asked about the Healthcare Protection Act on Paul Lisnek’s WGN show

This is a universal problem of having claims rejected, prior authorization. It’s probably the number one stressor for our doctors and it’s not a productive way for them to spend their time. The bill is gonna fly out of the Senate, I predict.

* If you haven’t yet, I’d highly recommend reading Peter Hancock’s Healthcare Protection Act explainer

Pritzker first outlined the initiative during his State of the State address in February. It targets many of the “utilization management” practices insurance companies use to hold down costs by either denying claims or steering patients toward lower-cost options.

For example, the bill would require health insurers to use “generally accepted standards of care” when deciding whether to cover treatments recommended by a doctor.

It also bans a practice known as step therapy that is used in some prescription drug plans. That, practice, sometimes referred to as “fail first” therapy, requires patients to demonstrate that a lower-cost drug that is part of an insurance company’s preferred drug list is ineffective before the company will approve paying for a different drug prescribed by the patient’s doctor.

It also prohibits insurance companies from requiring prior authorization before covering the cost of in-patient psychiatric treatment. In circumstances where prior authorization is necessary, companies would be required to publicly post it on their websites.

In addition to those restrictions, the bill would require insurance companies to conduct internal audits of their own provider networks every 90 days. Those audits would ensure that the providers listed still participate in the network and that the network has enough providers in various practice areas to meet the needs of patients.

There’s lots more, so go read the rest.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The left’s city hall tactics won’t work in Springfield (Updated x3)

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Just eight of 78 Illinois House Democrats openly sided last week with the once-indomitable Chicago Teachers Union.

The CTU hotly opposed a bill to halt all public school closures and prevent disproportionate budget cuts and changes to admissions criteria at Chicago’s selective-enrollment schools, until a fully elected Chicago school board is seated in 2027. The final roll call was a lopsided 92-8.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, whose popularity has plummeted along with his Statehouse influence, ought to take this as a warning not to follow the CTU’s example. And so should some other Chicago-based organizations.

The floor vote capped increasingly frenetic and bitter attempts to derail the legislation, including the CTU’s legislative director calling the bill “racist” last week, even though it had been amended to change the budget cut language and expand the closure moratorium to all schools — a provision that the teachers union had demanded just last month.

Several House Democratic members said privately they’d received angry and even threatening calls from CTU leaders demanding they abandon their promised support for the bill.

Others said they were upset that the union’s flip-flop was eerily similar to what happened in the Senate last year, when the Democrats bowed to the CTU’s demands and dumped their plan to pass a phased-in elected school board, only to watch the CTU rail against their fully elected school board bill that the union had demanded days before.

I asked Gov. J.B. Pritzker after the vote for his thoughts on the CTU’s labeling the bill as racist.

“That kind of criticism is uncalled for,” he said. “We don’t need that.”

Asked if he thought the tactic had hurt the CTU’s roll call, Pritzker said, “I do. I think that when you take it to that extreme, I think there are people that — you heard some of that discussion on the floor by members — that … some were between offended and outraged by what was said.’’
An in-your-face approach

This was not only a major loss for the CTU, it was also a strike against the increasingly divisive, angry and in-your-face approach that has been prevalent at Chicago’s City Hall, which lefty activists are now trying to bring to Springfield.

Last month, for instance, an organizer for Chicago’s Raise the Floor Alliance laid out a “plan of escalation” in an email that targeted Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, D-Glenview, for her refusal to hold a hearing on a major part of the group’s legislative agenda, “Work Without Fear.”

The plan of escalation started with Gong-Gershowitz being approached by a handful of people the following morning, and then escalated to bringing in more than 100 people to directly confront Gong-Gershowitz after a committee hearing that afternoon.

The organizer also laid out a plan for activists to approach a different legislator “in a significantly friendlier way” to thank her for her support, which seemed to more than just indicate that the action against Gong-Gershowitz was not going to be friendly. The organizer claimed in the email that the bill’s sponsors were on board with the plan, but one aghast sponsor firmly stepped in to stop the group from carrying it out.

Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, sponsored the selective-enrollment bill. She said she didn’t think the strategies used by activists in the City Council could work at the Statehouse but agreed those actions are increasing in Springfield.

“This is a really close-knit body,” Croke said. Unlike the Chicago City Council, she said, “We basically live together for six months, and people really take these relationships seriously.”

Croke also told me that some of her colleagues approached her on behalf of opponents to ask for changes. And when those changes were made, those same members were approached again by the opponents and pushed for even more changes. Croke said some of her colleagues didn’t appreciate the methods.

The chair of the House Progressive Caucus, Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, said during debate that Croke had changed her bill after he requested that the closure moratorium for selective-enrollment schools be expanded to all schools until the board was fully elected, “because that’s what I’ve been fighting for for all these years, that the people who are gonna decide about closing our schools are the people who should be accountable to us, they should be people we voted for.”

Guzzardi continued with a message to Mayor Johnson: “And I feel that way whether the mayor is a person I never met before or is a dear friend of mine who I worked my ass off to get elected, who’s the man sitting in the fifth floor right now.”

Discuss.

…Adding… Stacy Davis Gates told reporters this about the bill

This is insidious. This is ridiculous. This is vapid. And I think we sent out something that says this is gonna have racial disparate impact, which makes it a racist bill.

A Racial Impact Note was requested by the bill’s opponents, but this is what the note actually said

Pursuant to 25 ILCS 83/110-10 the State Board of Education does not believe HB 303 as amended would pose a racial impact as it would not change the existing procedures or operations of any attendance center within the district.

Simply asking for a Racial Impact Note is not the same as getting a note which confirms your contention.

…Adding… Fran Spielman asked Stacy Davis Gates how she proposes to fund the CTU’s long list of union contract demands

Well, you know, that’s an interesting question to pose to a president of a union. That’s a question that we posed to the Governor of Illinois. We have a progressive governor of Illinois who has his sights set on higher office. Wouldn’t it be a wonderful story to tell that he is fully funding the Chicago Public Schools after really a lifetime in Chicago Public Schools always been underfunded?

* Fran then asked how the governor can do that “with all the other budget pressures that he, at the state, is facing?“…

Well, that’s a question for the governor, Fran. That’s not a question for me.

It’s not alone, by any means, but the CTU has historically relied on “magic money” to make its arguments.

If progressives want these great things, then they need to start coming up with do-able revenue sources.

But the question for the CTU’s president is why the union thinks the city’s schools should be fully funded under the evidence-based model before the rest of the state’s schools are.

* Meanwhile, the CTU’s vice president accused the governor of “white-washing”

Yeah, that’ll work.

…Adding… I just noticed that Senate President Don Harmon is now the chief HB303 sponsor in his chamber. Hmm.

  47 Comments      


State’s opioid settlement bureaucracy is a tangled, ineffective mess

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The state is in line to eventually receive $1.3 billion from opioid-related legal settlements

Overall, Illinois has received more than $200 million from the largest national opioid settlement to date, according to the KFF Health News’ tracker. The estimated future payout from that settlement is more than $572 million, according to KFF. Additional smaller settlements will bring in hundreds of millions more over almost two decades.

But, as Olivia Olander reports, the state has thrown together a bureaucratic hodge-podge that has managed to distribute just $5 million since 2022.

* Go read the rest

The process for distributing money from the remediation fund to community organizations is complicated, involving dozens of people and a handful of entities meant to ensure the money is used responsibly. An explanation of the process provided in one advisory board Zoom meeting included two slides, 10 steps and nearly a dozen acronyms.

Strategy ideas initially go through the office of State Opioid Settlement Administrator Wilkerson, then through the board tasked with making recommendations. Those recommendations are taken up by a steering committee led by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, then reviewed by the attorney general’s office. The division of IDHS tasked with substance use strategizes for the plan’s implementation, then forwards it to yet another entity that handles the actual notice of funding opportunity and selection of grantees.

Only at that point would groups doing the actual work to fight the epidemic actually see the money.

All of the money so far has gone to programs previously funded by the state. Werning said organizations like his own that focus on harm reduction — seeking to reduce the physical and societal harms of opioids and keep users alive, as opposed to an abstinence-based approach — should be in line for more funding.

An illustration of the state’s process…

  5 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Jackie Haas…

Today, House Bill 4059, filed by State Representative Jackie Haas (R-Kankakee) passed the House with a unanimous vote of 104-0.

“The passage of House Bill 4059 is the first step in addressing the critical shortage of licensed daycare providers in the state of Illinois,” said Rep. Haas. “This bill ensures the Department of Children and Family Services continues to host at least two licensing orientation programs in each district for individuals interested in becoming daycare providers.”

House Bill 4059 will ensure there is access to programs statewide by requiring the Department of Children and Family Services, or any State agency that assumes daycare licensing responsibilities, to host licensing orientation programs at least twice annually in each representative district in the State.

Rep. Haas continued, “If we want to address the shortage of daycare providers, we need to start by creating pipelines for interested applicants from all corners of Illinois. Addressing this shortage is a bipartisan issue that affects every district in the state, and I look forward to seeing the legislation receive similarly high support when it’s taken up by the Senate.”

* Windy City Times

Thursday night, House Bill 5417, the Connection to HIV Testing and Linkage to Care Act, or the HIV TLC Act, championed by State Representative Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago) passed the Illinois House of Representatives with a bipartisan, unanimous vote of 106-0.
Supported by AIDS Foundation Chicago (AFC) and a coalition of community organizations, HB 5417 contains provisions that mandates insurers and Medicaid cover home test kits for sexually transmitted infections including HIV without cost-sharing, creates eight Rapid Start for HIV Treatment pilot sites, and ensures the availability of HIV/AIDS education in county jails. Justice-involved people incarcerated or in reentry are considered vulnerable to HIV. […]

Increasing access to testing and linkage to care, especially when prioritized among the Black, Latinx and LGBTQ+ communities disproportionately impacted by HIV, moves Illinois closer to zero new HIV transmissions by 2030,” said AFC’s Senior Director of Policy & Advocacy Timothy Jackson. “We thank Rep. Cassidy for her unwavering leadership in getting HB5417 voted out of the House, and we look forward to working with Senator Lakesia Collins on the next steps of the legislative process.” […]

Senator Lakesia Collins (D-Chicago) is the lead sponsor of House Bill 5417 in the Illinois Senate. If House Bill 5417 is passed by the Illinois Senate and signed by Governor Pritzker, Illinois would become only the 2 nd state to mandate insurers cover at-home STI/HIV testing kits without cost-sharing (California).

* Sierra Club…

Today, the Illinois State House passed HB3141, which directs state agencies to develop climate conscious standards for the purchase of building materials for use in state-funded infrastructure projects. The initiative, which is dubbed “Buy Clean,” will establish a maximum acceptable Global Warming Potential (GWP) for purchases on infrastructure projects to encourage investments in companies that use clean processes to produce goods.

“Illinois has led the way on climate and clean energy policy, and we can also show leadership in how we build our infrastructure. ‘Buy Clean’ standards will help us invest in the future of our state while also taking us one step further toward achieving our carbon reduction goals,” said Sierra Club Illinois Director Jack Darin. “Facilities that produce iron, steel, cement, and aluminum are foundational industries in our economy, but are challenging to decarbonize and produce a range of adverse environmental and health impacts. When Illinois buys clean materials, we ensure that taxpayers’ dollars will support Illinois businesses producing these products in ways that reduce pollution and create jobs. We urge the Senate to approve this legislation this Spring.”

“Illinois is a leader on climate action, and setting standards for the building materials we use in state construction projects allows us to utilize our purchasing power to support businesses producing high quality, low carbon products,” said State Representative Diane Blair-Sherlock, the chief sponsor of HB3141. “I’m pleased to work with the Illinois Department of Transportation, Central Management Services, and the Capital Development Board on this plan for setting standards for sustainability in Illinois infrastructure projects.”

* WGEM

It may soon be illegal in Illinois to deny someone a job or promotion due to their family responsibilities.

The Illinois state House of Representatives passed a bill Friday adding family responsibilities to the state’s workplace discrimination law, the Illinois Human Rights Act.

Under current state law, employers can deny someone a job or promotion because they believe someone’s family responsibilities could impact their performance. The bill would make that practice illegal.

Opponents, however, argue it will lead to more lawsuits, hurt business and that the bill is unnecessary because the state already has strong workplace discrimination laws.

* Rep. Bradley Fritts…

Yesterday, House Bill 5011, introduced by State Representative Bradley Fritts (R-Dixon) passed the House floor with a unanimous vote of 108-0.

“I am thrilled with the passage of House Bill 5011,” said Rep. Fritts. “This bipartisan bill, crafted with collaboration from the Comptroller’s office and the Township Officials of Illinois, will help save money for taxpayers in townships by changing the requirements on yearly audits.”

Under current law, every township in Illinois with combined revenues over $850,000 is required to pay for a yearly audit performed by a Certified Personal Accountant. House Bill 5011 will change the requirement to once every four years for townships that generate a revenue of less than $1.4 million per year and every two years for those that generate more than 1.4 million per year.

* American Heart Association

In a bold move to save lives, the Illinois legislature is moving toward passage of a landmark bill. Sponsored by Rep. Laura Faver Dias, HB5394 mandates that schools throughout the state have plans in place to respond to cardiac arrests of students or staff with CPR and AEDs. Such plans are known as cardiac emergency response plans or CERPs. Much like fire drills, these plans allow schools to assume responsibility and facilitate training for cardiac emergencies. In 2022, according to Illinois Heart Rescue, cardiac arrests affected more than 109 people under age 18 in the state. Currently, only about 40% of people who experience an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) get the immediate help that they need before emergency services arrive.

In an emotional testimony during the bill’s hearing, cardiac arrest survivor and school principal Dr. Heather Baker recalled, “I dropped dead on the floor at school as a school administrator at the age of 28. I had zero pre-existing conditions or warning signs and dropped dead mid-sentence in a meeting with several other administrators. I am alive today because my coworkers had been CPR and AED trained one month prior, and they knew how to enact a cardiac emergency response.”

According to Rep. Faver Dias, “This legislation will save lives. A coordinated plan to provide CPR to those in cardiac arrest in our schools ensures that our kids and educators are safe while they focus on learning. We’ve worked closely with school principals, cardiac arrest survivors, physicians and public health advocates to make this happen and this is a win for all our communities.”

Part of a wave of similar legislation throughout the Midwest, this latest vote is a movement towards greater education and awareness about the need for CPR training. From Michigan to Kentucky, Kansas and Illinois, the Association is proud to work directly with schools, advocates and legislators to safeguard young people and educators.

According to American Heart Association Senior Regional Lead for Government Relations, Lauren Peters, “We’re excited for this bill to move on to the Senate and then be signed by the Governor. With the passage of HB5394, more than 20% of our state population that walks through the doors of thousands of schools each day – including students, teachers, administrators and support staff – will be equipped to act in a cardiac emergency. They’ll also have the knowledge that if they ever find themselves in need of help, no matter where they turn, they’re in good hands.”

* Center Square

In the latest push for health insurance reform, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is taking aim at what he calls “predatory health insurance practices” with his Healthcare Protection Act.

Among other things, the legislation would ban step therapy, the tactic insurers use to require people to receive less effective drug treatments before moving to options initially prescribed by doctors. It also includes new requirements for insurers to offer enough in-network doctors to meet patients’ needs. […]

Pritzker plans to tour the state this week to publicize the legislation.

Additionally, the measure mandates that all insurance companies regulated by the state of Illinois disclose treatments requiring prior authorization, facilitating consumers’ ability to compare plans when seeking coverage. Short Term Limited Duration insurance plans, often called “junk insurance,” will also be barred.

* WSPY

The Illinois House of Representatives unanimously passed legislation on Tuesday that would have Illinois recognize June 27th as National PTSD Awareness Day. House Bill 4928 is sponsored by State Rep. Harry Benton of the 97th district in Plainfield.

Benton says that people across the state suffer from PTSD, or post traumatic stress disorder, and his bill aims to promote better recognition of the effects that it can have on individuals. Benton says that it is also important to recognize those who provide assistance to PTSD patients, including friends, family and other caretakers.

Millions of Americans suffer from PTSD, which can affect individuals who were a part of or near a traumatic event. Many PTSD cases involve veterans, assault victims and first responders.

After passing the House, the bill now heads to the Senate.

* Rep. Brandun Schweizer…

State Representative Brandun Schweizer (R-Danville) passed his first bill out of the Illinois House of Representatives Friday afternoon.

HB 3504 was filed to prevent a problem between State insurance and Carle Clinic in the sponsor’s district. System members went to the hospital and were unaware that they were no longer covered in network. The bill provides that at least 60 days prior to the effective date of any changes to the coverage or benefit recipient cost share for TRS benefit recipients, the Department of Central Management Services shall post those changes on its website. The representative believes the transparency afforded by this bill is necessary for members.

The bill passed unanimously on a vote of 106-0 and will now head to the Senate for their consideration.

  8 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Johnson sticking with CTA president for now as Gov. Pritzker calls for new leadership. Block Club

    - Pritzker, speaking at a Thursday news conference, stopped short of saying he thinks CTA President Dorval Carter should be fired — instead saying there should be “new leadership” at the transit agency.
    - “It’s my job to determine the leadership of the CTA, that is my job,” Johnson said when asked about Prizker’s comments. “If people want to be mayor, they should run for it.”
    - The governor appoints three members to the CTA’s seven-member board, while the mayor appoints four.

* Related stories…

* Democrats for the Illinois House…

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch was unanimously recommended to serve as the new Proviso Township Committeeman in a meeting held this evening of the Executive Committee, replacing the late Karen Yarbrough.

With the support of every local mayor, labor leaders from throughout the state, and active Democrats throughout the township, the Proviso Township Democratic Organization (PTDO) recommended to the Cook County Democratic Party that Speaker Welch be named Proviso Township Committeeman. Their recommendation is expected to be ratified by the full Cook County Democratic Party on Monday.

“Karen Yarbrough was a trailblazer for our region who worked hard each and every day to grow our party and ensured that local residents knew that our party stood up for working people,” said Welch. “It is an honor to follow in her footsteps and to have received such unanimous support from my friends and neighbors.”

Welch was born and raised in Proviso Township where his deep roots have motivated his work in the community for over 20 years. Before being elected State Representative, Welch served on the Proviso Township High School Board after graduating from Proviso West, where he played baseball. He and his wife are raising their two children in the community.

PTDO President Clarence Thomas, who stepped in initially to fill the role of Committeeman, understood that Welch could carry on the legacy of Karen Yarbrough, while also bringing new ideas to the party and engaging new members.

“We were saddened by the loss of our dear friend Karen,” said Thomas. We were so close, and Karen left huge shoes to fill. The entire organization believes that Speaker Welch is best able to serve as Committeeman and continue making Proviso Township a strong, united organization.”

Cook County Board Chair Toni Preckwinkle congratulated the Speaker and PTDO on what could be a game-changing appointment.

“Speaker Welch and I have a longstanding working relationship,” said Preckwinkle. “He has always been a trusted friend and staunch advocate. We both fight passionately and fervently for our party and our people. I am proud to have him join Cook County Democrats. I look forward to working with the Speaker and the party in supporting Proviso, electing more Democrats, and supporting a successful campaign for Biden Harris 2024.”

Governor Pritzker is touring the state this week to amplify the Healthcare Protection Act. The governor will give remarks at Belleville Memorial Hospital today at 10 am. Click here to watch.

*** My top picks ***

* SJ-R | ‘One of the nicest people I ever met.’ Longtime Springfield photojournalist dies at 78: Milner, a longtime presence around the State Capitol Building and Springfield with his camera, died April 17 after a recurrence of pancreatic cancer. He was 78. A memorial service is set for Butler Funeral Home, 900 S. Sixth St., from 4 to 7 p.m. April 23. […] James Milner said he and his father were bowled over by the support at the capitol and at another open house several weeks ago.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton Village Hall hit with federal subpoenas amid ongoing probe into Mayor Tiffany Henyard: A spokesperson for the FBI confirmed in a written statement that agents were “conducting court-authorized law enforcement activity” in Dolton on Friday, but declined to comment on the nature of any investigation pursuant to Department of Justice policy. One of the sources said the investigation into Henyard is still in its early stages, and no charges are imminent.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Groups battling opioid crisis express frustration over state’s speed in distributing millions of dollars from legal settlements: The payouts stem from multistate agreements with major drug distributors, manufacturers and household names such as CVS, Walgreens, and Johnson and Johnson. Payments started in 2022 and will continue well into the next decade, and offer the potential for a significant investment in harm reduction and treatment efforts. Nationwide, more than $50 billion is expected from the settlements, according to KFF Health News, which tracks the money. But so far, the flow of settlement money to organizations in Illinois has remained barely a trickle. A complex bureaucratic process for distributing the funds has put only a tiny fraction of the money into the hands of organizations dealing with the crisis.

* Daily Herald | ‘Proactive’ measure or ‘government overreach’? Lawmakers weigh ban on corporal punishment in private schools; most already prohibit it: State Rep. Margaret Croke, a Chicago Democrat, drafted the legislation after seeing an uptick of public schools in neighboring states such as Missouri reinstituting the practice. “I haven’t found recent instances here, but I don’t feel bad about being proactive,” Croke said. “We saw recently New York decided to take similar action.”

* Rockford Register Star | Illinois election authority wants voters’ personal information removed from media websites: The State Board of Elections said it did not provide data to the media group for the stories. […] Through communications with a representative of the media group, the board of elections believes the company combined 2016 and 2020 data sets for its voter stories. It used a copy of the 2016 voter file to obtain the birthdates and many of the street addresses it has published.

* Sun-Times | Ballot bypass? Illinois sees lowest presidential primary voter turnout in decades: Chicago may have avoided surpassing 2012’s bleak low-turnout record of 24.6%, eking out a final turnout of 25.8%. But statewide, just 1,518,856 of the 7,965,287 registered voters in Illinois cast ballots in the March 19 primary. That resulted in a statewide voter turnout of 19.07%, the Illinois State Board of Elections said Friday in releasing its certified election results.

* Sun-Times | Illinois House Speaker Emanuel Welch travels to Washington on fundraising trip: On Monday afternoon, Welch raises money for his People for Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch committee, with the ask ranging from $1,000 for a ticket to $68,500, the contribution limit, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections, for a political action committee per election cycle. The event, at the Washington Hilton, is timed to coincide with the North America’s Building Trades Unions 2024 legislative conference and is taking place at the same hotel. Illinois state Treasurer Mike Frerichs is scheduled to speak to the conference Tuesday.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago police mourning Officer Luis Huesca as search for Gage Park shooting suspect continues: Officer Huesca was two days shy of his 31st birthday when he was shot and killed early Sunday morning as he was arriving home from his shift, according to CPD. […] “He was a great officer,” CPD Supt. Larry Snelling said. “A great human being. And his family is dealing with a lot right now.”Mayor Brandon Johnson released a statement saying in part, “I met with Officer Huesca’s mother and uncle this morning and assured them that they have the full support of my administration as they deal with this unspeakable loss. Our city is grieving, and our condolences go out to their entire family as well as Luis’ fellow officers and community.”

* Tribune | Chicago to have one unified system for homeless and migrants, city and state officials say: The “One System Initiative” will shift a “permanent shelter management to the non-profit workforce,” Illinois Department of Human Services spokesperson Daisy Contreras said in a statement. Currently, the city contracts with Favorite Healthcare Staffing, whose sizable overtime has contributed to tens of millions of dollars in city payments to the firm staffing the city’s migrant shelters. The state’s office to prevent and end homelessness will lead the initiative with more than 25 community-based agencies participating, Contreras said. Planning sessions are set to begin at the end of April and go through the spring.

* Tribune | Johnson safety plan slow out of the gate, but mayor vows ‘root causes’ approach will work: A year after he took office, however, Johnson’s plan is still in its early stages, and crime remains a stubborn scourge across the city. And his move away from investing more in policing to address the problem has further enflamed opponents who have long distrusted his approach. In the West Side field house, the reality of Chicago’s violent streets was reflected in participants’ grim tone as they set about brainstorming how to make the mayor’s plans reality.

* Block Club | After Demands For Accountability, CHA Boss Agrees To Testify Before City Council Committee : Alderpeople called on CHA leaders to answer questions after an investigation by Block Club Chicago and the Illinois Answers Project found the agency was sitting on hundreds of empty and deteriorating homes.

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker says protests will be permitted, but safety will be maintained at DNC: In an interview with Dana Bash on CNN Sunday morning, Pritzker stressed that groups gathering in Chicago this August will be allowed some protests – to a point. “Look, we believe in free speech, and we’re going allow people to protest, and, you know, say whatever it is they want to say,” Pritzker said. “But the reality is we’re also going to make sure that people have ingress and egress and that they’re safe in our state.”

*** Downstate/Suburbs ***

* WTTW | Judge Tosses Large Portions of Evanston Residents’ Lawsuit Over Northwestern’s Ryan Field Deal: Judge Pamela McLean Meyerson on Friday agreed to dismiss three of four counts brought by a group of 13 residents who live near the stadium and who had asked the court to invalidate Evanston City Council’s 5-4 vote to change the city’s zoning law, allowing the renovated facility to host as many as six concerts per year. “I will note, as I said upfront, this case is not over,” Meyerson said after delivering her ruling, “that count one, the constitutional claim, remains pending.”

* Tribune | Wind and solar in limbo: Long waitlists to get on the grid are a ‘leading barrier’: Both projects have been approved by the Lee County Board. But neither can be built, according to a county official, due to PJM Interconnection, a powerful but little-known entity that controls access to the high-voltage electric grid in northern Illinois. “There isn’t anything we can do to help the state move forward (with its clean energy goals),” said Lee County Zoning Administrator Alice Henkel. “This is all PJM. They have the control.”

* NBC News | In Superman’s ‘hometown,’ a pastor vows to fight Satan’s influence at the local library: The dispute has pitted the city’s mayor, a member of Eastland Life Church, against his own library board of trustees. It led to the abrupt dismissal of the library director, who accused the board of punishing her for her faith. And last month, it drew scrutiny from the state’s Democratic secretary of state, who said the events in Metropolis “should frighten and insult all Americans who believe in the freedom of speech and in our democracy.”

* Daily Herald | Kane County GOP elects chair to second two-year term: Andro Lerario has been reelected for another two-year term as chair of the Kane County Republican Party. Precinct committee persons reelected Lerario, who ran without opposition, at the Kane GOP convention Wednesday in St. Charles.

* Shaw Local | How hops grown by McHenry County College students became beers at Woodstock brewery: For the first time last year, McHenry County College students learned how to grow hops and saw their harvest used to brew two beers now sold for a limited time at a Woodstock brewery. An MCC graphic arts student also designed the beer label. The two varieties of beer brewed and sold at Holzlager Brewing Co. made from MCC’s hops are the MCC Wet-Hopped American Light Lager and a dry-hopped beer, Agrarian American Pale Ale. The taste is a refreshing brew, featuring a blend of earthy and citrus notes, and both “are very well received,” said Travis Slepcevich, owner of Holzlager Brewing Co.

*** Sports ***

* Sun-Times | Sky operating chairman/co-owner Nadia Rawlinson confident in team’s direction: ‘This is our era’: The Sky are without a franchise star after trading Kahleah Copper to the Mercury at her request this offseason. What they do have, however, is a blank slate with two newly drafted twin-tower powerhouses in Kamilla Cardoso and Angel Reese and a coach in Teresa Weatherspoon who seems to exemplify Chicago.

* Tribune | Bill Tobin, longtime Chicago Bears personnel man who played a major role in building the Super Bowl XX champions, dies at 83: Tobin, who was the Chicago Bears vice president of player personnel from 1986-92 after joining the organization in 1975, died Thursday, the Cincinnati Bengals announced. He was 83. “Bill was relentless in pursuing a single goal: making the Bears better,” Chairman George McCaskey told the team’s website Friday. “He had a keen eye for talent and he passionately advocated for players he believed in. He helped build the greatest team in NFL history — the ’85 Bears — and for that we are forever grateful.”

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Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Monday, Apr 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here 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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