Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Phil’s bass lines in this are just crazy good… Once in a while, you get shown the light
|
Phil Lesh
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
* NY Times…
* Turn up the bass in your mix and listen to this song… Nothin’s gonna bring him back. I played bass guitar in bands during high school and college. But what Phil did was just so far out of reach. Nobody could do it. He was an essential element to the Grateful Dead’s music and he can’t ever be replicated. * Bertha… It was like having another guitar player in the band, but with that bass kick. Top of the scale and way down low. Click here for another example. Amazing stuff. * The camera focuses often on Phil in this video, so you can see how he made the magic…
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * I thoroughly enjoyed reading this profile of courtroom sketch artist Lou Chukman from Block Club…
* At 7 pm the governor will give remarks at La Casa Norte Annual Gala Esperanza. Click here to watch. * Sun-Times | A Chicago cop faces firing over a fatal shooting. Months earlier, he shot and paralyzed another man: Ruiz arrived with other officers, approached the driver’s side of Comer’s friend’s vehicle “and immediately fired his weapon at Mr. Comer at least eleven times without issuing commands,” the lawsuit claims. Comer was trying to park the car closer to the curb when the cops showed up, and he wasn’t holding a gun at the time. “At no point did Mr. Comer grab a weapon, much less threaten an officer with it or pose a threat to any officer or citizen of bodily harm or death,” the suit holds. The shooting left Comer, 39, paralyzed from the waist down, according to the suit, which targets the city of Chicago, Ruiz and other officers. * Chicago Reader | ‘A common sense problem’ : A coalition of Black women alders led by Jeanette Taylor (20) and Stephanie Coleman (16), along with Mayor Brandon Johnson, pushed for the hearing. The resolution that called for the hearing cited the seven-part investigation “Missing in Chicago,” copublished by Invisible Institute and City Bureau in November, an excerpt of which also ran as a Chicago Reader cover story. The series was awarded the 2024 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting. Alders also highlighted a 2023 series by CBS Chicago journalist Dorothy Tucker on crime and violence against Black women. * Bloomberg | Bally’s $1.8 Billion Chicago Casino Hinged on Landlord Redesign: For months, casino industry veteran Peter Carlino pondered whether to back the massive gambling resort Bally’s Corp. had won approval to build in downtown Chicago. Carlino, chief executive officer of Gaming & Leisure Properties Inc., liked the idea of financing the only casino in America’s third-largest city, but he had issues with the design. So he dispatched one of his staffers to engage with Bally’s on a top-to-bottom rethink of the property. * Block Club | Latino-Owned Cannabis Dispensary Opens In Avondale: Bloc Avondale opened last week at 3545 N. Kedzie Ave., a former mattress and paint warehouse building. Bloc is the first social equity license dispensary for Avondale and the second dispensary to open in the neighborhood. Louis Lopez, who grew up in Hermosa and Belmont Cragin, owns the dispensary. It’s one of 11 stores nationwide from operator Justice Cannabis Co., which was started by Chicago civil rights attorneys in 2014. Justice CEO Alexzandra Fields, who lives in Lakeview, helps run the shop. * Sun-Times | Former Loyola football teammates battle cancer together as doctor and patient: Mike Lowe and Dan Dammrich watched the Loyola vs. Providence game together. The two former Loyola football teammates blended in with all the others hanging out on the sideline. They greeted old friends, talked with assistant coaches and enjoyed a warm mid-October Saturday afternoon. […] Lowe, a reporter for WGN-TV, was diagnosed with stage 3(c)N+ colon cancer in May. […] But the personal connection and the old high school football tie is making it easier for Lowe. * Sun-Times | Substandard Media: Chicago Sports Network’s broadcast partner isn’t doing channel, fans any favors: The decision by the White Sox, Bulls and Blackhawks to partner with Standard Media for their new regional sports network was perplexing from the start. Here was a small media company based in Nashville, Tennessee, carrying the teams’ hopes and dreams. Its job would be to get the network distributed as widely as possible. For that to happen, Standard would need to agree to a carriage deal with Comcast, the largest TV provider in the Chicago market. More than three weeks into Chicago Sports Network’s existence, no deal is in sight, validating concerns that Standard was not equipped for the job. * WTTW | Day of the Dead’s Iconic Flower Plants Seeds of Cultural Connection in Chicago: For the past six months, staff and students at the University of Illinois Chicago have been tending thousands of marigolds on the grounds of the school’s Plant Research Laboratory, sowing seeds in the spring and nurturing plots of the flowers throughout the growing season. The brilliant orange and yellow blooms aren’t part of an official scientific study, but they do represent a cultural experiment of sorts. […] Turns out the marigolds in UIC’s garden — specifically the species known as Aztec marigolds (Tagetes erecta) — are destined for use during Dia de los Muertos. * Block Club | Old Irving Park Lawn Transformed Into ‘Six Hags Boosment Park’ For Halloween: The Old Irving Park Halloween display features amusement park rides like Skelly the Striker, The Bone Rattler roller coaster, the Wheel of Death and the Fright Flight swing tower. An archery target with a skeleton is spinning in the background, and a skeleton dog and human are at the park enjoying the fun. * AP | DNA tests identify 19th-century teenager’s skull found in Illinois home’s wall: The skull went forgotten until March of 2021, when museum supervisors discovered it during an inventory audit. They called police, who sent the skull to the coroner’s office. Working with Othram Laboratories, a forensic laboratory in Texas that assists law enforcement, the office was able to build a DNA profile from the skull that suggested it was that of Esther Granger, a 17-year-old woman who died during childbirth in Merrillville, Indiana, in 1866. * Shaw Local | Downers Grove at odds: Video gambling referendum stirs passionate debate: Residents will be asked to vote on a nonbinding advisory referendum that would allow restaurants and recreational/club/private facilities to operate video gambling terminals beginning Jan. 1. If approved, the measure would restrict the number of licenses to 10. The ordinance also would have specific stipulations on the number of terminals (six), terminal configuration and terminal visibility. * Sun-Times | At this Northwestern professor’s lab, plastic-eating microbes show promise to gobble up microplastics in nature: The 18-person team’s latest finding has helped science inch closer to answering a question that’s perplexed researchers for years: Can the bacteria that cling to plastic bottles in rivers eat up all of that plastic and help get rid of that pollutant? The answer, according to Aristilde’s team’s recently published research, is yes. * Daily Herald | Delnor Hospital’s drone delivery program saves time transferring specimens, medical supplies: A partnership between Northwestern Medicine and the Valqari drone delivery company in Lombard sends specimens and medical supplies in time-saving flights between the hospital and the Delnor Cancer Center. Without the drones, most deliveries at Delnor are made during four scheduled courier trips, or by nursing staff or laboratory technicians who make the deliveries on foot across Delnor Drive. It takes about a half-hour to cover the half-mile round-trip on foot. Staff does this more than 40 times a month. […] “A half-hour is a good chunk of a nurse’s day,” said Ryan Walsh, Valqari CEO and founder. “We can make that same delivery in about 4 minutes.” * WCIA | Former deputy accused of murdering Sonya Massey now in Macon County Jail: Macon County Jail records show Sean Grayson was transferred Thursday afternoon to the facility. He was previously held in Menard County Jail. […] Grayson’s next trial date is Dec. 2. His lawyer appealed for pre-trial release for him under the SAFE-T Act, but two courts so far have denied him. * Rockford Register Star | Winnebago County Mental Health Board appointee drops out after questions are raised: County Board Chairman Joe Chiarelli during a Thursday night board meeting said that Terri Hitzke of Loves Park no longer wanted to be considered for the four-year appointment “for reasons that she is going to put in a letter to the county board chairman and to the county board about what she has had to endure during this process.” […] Chiarelli said he looked into concerns that had been raised and ultimately decided they were unfounded. Chiarelli had planned to bring her appointment back to the County Board floor on Thursday night. * WIFR | Winnebago County Board members react to RAVE Board vacancy: ‘Surprised’ is how some Winnebago County Board members describe the news that Hard Rock Casino Rockford President Geno Iafrate is stepping down from his position with the RAVE Board. […] John Guevara, Winnebago County Board member, says he’s surprised to hear about Iafrate leaving RAVE. “I think the contributions, you know, spoke for themselves. There was a significant partnership between entities across the board,” he says. * SJ-R | Public gets a look at new master plan for downtown Springfield, medical district: The 278-page document was recently rolled out online, but members of the public got a close-up of specifics at an open house at Memorial Learning Center on Oct. 24. […] “We all kind of want to see, in my opinion, the end result. We want cool shops. We want good restaurants,” Stremsterfer said. “We do have a lot of those great things already. We just want more of them. * SJ-R | City of Springfield will resume showing faces of public commenters at meetings: The city of Springfield will resume showing faces of public commenters at its committee of the whole meeting Tuesday. For the past two meetings, the city preempted video but not audio during public commentary citing “unauthorized recording and sharing of meeting content.” Haley Wilson, a spokeswoman for the city, told The State Journal-Register last week the move was “temporary” and may be lifted. * STLPR | A Metro East nonprofit increases after-school programs with a $450,000 Illinois state grant: East Side Aligned, a local nonprofit serving youth, received a nearly $450,000 Illinois state grant to help bring more after-school programs and services to children and families in East St. Louis and the surrounding communities. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority’s Restore, Reinvest and Renew program funds community organizations that work in areas that have been harmed by economic disinvestment, violence and excessive incarceration. It is funded through state revenue from adult recreational cannabis sales. * Semafor | Why there are fewer polls this election: In addition to the usual concerns about accurately predicting a race that’s effectively deadlocked in every swing state, the sheer number of high-quality, brand-name polls has been in decline for several cycles. Politico’s polling reporter Steven Shepard lamented that last weekend bizarrely passed without any major polls of note nationally or in battlegrounds, although they picked up later this week on both counts. That means less grist for obsessive news consumers and less data for big aggregators and forecasters trying to make sense of the race. * The Atlantic | Election officials are under siege: ”Stop counting votes, or we’re going to murder your children”: Around the country, election officials have already received death threats and packages filled with white powder. Their dogs have been poisoned, their homes swatted, their family members targeted. In Texas, one man called for a “a mass shooting of poll workers and election officials” in precincts with results he found suspicious. “The point is coercion; the point is intimidation. It’s to get you to do or not do something,” Al Schmidt, the secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, told me—to get you to “stop counting votes, or we’re going to murder your children, and they name your children,” a threat that Schmidt said he received in 2020. This year, the same things may well happen again. “I had one election official who said they called her on her cellphone and said, ‘Looks like your mom made lasagna tonight; she’s wearing that pretty yellow dress that she likes to wear to church,” Tammy Patrick, the chief programs officer at the National Association of Election Officials and a former elections officer in Maricopa County, Arizona, told me. “It’s terrorism here in America.”
|
It’s far more complicated than this
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * WBEZ on why extending the Invest in Kids tax credit program failed…
The teachers unions did indeed lobby hard against the extension. But as we’ve discussed before, the big money people funding the extension push absolutely refused to even consider a compromise. * Proponents could’ve divided the opposition by agreeing to phasing out the program over time. Kids with scholarships would keep them until they graduated, for example. It’s a pretty easy argument to make and one that loads of Democrats were open to. The benefit for proponents would be keeping the tax credit alive. The idea in situations like this is to find a way to live to fight another day. Instead, both sides took an all-or-nothing stance and the side with the most votes won.
|
Illinois temporarily suspends betting on certain aspects of NFL games
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Meanwhile, from Casino Reports…
|
Question of the day
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune management is obviously lacking in the training department. Email exchange… ![]()
The initial mistake is probably understandable. Following up with something like, “Ope, my bad,” would be fine. But then to go on and ask a person via a state email account for help reaching a campaign account after being told such correspondence is prohibited is probably not a great idea. Again, this is obviously a training issue. But it’s not uncommon, even among people who should know better. I regularly hear gripes from government spokespeople about reporters asking them campaign questions. Heck, I’ve done it occasionally because I just wasn’t thinking. But I backed off when realizing my mistake. Not everyone does that. Anyway… * The Question: If you were the state legislator in question, how would you respond to that follow-up email? It’s Friday, so snark is not discouraged.
|
Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Friday, Oct 25, 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 Ellen and Julie, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
|
Roundup: Jury hears first wiretaps in Madigan corruption trial
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* More…
* WBEZ | Dozens of secret recordings at Madigan trial show close ties with McClain, undercutting key defense point: In court Thursday, Lang told Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu that, “I understood at that time that [McClain] was a messenger for the speaker.” He also told the prosecutor that “it was very clear to me, from this call, that my career had ended. Because the speaker was in control of my ability to move up the ranks and get the leadership that I wanted to have.” * WGN | Secret recordings expose Madigan and McClain’s close ties in corruption trial: Taking the stand Thursday, FBI agent Ryan McDonald vouched for the blizzard of phone conversations and emails. Aside from official business, many recordings heard in court between Madigan and McClain were brief and to the point. The two were heard making dinner plans or travel arrangements, which prosecutors say demonstrates the closeness of their relationship while meting out punishment in the Illinois House. * ABC Chicago | State Rep. Bob Rita begins testimony: State Rep. Bob Rita began his testimony Thursday. He testified for about 10 minutes before court was dismissed about 5 p.m. […] Rita’s testimony will resume Monday.
|
Pritzker responds to Local 150 claim about data center power usage growth
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * From yesterday…
40 percent more electricity? The governor has said he’s been monitoring data center power usage, so I asked his office for a response. * From Gov. JB Pritzker…
Thoughts?
|
Kenneally goes down swinging
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * WTVO…
* The news story was essentially just a rewrite of a press release without question from lame duck McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally. Fox32 Chicago did the same thing, but they at least acknowledged it…
* The press release…
* I asked the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice for a response…
|
Open thread
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois community colleges see largest enrollment jump in 15 years. KHQA…
∙ The report recorded an overall increase of 7.4%, the largest fall-to-fall enrollment growth in the last 15 years, outpacing last year’s fall enrollment increase of 5.7%. ∙ Statewide enrollment data shows 37 of 45 community colleges experienced an increase in headcount enrollment from Fall 2023 to Fall 2024. * Illinois Times | Exhibit honors Illinois sculptor Richard Hunt: The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum will open “Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt” on Oct. 25, an exhibition dedicated to world-famous Chicago-based sculptor Richard Hunt, who died Dec. 18, 2023. This will be the first major show of Hunt’s work since his death. Hunt is known for his large abstract metal works utilizing welding and steel casting, often manifesting the Black experience through his work. * Pantagraph | Illinois, Normal leaders discuss the future of rail, transportation: “I am fascinated by what I see happening here especially with Amtrak,” said U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Schaumburg. “This is the first time I’ve seen a city hall above the train station.” Krishnamoorthi met with Normal Mayor Chris Koos at City Hall in uptown Normal for a roundtable in which they primarily discussed the current state of transportation and future developments locally, regionally and nationally.
* Journal-Topics | Candidates In 17th, 57th House Districts Square Off At League Forum: Four candidates running in two Illinois State House races — incumbent state representatives Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz (D-17th) and Tracy Katz Muhl (D-57th), and their challengers Jim Geldermann (R) and Daniel Behr ® — squared off in a recent League of Women Voters candidate forum in Wilmette.[…] “As a citizen, I consent to be governed by delegating limited powers to the government,” Geldermann began his opening statements with. “I was asked to run not because I had a burning desire, but I believe as a citizen I have a duty to stand up and to serve when asked.” He said he was running against the “big crime lobby,” the “let’s keep our kids stupid lobby,” the “DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) lobby,” and the “death lobby.” * WBEZ | How does seemingly popular legislation die at the Illinois capitol? Many ways — here’s one of them.: Illinois lawmakers introduce thousands of bills every year – and sometimes one of them seems really popular. People flood the capitol in support chanting and carrying signs, lawmakers are hashing it out with each other and meeting with constituents. It’s getting a lot of media coverage. But even if the momentum seems there, sometimes the bill just dies – for any number of reasons. * Crain’s | Doc groups target alleged center of insurers’ price-fixing ‘cartel’ in lawsuit: The American Medical Association and the Illinois State Medical Society say MultiPlan, a data analytics agency for health plans, is at the center of a price-fixing “cartel” with commercial health insurers. In a lawsuit filed today in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the Chicago-based associations say New York-based MultiPlan has undercut fair payment for out-of-network health care services and eliminated market competition. * WGEM | Gov. Pritzker celebrates expansion of ‘Reach Out and Read’ children’s literacy program: “Our program strengthens the relationships between children and their caregivers and lays the foundation for early learning,” said Reach Out and Read Illinois Medical Director Dr. Mariana Glusman. Participating pediatricians give their patients a book following their checkups starting at six months old until they’re five. Doctors give Illinois families more than 180,000 books annually according to Reach Out and Read Illinois. * 25 News Now | Illinois residents can voice their opinion on ranked choice voting: Voters will be able to weigh in on ranked choice voting (RCV) with an advisory question on this fall’s ballot, which means the result will not be binding, A 20-member state task force is studying the issue by reviewing different voting systems and processes to see if RCV should be implemented in Illinois. * Sun-Times | Chicago Police Department exodus: New cops are leaving in droves, Sun-Times investigation finds: One of every six Chicago cops hired since 2016 is no longer on the payroll. About 950 of the more than 5,750 people hired in that period have left. Their average time with the department? Not even three years. Many moved to suburban police departments. * ABC Chicago | Pending lawsuit over police overtime pay could worsen Chicago budget debt crisis: Chicago’s budget crisis may be worse than many had thought. A still-pending lawsuit over police overtime pay could put the city on the hook for $200 million. It’s a liability Chicago City Council members recently learned about as the city heads into budget season. * Sun-Times | New CPS board president picked by mayor praises Johnson, makes clear he backs mayor’s plans: Three weeks after the entire Chicago Board of Education resigned, the board’s new president on Thursday lauded Mayor Brandon Johnson in a politically tumultuous time and indicated he’s willing to take the school district in the direction Johnson has ordered. “This is a moment in time that we can not afford to squander,” the Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson said at his first meeting as board president. “My opinion is the mayor has a clear vision for public education here in Chicago: a fully funded school district that gives every Chicagoan a world-class public school in their neighborhoods. A transformation of our public education is a critical piece for [Mayor] Johnson’s vision for transforming Chicago. * Crain’s | True Value weighs laying off almost half its workforce as company seeks sale: As True Value tries to win approval to sell “substantially all” of its business operations to Indiana-based home improvement competitor Do It Best, the Chicago-based retailer says it could lay off a considerable portion of its workforce if the deal doesn’t come together. * Sun-Times | Settlement reached in case involving former CPS teacher’s alleged abuse of 3 young boys: The families of three boys allegedly sexually abused by a former Chicago Public Schools teacher have settled their lawsuit against the school board for $2 million, lawyers announced Thursday. The families contended in federal court that CPS did not notify families sufficiently of sexual abuse allegations against Andrew Castro, a former gym teacher at Federico Garcia Lorca Elementary School on the Northwest Side, that led to his removal in 2021. While the notification said a teacher had been removed, it did not name Castro. * Southside Weekly | Chicago Fashion Week Threads Together Community and Culture: The inaugural Chicago Fashion Week (CFW) made a citywide impact with more than fifty events across both the North and South Sides and extending into nearby suburbs. Anchored by three pillars—history, ingenuity and commerce—CFW was designed with a clear purpose: a fashion experience created by and for the people of Chicago. * Daily Herald | Democratic candidate for Cook circuit court clerk promises modernization, transparency; Opponent silent: Failure to modernize and lack of transparency are the biggest challenges facing the Cook County circuit court clerk’s office, according to Mariyana Spyropoulos, Democratic candidate for clerk of the Cook County circuit court. She faces Republican candidate Lupe Aguirre on Nov. 5. The Daily Herald attempted to contact Aguirre, a former Chicago police officer and attorney, through the Cook County Republican Party, but was unable to do so. Aguirre does not appear to have a campaign website. * Naperville Sun | Naperville’s tentative 2025 budget calls for 9 new hires, including 4 for the police department:ity staff presented a $641.88 million budget for next year, 3.3% more than the city’s amended 2024 budget. It includes a $166.43 million general fund, which is 6.4% — a little more than $10 million — higher than what had been allocated this year. The tentative budget also includes a hefty $179.38 million capital improvement fund program, which council members reviewed at a workshop meeting last month. * Crain’s | Property rights lawsuit over counties’ tax sales gets go-ahead from judge: A lawsuit that aims to halt suburban counties’ longstanding practice of seizing properties over unpaid property taxes — claiming it’s a violation of property rights enshrined in the U.S. Constitution — can move forward, a judge ruled last week. At stake in the case is potentially millions of dollars in home equity that homeowners lose when Illinois counties including DuPage, Kane, Lake and Will seize their properties through the labyrinthine tax sale mechanism. For decades, property owners have been compelled by state legislation to forfeit the entire value of their property so the county can recoup a relatively small amount, the tax debt. * Action | Accel Unveils Plans for Racino at FanDuel Sportsbook & Horse Racing Track: Accel Entertainment unveiled plans for its racino at the horse track formerly known Fairmount Park during the Illinois Gaming Board meeting on Thursday, targeting an opening of its temporary casino before the Kentucky Derby next May. Accel reached an agreement to purchase Fairmount Holdings, which owns the FanDuel Sportsbook & Horse Racing track in Collinsville, for $35 million in July. Accel plans to invest an additional $90 million in converting the venue into a single-site horse racing track as part of an eventual racino. It made its presentation to the IGB prior to the stage agency voting to transfer the organizational and master sports wagering licenses from Fairmount Holdings to Accel, with the sports wagering license also renewed through October 2028. * Tribune | Cook County Board approves new health system CEO: After a monthslong search, Cook County Health found its new leader right back at home, with the current interim CEO getting elevated Thursday to the permanent job. The Cook County Board affirmed a search committee’s pick, appointing Dr. Erik Mikaitis to oversee management of Stroger and Provident hospitals, a network of more than a dozen clinics, and the county’s Medicaid managed care program, CountyCare. He inherits a proposed $5.2 billion budget for 2025 and a workforce of roughly 7,600. Though the system has faced significant financial hurdles in recent years — including high costs for providing free care — 2025 is the first year in recent history the county’s health fund does not have a projected deficit. * Pantagraph | Illinois Democrats rally student voters at ISU: As a mother of two daughters, state Rep. Sharon Chung said she was proud to convey the message “bans off our bodies” in voice and through the message of the T-shirt she wore. “It terrifies me. … they’re growing up in a world today where they have fewer rights than I did when I was their age,” Chung said, referring to her children. * Rockford Register Star | Winnebago County is on a mission to replace Mental Health Board with new faces. Here’s why: County Board Member Tim Nabors, D-14, said even as a Nov. 5 referendum for renewal of a 0.5% mental health sales tax approaches, some on the County Board are working to assert greater influence by installing new board members. “The ones that are on there aren’t being given the opportunity to be reappointed,” Nabors said. “They just want them to be replaced because they don’t like not having control of the Mental Health Board.” * Shaw Local | As ‘skills gap’ grows, teens learn about potential careers – and try out big machines – at Johnsburg High: SkillsUSA Illinois’ ‘career experience’ gave students from across northern Illinois a chance to explore future job pathways that don’t involve four-year college degrees * News Chanel 20 | Businesses Continue to Struggle after Adams St Fire: Daisy Jane’s said being an older established business meant they were able to bounce back faster. But newer businesses like The Wakery have had to reduce their hours just to survive. “In the business world you see ups and downs all the time. So the key thing is that I chose not to just close my doors and not call it quitsI know that we make income through our events I know we make income through rentals and I can pay my bills through that, so we’re going to focus on that until we get our feet steady again,” Elizabeth Wake, owner and founder of The Wakery, said. * WICS | Jacksonville Education Association speaks out on violence against teachers: Issues about the treatment of teachers at Jacksonville district schools have been making headlines over the past few weeks. While there has been some friction over the district’s statements and claims from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the teacher’s union is also speaking out now. Members of the Jacksonville Education Association said they expect a certain level of respect and safety from students and parents. * BND | Belleville high school teachers will wear panic buttons to help head off emergencies: In an effort to boost school safety, Belleville Township High School District 201 employees will soon be able to click a button on a wearable badge to request help or initiate a rapid response during an emergency. The buttons are part of the Centegix Safety Platform, which is “an alert and response system designed to reduce response times … when there is a security issue,” Superintendent Brian Mentzer said. * AP | Georgia officials say they thwarted an attempt to crash a state election website: The attack was limited to that part of the state’s website, which voters use to request an absentee ballot. Users may have experienced a brief slowdown, but the site never crashed and no data was compromised, said Gabriel Sterling, a top official at the agency. He said it was not clear where the attack originated. There has been no public indication that similar systems in any other state were subject to the same kind of attack.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Live coverage
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Oct 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune | ‘This is no longer me talking’: Jurors hear first wiretap audio in Madigan corruption trial: “This is no longer me talking,” said Michael McClain, Madigan’s confidant and now co-defendant, in the wiretapped November 2018 phone conversation with then-Skokie Rep. Lou Lang. “I’m an agent, somebody that cares really deeply about you, who thinks that you really ought to move on,” McClain said in the call. On the stand Thursday, Lang said he knew McClain was saying he was simply a messenger for Madigan, who was no longer interested in giving Lang a more powerful position within the House. * Sun-Times | ‘You really ought to move on’ — Former lawmaker testifies about call telling him Madigan wanted him out: The call between Lang and McClain occurred after someone threatened to come forward with an allegation against Lang late in 2018. Springfield had just endured months of #MeToo scandals. McClain asked Madigan on Nov. 3, 2018, “When do you want me to call Lang and just lower the boom on him?” “Sooner rather than later,” Madigan told him.
* Tribune | Big money floods Illinois campaigns with few rules and little enforcement: The flood of money pouring into the state’s pliable political system has created a raucous campaign environment where the last two races for Illinois governor have become the most and third-most expensive governor’s races in the nation, and, in 2022, allowed the incumbent governor to spend as much as he wanted to help pick the Republican rival he correctly thought would be easiest to defeat. It has permitted legislative leaders in Springfield to consolidate their power and protect incumbents by weaponizing political donation rules meant to ensure fair play and directing the flow of cash to preferred candidates. * WTTW | ‘A Moment in Time That We Cannot Afford to Squander’: New Chicago Board of Education Members Sworn in at First Meeting: Martinez, who was also present at Thursday’s meeting, has seen questions swirl about his continued employment with the school district. […] Thursday’s agenda did not include any items specifically relating to Martinez or his employment, but it did include language that during the board’s closed session it would discuss “the appointment, employment, compensation, discipline, performance, or dismissal of specific employees.” That language, however, is typical for board agendas. * Block Club | Lakeview Parents Beg CPS For More Janitors As Teachers Clean Filthy Elementary School: Like most elementary schools in the city, Nettelhorst is usually staffed by three full-time custodians, said Chicago Public Schools spokesperson Evan Moore. Industry standards for custodial staffing in CPS schools are based on square footage and task frequency, Moore said. But before summer break, Nettelhorst’s third custodian was laid off. When teachers arrived to school Aug. 26, they quickly realized that cleaning the entire building was a job too big for just two-full time custodians. * CBS Chicago | Argonne National Laboratory team to study causes of flooding in Chicago’s Chatham neighborhood: The Greater Chatham Initiative is a community group now working directly with a team of scientists and researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory has launched a project to focus on flooding. They are homing in on Chatham as the Chicago neighborhood hardest hit. […] “Chatham tends to flood first and tends to flood worst,” said Scott Collis of Argonne National Laboratory. “We are going to bring state-of-the-art research radar to the region.” * Block Club | Father Of Slain Teen Caleb Westbrooks Writes Children’s Book To Honor Him — And Process Immense Grief: Westbrooks was at the airport trying to get an earlier flight home when he finally learned his son had been killed. The next few hours were full of shock and panic as he flew back to Chicago. “My brain is like, if you get hysterical or something, they’re gonna land this plane somewhere, and you won’t be able to get to Chicago,” he said. “So it was like, just keep it together. Just keep it together at all costs. Just keep it together.” * Crain’s | Company that shut Chicago steel-conduit plant sues Mexico: The owner of a Chicago-based steel company has sued the Mexican government over claims that companies there are flooding the U.S. market with cheap product. Zekelman Industries filed the suit Oct. 21 in federal court in Washington, D.C., for breach of contract in violating the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement trade deal that replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement in 2020. * Block Club | The Pilsen Food Pantry Is Fundraising To Help More Neighbors In Need: The Pilsen Food Pantry is looking to raise $100,000 by Oct. 31 as it hopes to continue its work of helping people who face food insecurity — and it’s close to hitting its goal. […] The Pilsen Food Pantry is open Monday-Friday, distributing fresh produce, frozen proteins, dairy, shelf-stable foods and household items to 120 clients daily. Clients can pick what they want, a model that reduces food waste, promotes healthy eating and cooking and is “more dignified” for struggling neighbors, Figueroa said. * News-Sun | Election to determine if Lake County continues its Democratic shift; ‘The Republican Party is hungry to talk to the voters’: When exactly Lake County started turning blue is up for debate. Lake County Republican Chair Keith Brin pointed to 2016. “There was a rapid shift in the electorate and within four to six years, Lake County had flipped from a super majority of Republicans on the County Board to a super minority,” he said. Brin said the cause was national politics, which “forced people to polarize.” Suburbs were no longer “mildly red or mildly blue,” and the national elections, “didn’t play well for Republicans in Lake County.” * Daily Herald | Lawsuit against Huntley High over E. coli outbreak dropped — for now: Just over a month after two families sued Huntley School District 158 following last year’s E. coli outbreak at Huntley High School that sickened 15 people, the lawsuit has been withdrawn, although the legal battle might not be over. McHenry County court records indicate that the plaintiffs asked for a “voluntary dismissal” of the case, which was granted Tuesday. * Daily Herald | ‘Answer to a prayer’: Community invited to honor Korean War MIA soldier as he’s laid to rest in Elgin: For 74 years, all Gloria Valle knew about her “Tio Beto” was from stories she heard from her family. Though the Elgin woman always kept his picture up in her home, she never met her uncle Eriverto Ortiz, a U.S. Army corporal who was declared missing-in-action in Korea in 1950. But after all this time, she’ll finally get to help him find his final rest. * Daily Herald | ‘Spaceship’-look midcentury Barrington home by noted local architect sells in warp speed: Inside, the single-story house is equally dramatic. Though about 2,700 square feet, it has only two bedrooms and 1½ bathrooms. Most of the space he said, is taken up by a “massive” great room filled with natural light where built-in couches and shelves stretch out across white carpet. Two wide steps lead to a conversation pit around the fireplace.
* SJ-R | Family of fallen Illinois State Police trooper releases statement: “Our world has been shattered, and we will never be the same,” the family said. “But we take comfort in knowing that he lived life to the fullest, he loved his family and friends deeply, and he died doing what he loved. “We could never begin to thank law enforcement or the thousands from our community who have reached out to us to express their love and support,” the family said. * WCIA | Past Iroquois Co. health admin due back in court December after pleading not guilty to falsifying timesheets: DeAnn Schippert, the former public health administrator, pleaded not guilty in court last week, according to Iroquois County court records. Schippert was arrested by Illinois State Police and charged with 33 counts of theft of government property, forgery, and official misconduct in March. The Attorney General’s Office said Schippert was paid more than $100,000 she should not have received for fraudulent time sheets claiming regular and overtime hours she did not work. * SJ-R | Who is Bill Pope? Meet the new owner of Gabatoni’s in Springfield: Pope said the only change planned is reopening Gabatoni’s dining room that has been closed since the pandemic in 2020. The business has operated solely as take out and delivery service since. Hours are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. * Vote Beat | No, Michigan does not have more voters than residents eligible to vote: The claim — that Michigan has more voters than people eligible to vote — has been debunked extensively by the state as well as independent experts. A federal court ruling this week weighed in on a similar GOP claim, finding flaws in the comparison of data points and no proof that the discrepancy amounts to a violation of law, just as previous courts have found. Musk and others cite the data points to argue that the discrepancy could enable fraudulent voting. The claim is based on a misunderstanding about the makeup of the state’s voter roll and what it means in relation to Census population data. * Casino Reports | Inside Pace-O-Matic’s Place In The Developing, Divisive ‘Skill Games’ Industry: Skill games are gaming devices that look and feel similar to traditional slot machines. However, whereas those casino games rely purely on chance, manufacturers like Pace-O-Matic say their games rely on the player’s skill. According to Fortune Business Insights, the global skill game industry was valued at nearly $31 billion in 2022 and it’s expected to swell to $85.34 billion by 2030. And, in the U.S., it’s all unregulated.
|
Today’s quotable
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Maybe somebody should tell Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred that a large number of South Side legislators will be asked to vote on a subsidy for the Chicago White Sox. So, dissing their part of town is just dumb. As subscribers know, Ozzie Guillen also “went there” in the presence of a bunch of South Side lawmakers last month. As Sneed might say, dumb-dee-dumb-dumb…
* Transcript…
Asked about the comment, a South Side legislator told me today that “Its wild how [Jerry Reinsdorf] maybe found a way to pass the Bears in worst stadium lobbying of the decade.”
|
More magic beans
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
The CTU has long been fond of relying on magic beans to balance budgets because they didn’t have to concern themselves with the details of governing. Old habits are hard to break. * The 2020 Fair Tax constitutional amendment needed to be “approved by either three-fifths of those voting on the question or a majority of those voting in the election.” Instead, it got thumped 53-47. The “Yes” votes totaled just 45 percent of all those voting. Also, even if attitudes change, it would be another two years before another constitutional question could be placed on the ballot. …Adding… A commenter makes a very good point. If this survives all odds and somehow makes it onto the ballot, and it’s then positioned as a windfall for CPS, it’ll do even worse next time.
|
McCombie slightly adjusts pickup prediction
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * July…
* From today’s Q and A with Leader McCombie…
Discuss.
|
Energy Storage And Clean Energy!
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the next few years, Illinois can expect increases in demand for electricity not seen in decades. While the state is currently experiencing a clean energy boom, the growth is not enough—which puts families and businesses at risk for higher energy bills and unreliable service. Luckily, there is legislation that would expand the use of a technology that can capture and store clean, cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day -large- and small-scale battery energy storage. Energy storage will help avoid the cost spikes ratepayers may experience due to insufficient energy capacity. The need to accelerate the adoption of energy storage is urgent. Springfield is faced with a choice: support policy that will build out clean, cost-effective energy storage or allow families and businesses to have to rely on dirty, unreliable, and expensive natural gas plants. Meanwhile, Illinoisans agree: recent polling shows 72% of Illinois residents support incentives for energy storage. Paid for by Counterspark.
|
Past time for a state fix
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Mr. Tourjman is right that people will just drive down the street to the next town to buy the very same products. And many of the dangers are likely over-stated. But maybe action like this will spur the General Assembly to properly regulate and tax the sale of these products…
* More…
And they should do something about sweepstakes machines while they’re at it. The legislative inaction on these grey market products is just odd. It’s never smelled right.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
|
Today’s must-read
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Most of the Tribune’s profile of Local 150’s leadership is known to people like yourselves. But not all of it, so definitely take some time and read the whole thing. John Lippert has provided us a sweeping and comprehensive look at one of the most powerful organizations in the state. From the end…
|
Meanwhile… In Opposite Land
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * South Dakota…
* Texas…
* Alabama…
* Florida…
* Idaho…
|
Madigan corruption trial coverage roundup
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to follow along in real time. Tribune…
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times federal courts reporter Jon Seidel is in the courtroom this morning…
* More…
* WGN | ComEd exec testifies in Day 2 of Madigan corruption trial: Expected to take the stand Thursday is former State Rep. Lou Lang (D-Skokie) who resigned after accusations of sexual harassment emerged in 2018. The longtime representative from Illinois’ 16th District was allegedly pressured to resign by McLain even though Lang believed the accusations against him were false. * Center Square | Witness testimony continues in corruption trial of former Illinois House Speaker: Former State Rep. Scott Drury, D-Highwood, returned to the stand for additional cross-examination Wednesday morning after beginning his testimony on Tuesday. Drury and Madigan defense attorney Todd Pugh had several combative exchanges over a variety of issues. U.S. government prosecutor Amarjeet Bhachu said the prosecution planned to call utility company executive Scott Vogt next, followed by former State Rep, Lou Lang, D-Skokie. Lang was on Madigan’s leadership team before stepping down in 2019 amid harassment allegations.
|
Open thread
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: CUB, Ameren Illinois spar over rate increase proposal. WCIA…
- But the Citizens Utility Board says the plan should be reduced by at least $100 million because of wasteful spending. CUB officials said the current plan includes $23.5 million for six projects and $800,000 for operations and maintenance costs. -When asked how much more money people could see on their bills every month, Ameren did not give a specific answer. * Related stories… ∙ WMBD: Board urges state commission to cut Ameren rate hike request∙ Advantage: CUB urges ICC to rethink Ameren request Governor Pritzker’s schedule…
In Rockford at 11:30 pm to announce the US Department of Energy grant award. In Machesney Park at 1 pm for the mobilization ceremony for the 725th Transportation Company * Tribune | Local 150 steps into Springfield power vacuum aiming to promote clean energy and protect jobs, efforts often at odds: Mandating electric vehicles too soon, according to Local 150 political guru Marc Poulos, would cripple revenue from the state’s motor fuel tax. That, in turn, would kill lots of road-building projects and jobs. These include a $6.4 billion plan, of which Local 150 is a principal proponent and beneficiary, to rebuild the Eisenhower Expressway west of downtown. * Daily Herald | Police explain how they solved 45-year-old North Aurora murder: Thanks to DNA testing, North Aurora police can close the case of the 1979 murder of Kathy Halle. But they know that while it might bring some comfort to Halle’s family to know who killed her, there will be no justice. That’s because the perpetrator, Bruce Lindahl, died just two years later while committing another murder. “This was a tough one for us,” Detective Ryan Peat said. “It (the ID) doesn’t save Kathy. It doesn’t bring any justice to Bruce.” * Center Square | Some argue for Illinois’ Electoral College votes to be proportioned: Former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn doesn’t favor a proportional approach to the Electoral College. He said whoever gets the popular vote should win. “The electoral college is really something from the 18th Century and it doesn’t really work in the 21st Century in my opinion,” Quinn said recently at an unrelated news conference. * WAND | Election preview: Schweizer, Clem battle for Illinois 104th House seat: Schweizer argued Illinois should eliminate some of the less effective programs and reprioritize funding to alleviate taxes. Clem is in favor of cutting down on state government spending to help lower the burden on families. “But, we need to make an investment in education and our pensions,” Clem said. “Our property taxes are the biggest expense for a lot of homeowners.” * WSPY | Gabby Shanahan runs for Illinois House 97th District seat, prioritizes cost of living and taxes: Shanahan says the high cost of living is the main issue she would like to address if elected, and she believes the elimination of the grocery tax is a step in the right direction. She would also like to see the gas tax eliminated. * 25 News Now | Single strand of pneumonia is infecting Illinois kids at an earlier age: Mycoplasma Pneumoniae, a strand of pneumonia also known as walking pneumonia, is becoming more common in Illinois children in 2024. Typically, children eight or older become infected. However, Illinois Department of Public Health data show increased cases in children under the age of six, and the symptoms have reportedly been more severe. The department saw a positive case rate of walking pneumonia at 1% in April 2024. In October, it rose to 20%. * Sun-Times | Brandon Johnson’s communications director ousted amid latest mayoral office shake-up: It is unclear why Ronnie Reese is stepping down as communications director, but it comes amid a string of high-profile departures from the mayor’s top team, and after a rocky year and a half of communications strategy. Reese did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A source with direct knowledge of Reese’s departure who was not authorized to speak on the personnel matter publicly said the exit was “not voluntary.” […] Reese helped propel Johnson into the mayor’s office. He ran campaign communications after spending more than a decade as a deputy press secretary at the Chicago Teachers Union where Johnson was a paid organizer. * ABC Chicago | CTA Train operator had alcohol in their system when Yellow Line train crashed in 2023, report shows: The reports documented two separate blood alcohol tests conducted that show the operator was under the influence at the time of the late morning crash at levels above federal requirements. […] At the time of the crash, the 47-year-old train operator at the controls had worked in that position for only three months, according to findings from the NTSB’s investigation. […] “The medical facility’s results showed that at the time the train operator was tested, approximately one hour after the accident, his blood alcohol concentration (BAC) was found to be .06,” the NTSB report states. * Sun-Times | Chicago police blasted for mishandling cases of missing Black women: ‘The days of silence are no more’: “I’ve come to understand that missing Black women cases, predominantly in Black districts, are handled without the same due diligence as white women in predominantly white areas,” Bridgette Rouse, whose sister went missing in 2017, told the City Council’s Public Safety Committee at a four-hour meeting Wednesday. * Tribune | Cook County commissioners advance settlements tied to disgraced Chicago Detective Reynaldo Guevara: In all, the National Registry of Exonerations at the University of Michigan tallied more than 40 individuals who were wrongly convicted based on Guevara, partner Ernest Halvorsen, or other detectives’ misconduct — including coerced false confessions or witness identifications — through threats or violence. That misconduct has been costly for city taxpayers already: cases that named Guevara cost $39.3 million in 2019, 2020 and 2021 alone, not including the cost to pay outside counsel to defend the city in court. * CBS Chicago | Chicago Teachers Union spends thousands on flyers attacking candidates for school board: A total of 31 candidates are vying for 10 spots in what is now a $3.2 million race for Chicago’s first elected school board. More than $38,000 has come in the last couple of days just for Chicago Teachers Union-backed candidates—earmarked specifically for phone calls, text messages, and radio ads. Thousands of dollars were spent specifically on a run of flyers alone. The flyers, which some are receiving in the mail right now, claim candidates in the race are aligned with former president Donald Trump and “out-of-state billionaires.” * Tribune | Chicago Teachers Union report aims for alignment between district, mayor and union: The Chicago Teachers Union released a new report in a virtual news conference Wednesday, combining the highly anticipated Chicago Public Schools “Together We Rise” five-year strategic plan and the union’s contract proposals. While CTU’s new report takes goals from CPS’ five-year strategic plan and provides more specific “implementation steps,” much of the news conference focused on the ongoing disputes between the district and the union over key financial decisions. * Daily Herald | How many lawyers does a county clerk need? DuPage board members question size of clerk’s legal team: Some DuPage County Board members are questioning the number of lawyers representing the county clerk in a legal case stemming from an ongoing dispute over how bills get paid. County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek has a team of three lawyers representing her in a lawsuit challenging her authority over how she runs her office. Because the state’s attorney’s office filed the lawsuit against Kaczmarek, the county’s chief judge appointed legal representation for the clerk. * Daily Southtown | Thornton Township meeting canceled as trustees, Tiffany Henyard dispute where to meet: While enough of the board had showed up to the Thornton Township Hall in South Holland to call the meeting to order, Trustee Chris Gonzalez refused to go to the upstairs meeting room, saying there was too little space for the number of attendees present. Meeting locations have frequently switched between two rooms of the building, with Henyard preferring the upstairs and Trustees Gonzalez and Carmen Carlisle saying they prefer the larger basement space. * Shaw Local | Shaw Media acquiring Daily Journal in Kankakee: The Small family had owned the Daily Journal before its sale to Shaw. Len Small founded the newspaper in 1903. The present owners, Len, Tom and Jennifer Small, issued a statement saying: “We congratulate the Shaw organization for their commitment. We will celebrate the progress of the new company.” * WCIA | Danville nursing home cited for multiple violations: The document said a resident received care for a wound he had on his right leg. Five days later a nurse found maggots in his dressing and wheelchair. The wound physician ordered it be washed with an antiseptic and the wrap be changed every two days. * BND | Breese contractor and Aldi executive sentenced in bid-rigging and kickback scheme: A former executive for Aldi and a building contractor from Breese have been sentenced in federal court in East St. Louis for rigging bids for the construction and remodeling of grocery stores throughout southern Illinois and Missouri. Louis R. Ross Sr., 64, a former Aldi executive from St. Louis, was sentenced on Oct. 16 to serve two years in prison, according to court records and a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office Tuesday. Ross pleaded guilty in May to one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, four counts of mail fraud and four counts of wire fraud. * Daily-Journal | Unfinished business: New chairman of Kankakee County Board appointed: Kankakee County Board has a new chairman. That was revealed at Tuesday’s special board meeting that Andy Wheeler resigned late Friday in an email to Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe, which made the proceedings moot. A special meeting was called Friday afternoon to discuss Wheeler’s status as board chairman. * WCIA | Springfield’s ALPLM hosting naturalization ceremony: The United States District Court, Central District of Illinois will hold a naturalization ceremony at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum on Oct. 24 at 2:30 p.m. During the ceremony, the 75 citizenship candidates will be presented to the Honorable Karen McNaught, a Magistrate Judge of the United States District Court, Central District of Illinois. The candidates come from 37 countries, including Bolivia, China, Italy, Pakistan and Zimbabwe. * PJ Star | ‘Perfect storm’: Major Peoria road project is one year ahead of schedule. Here’s how: Wisconsin Avenue reconstruction is a year ahead of schedule because no unexpected variables arose during work, contractors worked quickly and effectively with the road shut down, and there were no scheduling issues, according to Peoria Public Works spokesperson Nick McMillion. “It truly was a perfect storm that came together for this project to be completed a year ahead of schedule,” McMillion said. “On a construction project of this magnitude, it is rare that everything lines up perfectly and nothing unexpected occurs. Wisconsin Avenue is such a vital corridor for the city, and its residents in the East Bluff and we are really excited to show off the vast improvements of this important roadway.” * WCIA | UIUC researcher creates technology to detect cancers faster: Within a small black box, LED lights and sensors detect molecules, take a photo and connect with a doctor’s smartphone. Once those are counted, doctors can detect cancer faster and tell if it’s becoming more advanced. It could also help medical experts decide which medicines would be most effective for the patient. * AP | Grateful Dead named MusiCares Persons of the Year for philanthropy and music impact: MusiCares, an organization that helps music professionals who need financial, personal or medical assistance, will honor the Grateful Dead as its 2025 Persons of the Year. MusiCares announced Wednesday that it will recognize original members Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh and Bobby Weir for their philanthropic efforts, their unique ability to foster community through concerts and for their impact on American music on their 60th anniversary. * The Guardian | US public schools burned up nearly $3.2bn fending off rightwing culture attacks – report: Researchers from UCLA, UT Austin, UC Riverside and American University surveyed 467 public school superintendents across 46 US states, asking them about the direct and indirect costs of dealing with these volatile campaigns. Those costs included everything from out-of-pocket payments to hire to lawyers or additional security, to the staff member hours devoted to responding to disinformation on social media, addressing parent concerns and replying to voluminous public records requests focused on the district’s teachings on racism, gender and sexuality.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Live coverage
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Oct 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers know more. Sun-Times…
* Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…
The polling memo is here. …Adding… Leanne Redden, RTA Executive Director…
* Crain’s…
Click here for the opinion. * WIFR…
* WLPO | Current, Former Sheriffs Condemn Remarks Made by State Rep. Candidate Murri Briel: In response, Briel tells 103.9 WLPO that she “approached my podcast appearances as an opportunity to have a deeper discussion on different ideas that we might otherwise only hear about in soundbytes, not as my own platform”. She went on to accuse Bishop and political insiders backing her of feeding voters a false narrative because they can’t run on their own platform. Photo of sheriffs in uniform at the campaign press conference… ![]() * Press Release | Honoring Illinois’ Fallen: The Department of Central Management Services has received notice from Governor JB Pritzker that all person or entities covered by the Illinois Flag Display Act are to fly the flags at half-staff in honor of: United States Army Corporal Eriverto Ortiz served with distinction as a member of Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division during the Korean War. Corporal Ortiz was killed in action at the age of 27 in September of 1950. His body could not be recovered due to the intense fighting in Pusan, South Korea, and was declared nonrecoverable by the US Army in 1956. Through the relentless efforts of the U.S. Department of Defense’s Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Accounting Agency, using dental, anthropological and mitochondrial DNA analysis. Corporal Ortiz will be returned to his family on October 28, 2024, and will be buried with full military funeral and honors in Elgin, IL. * Capitol News Illinois | Feds ‘turned over heaven and earth’ in Madigan probe but found no real bribes, co-defendant says: Defense attorney John Mitchell claimed McClain did everything “with intent to maintain and increase his access to Mike Madigan,” explaining that building and maintaining relationships with elected officials lobbying is essential to lobbying. And for McClain, that relationship maintenance included “100% legal favors for Mike Madigan,” Mitchell said. “Every time there’s a legal favor, the government’s view is that it must be a bribe,” Mitchell said. The argument mirrored opening statements made by his colleague at the outset of the ComEd trial last spring in which McClain attorney Patrick Cotter said the feds’ yearslong investigation gave them tunnel vision such that “everything begins to look like a crime.” * ABC Chicago | Former Majority Leader Lou Lang expected to take stand in former IL Speaker Mike Madigan trial: Lang has testified in both the ComEd case and the trial of Madigan’s former chief of staff last summer. Both testimonies delved into how Madigan sent Mike McClain to urge Lang to retire from the General Assembly after the speaker’s office was warned of a woman who had threatened to go public with sexual harassment allegations if Lang did not step down. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s communications director exiting: Ronnie Reese, who led Johnson’s press office since the transition in May 2023, will exit the role after a tumultuous year-and-a-half that’s seen the administration struggle at times with media strategy. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for the mayor said Johnson press secretary Erin Connelly has been appointed acting communications director and will run the mayor’s press office moving forward. The departure was not a voluntary decision by Reese, sources with direct knowledge of the situation told the Tribune. * Crain’s | Another wrinkle in Johnson’s budget dilemma: Public health: More than 80 public health advocacy groups, clinics and nonprofits are urging Mayor Brandon Johnson to allocate an extra $25 million to Chicago’s Public Health Department next year, a demand that comes as he stares down a $1 billion shortfall across the city’s entire budget. The advocacy group, led by the Health & Medicine Policy Research Group, argues the CDPH has long been given an insufficient amount of money each year to tackle the many issues on its agenda — responding to pandemics, conducting restaurant inspections, launching mental health services and more. * Illinois Answers | A New City Tree Trim Strategy Produces Big Results. Not Everyone Is On Board.: Directing crews to work tree-by-tree and block-by-block instead of crisscrossing the city to chase complaints has unlocked efficiencies few thought possible, officials said. Trees that had become dangerous over more than a decade of neglect are now getting attention from arborists. The overhaul has set the city’s tree canopy on pace for a potential top-to-bottom refresh by 2030. Department leaders hope that will mean less damage to cars and homes, fewer trees felled by disease and damage — and a sharp drop in complaints to ward offices. The switch to area-based trimming has not come easily. While more trees are getting trimmed, some alderpeople have balked at the new system because they have less influence on which jobs get done when. They complain that the department does little to communicate with them and even when crews do show up, they sometimes do a poor job. It’s also unclear whether city-employed trimmers will be able to finish a pass around the city in time for the strategy to pay off. * Sun-Times | CTA employee assaulted on bus over payment dispute in Greater Grand Crossing in ’senseless act of violence’: CTA President Dorval R. Carter Jr. said in a statement the agency was “outraged by this senseless act of violence.” “Such attacks are not only unacceptable, they are also a felony,” Carter wrote. “We will utilize all the resources at our disposal to find the perpetrators and hold them accountable to the fullest extent of the law. CTA’s transit workers are dedicated public servants and deserve our respect and protection.” * Sun-Times | Activists push for youth-led violence prevention program: Activists in the youth group GoodKids MadCity and two City Council allies — Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th) and Ald. Lamont Robinson (4h) — gathered Tuesday in City Hall to call for the passage of the Peace Book Ordinance in this year’s budget negotiations. The ordinance, originally proposed in 2022, seeks to invest in youth-led violence prevention programs. It proposes employing youth peacekeepers, creating neighborhood-based and citywide peace commissions and creating a physical “Peace Book” guide with resources for deescalation and violence prevention. * WTTW | Police Misconduct Agency Identified Troubling Pattern of Stops in 11th District Months Before Fatal Dexter Reed Shooting, Letter Shows: A letter sent to police officials from COPA on March 27, six days after Reed’s death, shows that the agency had evidence that officers were routinely engaging in misconduct that violated Chicago Police Department rules and put Chicagoans at risk of a violent encounter with officers for at least a year. COPA Chief Andrea Kersten told WTTW News her agency took no action to inform Superintendent Larry Snelling or his command staff about the alleged misconduct until that March 27 letter was sent. * Block Club | In Horner Park’s Natural Area, ‘No Dogs’ Signs Ignored, Vandalized: ‘People Don’t Really Care’: In mid-August, someone attached a “Thanks, Karen” sticker to one of the signs. A month later, that sign and 10 others were “ripped down,” said John Friedmann, vice president of stewardship for Horner Park Advisory Council, which installed the signs this summer. As recently as Sunday, a reporter saw a metal “No Dogs Allowed” sign off its post and sitting in the grass. “They are even breaking off metal signs,” Friedmann said in a text message. “Not easy to do. Someone has a lot of rage to support his/her sense of entitlement out there.” * Sun-Times | Leila Rahimi weighs in on departure from NBC 5 Chicago: Leila Rahimi told the Sun-Times that she’s no longer at NBC 5 Chicago. “At this time, NBC and I have parted ways,” Rahimi said Tuesday via text. “I value my experience, time and relationships there, and I’m looking forward to what the future holds!” NBC 5 didn’t return a request for comment. Rahimi will continue to appear on The Score’s midday show with Dan Bernstein and Marshall Harris twice a week. * Crain’s | University of Chicago Crime Lab adds to leadership team: Katie Hill, who has previous experience as a policy adviser to former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and as a top official in Chicago’s law department, is taking over as executive director of the crime lab, replacing Roseanna Ander, who is transitioning to a new leadership role in the organization. * Tribune | In memoriam: Celebrating the life of ‘Lost Chicago’ author David Garrard Lowe and his love affair with Chicago: Its pages well-thumbed and portions underlined in ink, the book “Lost Chicago” sits on bookshelves across Chicago and continues to amaze and inspire. It is a poetic photographic essay about our bygone public buildings and private residences. It is harshly critical of the city’s once cavalier attitude toward architecture, filled with 200-some photos and prints, written in elegant, passionate prose. I picked up my copy again after hearing the news that its author, David Garrard Lowe, had died in New York City on Sept. 21. He had been in hospice care. He was 91 but remains alive in this book. And so I read, “Perhaps, by showing the splendor which has been lost, I might, in some small way, help to preserve that splendor not yet departed.” * Daily Southtown | Thornton Township meeting canceled as trustees, Tiffany Henyard dispute where to meet: A standoff between Thornton Township Supervisor Tiffany Henyard and one trustee led to the second scheduled meeting in a row being canceled due to lack of quorum. While enough of the board had showed up to the Thornton Township Hall in South Holland to call the meeting to order, Trustee Chris Gonzalez refused to go to the upstairs meeting room, saying there was too little space for the number of attendees present. Meeting locations have frequently switched between two rooms of the building, with Henyard preferring the upstairs and Trustees Gonzalez and Carmen Carlisle saying they prefer the larger basement space. * NBC Chicago | Full list: Suburban Chicago referendums in the 2024 election: For the most part, these include bond issues to help pay for new infrastructure or rehabilitating existing infrastructure, or changing the way certain governmental entities function, such as adding or eliminating elected positions. The second type of question is an “advisory question,” where voters are asked a question to help reveal their feelings on a particular issue. In this year’s election, those primarily involve asking generic questions about taxation or specific types of electoral reform. * Daily Herald | Crystal Lake District 47, teachers approve contract with ‘new money’ for salaries at 19.5% over four years: The contract will run until the end of the school year in 2029 and includes what the district called “new money added to the salary schedule totaling at least 19.5% over the next four years.” Other changes include up to 3% to Teachers’ Retirement System contributions starting at 1% with 10 years of seniority, increased benefits, and increased plan time, according to a District 47 press release. * Crain’s | Google opening store in Oakbrook Center — its first in the Midwest: Shoppers will be able to browse Google products such as Pixel phones, watches and tablets, Nest cameras, Fitbit trackers, and branded merchandise, as well as pick up online orders. They’ll also be able to try out products and AI experiences with help from experts who can also help with troubleshooting and repairs. * WCIA | Lake Land College sees English Language Acquisition program numbers rising: Lake Land College in Mattoon said numbers for their English Language Acquisition program are booming. They started off with a class of about 40 students in 2022, and Adult Education Director Dustyn Fatheree said last year they welcomed about 150 students. Now, nearly 200 students are in the program. * PJ Star | He gave life to the Supreme Court through his sketches. He’ll share his story in Peoria: “I was painting houses and tarring roofs when our governor in Maryland (Marvin Mandel) was going on trial,” Lien said. “A local station was looking for somebody, and I tried out by sketching people around their newsroom. I got the job, and that’s really how it started.” That start has led to Lien’s 50-year career as a courtroom artist, sketching the Supreme Court from 1977 until his retirement in 2022. During that time, Lien has covered such court cases as the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. In 2011, he joined the staff of SCOTUSblog, for which he covered nearly every case argued in the nation’s highest court. * Sun-Times | Red Stars get new name: Chicago Stars FC: The Red Stars announced the club will be known as Chicago Stars FC. […] Chicago Stars FC will continue to wear the Red Stars name and crest for the remainder of the season and into playoffs. The club will transition to the new crest for the 2025 season. * LA Times | Dodgers star Fernando Valenzuela, who changed MLB by sparking Fernandomania, dies at 63: His journey from a small town in Mexico to rousing success in Major League Baseball inspired generations of fans and created a seismic shift in the demographics of the Dodgers fan base. His unorthodox pitching motion, distinct physique and seemingly mysterious aura left an indelible mark on people from all walks of life, whether it was Los Angeles’ Latino community grappling with the displacement created when the Dodgers built their stadium, Mexican immigrants and their families or artists inspired by his wizardry on the mound. * Sun-Times | Breast cancer striking more young women — earlier screenings urged for those most at risk: Over the past two decades, more and more women under the age of 50 are being diagnosed with breast cancer. But researchers have yet to figure out why this spike is happening. Because most women don’t begin regular breast cancer screening until they’re 40, younger women are also being diagnosed with later-stage tumors when the disease is more aggressive and harder to treat, according to a study published this year from the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. * Bloomberg | McDonald’s stock plummets after deadly E. Coli outbreak tied to Quarter Pounders: Ten people have been hospitalized, including a child with complications from HUS, a syndrome that damages small blood vessels and can lead to deadly clots, the agency said. Of the people who have been interviewed, all reported eating at McDonald’s before falling ill between Sept. 27 and Oct. 11, the CDC said, with most specifying a Quarter Pounder. * WaPo | A young teen gives birth. Idaho’s parental consent law snags her care.: The patient, 36 weeks pregnant, was having mild but frequent contractions. She had come to the emergency room in this small lakeside town because she was new to the area and had no doctor. In most cases, physician Caitlin Gustafson would have begun a pelvic exam to determine whether labor had started. This time, she called the hospital’s lawyers.
|
Some people freak out and claim the worst over just about everything
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Lemme get this straight. You mean to tell me that the same people who believe all votes should be counted by hand are totally freaking out about how a few electronic ballot scanners might be down, so paper ballots have to be put into a secured box, just like in the old days? And so they are encouraging their fellow travelers not to vote? Hilarious…
If you really want to spoil your afternoon, click here and read the comments. * Daily Herald…
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Lawsuit calls 1992 Illinois minority teacher scholarship program ‘un-American and unconstitutional’
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From the lawsuit…
* Back to Crain’s…
* Lawsuit…
* The 14th Amendment was passed after the Civil War and was intended to protect the rights of former slaves and rein in the former Confederate states. From the Library of Congress…
* More background…
* SCOTUS was just denied a chance to eliminate ‘race-based funding’ — and ending affirmative action in college admissions had everything to do with it: A venture capital firm founded by Black women kept a case away from the U.S. Supreme Court that could have ended race-based entrepreneurial funding nationwide. The Atlanta-based Fearless Fund settled a lawsuit Wednesday with the American Alliance for Equal Rights — the same conservative advocacy group responsible for bringing the case that ended affirmative action programs in college admissions. Conservative activist Edward Blum, founder of the Alliance, brought a legal challenge against the Fearless Fund, an entrepreneurship funding competition open only to businesses owned by Black women. The program offered $20,000 to each of four winners in an effort to help Black women build growth within the venture capital industry. To be eligible, a business must be at least 50% owned by Black women. * Founder of grant program slams federal appeals court for eliminating funding for Black women’s businesses: U.S. Circuit Judge Robin Stacie Rosenbaum, a Barack Obama appointee, began a lengthy dissent with a soccer analogy in which she likened the unnamed plaintiffs’ case to faking an injury by “flopping on the field”: “No one doubts the sincerity of an Arsenal (soccer) player’s desire to beat Tottenham. But he can’t be allowed to try to win by flopping on the field, faking an injury near Tottenham’s goal. For those not in the know, the object of flopping is to manufacture a foul that the player hasn’t actually experienced to manipulate the referee into inappropriately exercising his power to award a penalty kick in the box, where it’s likely to result in a goal. Referees’ vigilance prevents players who have a sincere desire to defeat their opponents — but who try to do so through manufactured fouls — from commandeering referees to improperly exercise their adjudicatory authority to award unwarranted penalty kicks.”
|
Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
|
Report: Fewer than 5,600 newspapers remain in the US
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Axios in 2023…
* Medill released its 2024 State of Local News Report today…
* Related…
* The Atlantic | Is American Journalism Headed Toward an ‘Extinction-Level Event’?: The decline of the legacy news media has been playing out for decades, exacerbated most recently by the advent of the internet and the explosion of digital platforms, especially the ad-revenue-gobbling tech giants Google and Meta. Even when the ad-supported model of journalism still worked, the history of American media was punctuated by periods of dramatic expansion and contraction, often coinciding with the arrival of new technologies. The latest round of cuts, however, represents a grim new milestone. * Nieman Lab | This year’s Pulitzer Prizes were a coming-out party for online media — and a marker of local newspapers’ decline: In the years that have followed, non-newspaper outlets have made substantial gains in certain categories — Audio Reporting, obviously, but also Feature Writing, which magazines have come to dominate. But despite online-only news orgs having been eligible for 15 years now, their wins have been more sporadic. Newspapers were still the dominant force in the main reporting categories.
|
Question of the day
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* The Home School Legal Defense Association, an organization that has been highly influential in reducing regulations for home schooling across the county, shows Illinois has one of the lowest regulations for homeschooling in the US. From Capitol News Illinois in June…
* Capitol News Illinois in July…
* The Questions: Should homeschooling be regulated more in Illinois?
|
Roundup: Day 2 of the Madigan trial
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* WTTW…
* Fox Chicago…
* Some more from the app formally known as Twitter…
* This morning from the Tribune…
* More…
* ABC Chicago | Mike Madigan trial LIVE updates: Testimony to continue for 2nd day in former IL speaker’s trial: Co-defendant Michael McClain’s defense has wrapped up their opening statements as the Michael Madigan federal corruption trial moves forward. McLain’s defense attorney John Mitchell told the jury, “The evidence will show mike McClain was a lobbyist and like all lobbyist he understood if you want to get access to a politician you need to develop a relationship of trust…a favor by itself is not a bribe, a favor is a favor.” * WGN | Government calling first witnesses in Michael Madigan corruption trial; co-defendant’s attorney gives opening statement: On Tuesday morning, McClain’s attorney told the jury of eight women and four men that in the hundreds of hours of secret recordings and thousands of documents used to charge the defendants, there isn’t a whiff of any illegal conduct by McClain. Rather, McClain’s attorney told the jury that all his client did was legal lobbying and legal favors for Madigan in order to maintain access to the powerful state lawmaker. He said doing such things for elected leaders, with no expectations of something in return, is nothing more than doing a favor and does not constitute a bribe.
|
Open thread
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s bond refinancing plan passes after stalling effort by opponents. Tribune…
* Related stories… ∙ Crain’s: City Council approves $1.5 billion bond plan to refinance debt as budget deficit looms ∙ ABC Chicago: Chicago Council delays vote to lower speed limit; $1.5B bond issue to refinance debt approved * CNN | How elderly dementia patients are unwittingly fueling political campaigns: One 82-year-old woman, who wore pajamas with holes in them because she didn’t want to spend money on new ones, didn’t realize she had given Republicans more than $350,000 while living in a 1,000 square-foot Baltimore condo since 2020. By the time a Taiwanese immigrant from California passed away from lung cancer this year at age 80, she had given away more than $180,000 to Trump’s campaign and a litany of other Republican candidates – writing letters to candidates apologizing for not getting donations to them on time because she was going into heart surgery. She had only $250 in her bank account when she died, leaving her family scrambling to cover the cost of her funeral. * WTTW | Over 1,000 Illinois Students Are Signed Up to Receive Plant-Based Lunch, 1 Year After Law Went Into Effect: The milestone comes over one year after an Illinois law went into effect requiring public schools to provide a plant-based lunch for students who have, or whose parents have, requested that option in advance. Chef Rodolfo Cuadros of Bloom Plant Based Kitchen in Wicker Park has two daughters who are signed up to receive plant-based lunch twice a week at their school. The restaurant has teamed up with the campaign More Plants On Plates Illinois to increase awareness of plant-based meals being an option for students. * Shaw Local | State representative candidate Liz Bishop pledges to seek repeal of SAFE-T Act: A La Salle Republican running for Illinois state representative pledged Tuesday to try and overturn the SAFE-T Act and denounced three measures that would, if enacted, cut down on the time inmates would serve in the Illinois Department of Corrections. * WCIA | New Clem ad claims Schweizer campaign is aided by ‘extremists’.: “Schweizer’s campaign is funded with the help of wealthy extremists who think the 2020 election was stolen and who financed the rally that led to the armed insurrection on January 6th,” the ad states. The ad immediately drew push back from House Republican Leadership, who said it was wrong to say Schweizer — who is a veteran — was somehow connected to the events of January 6th. * WMBD | Board urges state commission to cut Ameren rate hike request: The Citizens Utility Board has requested state regulatory judges with the Illinois Commerce Commission cut a rate hike on Tuesday. According to CUB Communications Director Jim Chilsen, a proposed order granted by three ICC administrative law judges granted Ameren 90% of the $334 million the utility company had requested. * WTTW | Understaffing at Illinois Prisons Increases Lockdowns, Impacts Mental Health: Watchdog Report: Prisons in Illinois are currently facing a staffing crisis, according to a new report from the prison watchdog group the John Howard Association. It found understaffing greatly increases the amount of lockdowns and staff overtime and impacts the overall health, safety and well-being of staff and incarcerated people.
* Chicago Reader | Blue Line blues: Blue Line ridership to Forest Park has seen one of the weakest recoveries of any route on any CTA line since the start of the pandemic, according to data from the Regional Transit Authority. As of May, the route saw just 46 percent of its 2019 riders return, compared to 59 percent overall—the weakest recovery agency-wide other than the Yellow Line. * Chalkbeat | Mayor Brandon Johnson appoints seventh Chicago school board member: Mayor Brandon Johnson has picked a seventh member, Rafael Yáñez, to join a new school board he appointed earlier this month after the entire seven-member board stepped down. Yáñez, a hate crimes investigator with the Chicago Police Department according to his LinkedIn profile, and the other new appointees will meet for the first time Thursday to review the board’s October agenda — a meeting that was pushed back a week. The Rev. Mitchell Johnson, former executive director of the Developing Communities Project, is expected to serve as president of the new board, and Mary Gardner, a West Side community organizer, as vice president. * Sun-Times | Gen Z voters around Chicago want solutions, not social media vitriol from presidential candidates: About 8 million Gen Z voters are eligible to vote in their first election this year. Young voters around Chicago say candidates’ TikToks and other social media pages are helpful — but they want to hear concrete solutions for problems facing the next generation. * WBEZ | CPS School Board: The race in the Southwest Side’s District 7: The 7th District serves a large percentage of students learning English as a second language. Ensuring proper services has emerged as a priority for some of the candidates. Two candidates are getting lots of attention from groups on opposite sides of the ideological spectrum. Lopez is endorsed by the Chicago Teachers Union. As of Tuesday, she has received about $25,000 in in-kind support from the CTU and another union-affiliated PAC. * WBEZ | Here’s who endorses each Chicago School Board candidate: Below are endorsements from education-related groups for each Chicago School Board candidate. We also list organizations that do education-related work that are providing meaningful financial support to candidates. Election Day for the city’s first elected board is Nov. 5. * Tribune | Robert Helman, helped diversify Mayer Brown client base, dies at 90: “Bob was always promoting me and other younger partners to clients, and was incredibly generous in doing so — he never hoarded clients, but instead always tried to get us in front of clients, reveling in any success we had,” said U.S. District Judge Thomas M. Durkin, a Mayer Brown partner from 1993 until 2012. Helman, 90, died after an extended illness on Oct. 4 at his home, said his son, Adam. He was a longtime resident of the South Side Kenwood and Hyde Park neighborhoods. * Naperville Sun | DuPage County clerk files suit against county board, auditor over right to control office in ongoing billing dispute: Kaczmarek’s lawsuit, filed in DuPage County Circuit Court through private attorneys, is the latest development in what’s been a longstanding dispute between the clerk and the county board over bill payment procedures and what authority Kaczmarek has over her office’s budget. “This lawsuit repeats the same points of law my office has been raising for over two years,” Kaczmarek said in a news release from her office Monday. “Despite plain and unambiguous language backing us up, the state’s attorney chooses to ignore it.” * Daily Southtown | Landlord tells court she’s been unable to serve eviction papers to Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard: The owner, Genetta Hull, filed eviction papers last month, saying Henyard and Kamal Woods owe more than $3,350 in unpaid rent and late fees for the home in the 14600 block of Harvard Street. During the hearing, where she appeared by Zoom, Hull said the occupants have “been elusive” and that she’s not been able to gain entry to the home to inspect the property. * Daily Southtown | Video shows Harvey dispute that led to two arrests of Ald. Colby Chapman, a Chapman complaint and attempted order of protection: Harston said Chapman filed the police report after the Aug. 14 meeting, claiming she was “pushed and battered” by Davis. But after Harvey police examined surveillance footage and heard from witnesses, officers determined they disagree with how Chapman described what happened, Harston said. said the Cook County state’s attorney’s office decided not to pursue charges against Chapman. Police Chief Cameron Biddings was quoted in the news release criticizing that decision. * Daily Herald | New DuPage program would give county board members $100,000 each for grant awards: DuPage County Board members could soon look for ways to spend $100,000 each to benefit county residents. A proposed “member initiative” program would allow board members to work with nonprofit groups or other government agencies to support programs or services benefiting county residents. Under the proposed program, each of the 18 board members would get $100,000 — or $300,000 for each of the six districts — to spend on capital improvement projects or programs benefiting their district or the entire county. * Daily Herald | New Aurora casino construction going well, mayor says: Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin scrawled A-plusses on a giant report card Tuesday for the progress being made building the new Hollywood Casino Aurora. “This progress is amazing,” Irvin told laborers and their bosses, saying the project is on time and on budget and that the workers are doing high-quality work. * Sun-Times | Cook County commissioners sound alarm on syphilis spike: “This is not just a health care crisis, but a call to action for all of us that the consequences of this disease, particularly when passed from mother to child, are devastating yet entirely preventable,” Cook County Commissioner Monica Gordon said. * Bloomberg | Cracked Skull, Fractured Bones Show Danger for Rivian Factory’s Workers: These are among the injuries suffered by workers at Rivian Automotive Inc., which has only one factory yet has racked up more US safety violations initially deemed “serious” than any other automaker since the start of last year. And there are incidents alleged by workers at the plant in Normal, Illinois, that haven’t made it into government reports. One former employee interviewed by Bloomberg News said she complained to doctors last year of vomiting bile with a “Rivian blue” hue after painting automobiles without a respirator. * Tribune | Kankakee County Board chair steps down after taking job with firm building controversial EV battery plant: The chairman of the Kankakee County Board resigned from his post on Tuesday ahead of a special board meeting to consider his ouster after he recently took a job with the firm behind a controversial electric vehicle battery plant being built in Manteno. Under Andrew Wheeler’s leadership, the board was one of several taxing bodies that agreed to provide millions of dollars in incentives to lure Chinese-owned Gotion’s $2 billion EV battery plant, which was vigorously opposed by far-right Republicans who raised fears of communist infiltration. * PJ Star | $2 million in state funding allows Salvation Army to expand new homeless shelter project: The City of Peoria received a $2 million grant from the state that they will in turn give to the Salvation Army to build a new homeless shelter on the 400 block of SW Jefferson Avenue. The shelter will replace the Labor Temple, which will be torn down. The grant money will allow the Salvation Army to build a two-story shelter instead of a one-story shelter like originally planned. Additionally, the new plan will allow the Salvation Army to keep its existing shelter on Jefferson Street open while construction of the new shelter in underway. * News Channel 20 | Illinois prepares for massive test against No. 1 Oregon’s explosive offense and loud fans: Offensive coordinator Barry Lunney said preparing for the crowd noise “priority number one” for his unit. Eugene will be Illinois’ third road trip to a ranked school. “Everybody from A to Z talks about how loud the environment is, maybe the loudest place in the country,” said Lunney. “I thought we handled (crowd noise really well against Nebraska, but against Penn State) we didn’t handle as well.” * NYT | At This Illinois Museum, the Exhibits Are Larger Than Life: For more than two decades in this no-stoplight town in central Illinois, a 19-foot-tall fiberglass man has stood alongside a stretch of Route 66, holding a giant hot dog. Now, up the block at the American Giants Museum, more giants have joined him. There’s a giant Texaco gas station attendant, a gaptoothed fellow called a Snerd, a waving man in a blue bow tie.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Live coverage
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Oct 23, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times | Nearly 140,000 Illinois residents sent checks for unclaimed property: ‘It is not a scam,’ treasurer says: Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs on Tuesday reminded residents who receive these unclaimed property checks that it is not a scam. “All you have to do is open that envelope and cash that check.”
* ABC Chicago | Man wrongfully imprisoned for over 40 years files lawsuit against CPD, Cook County: lawyer: A man wrongfully imprisoned for over 40 years filed a lawsuit Tuesday against Chicago police, several Cook County prosecutors, Cook County and the city of Chicago, his lawyers said. James Soto was imprisoned for over 42 years for a murder he said he did not commit. […] The suit, which civil rights firm Loevy & Loevy filed, seeks damages from dozens of Chicago police officers, three Cook County assistant state’s attorneys, Cook County and the city of Chicago. * WBEZ | Ahead of Mayor Johnson’s second budget, we take a look at how far he’s come on his fiscal campaign promises: But “how we pay for that” is a question Johnson may be stumped with now as mayor. He must work to close both a $223 million deficit for this year and a $982.4 million gap for 2025, caused by an underperformance of revenue, a disputed CPS pension payment and rising pension and labor costs. Next year’s gap is the second largest the city has faced since 2002, according to a WBEZ analysis of prior budgets. * WBEZ | Chicago’s rental crisis: Is an algorithm rigging the system?: RealPage, a Texas-based real estate technology company, allegedly feeds proprietary rent-pricing data into an algorithm that generates daily rent prices for landlords and property managers across the country. […] In the Chicago metropolitan area, tens of thousands of units were priced with RealPage’s price-setting algorithm, according to the company’s own data and a class-action lawsuit filed in federal court last year. Plaintiffs in that lawsuit allege RealPage has harmed tenants and contributed to steep rent increases in the Chicago area. Among the nation’s 10 largest metropolitan areas, metro Chicago has witnessed the second highest growth in rent prices over the past year, according to data from Zillow, the real-estate marketing company. * Block Club | State Grant Helped Neighborhood Hit Hard By War On Drugs. Now, A Group It Funded Could Close As Money Runs Out: A spokeswoman for Gov. JB Pritzker’s office said the grant was never meant to be the group’s sole source of income. Instead, it was supposed to help the organization grow and become better-positioned to get other funding. But the struggles of the Hermosa Neighborhood Association are part of a broader debate over the effectiveness of the grant program, which was created with the goal of helping communities hit hardest by the war on drugs. * Chicago Mag | The Hotel for the Homeless: When I moved into the neighborhood in 2022, the Diplomat, still in operation at 5230 North Lincoln Avenue, no longer looked like the kind of building that could be on a novelty postcard. Instead, the motel was a muddy gray, its doors painted green with shocks of red trim. The windows along the sidewalk had been plastered over, a slab of nondescript brown that would press itself into your periphery when you walked past it. […] That was before the city announced, in 2023, that it was going to buy the motel. That it was going to turn the Diplomat into a transitional housing facility called the Haven on Lincoln, a chance to try something new that could maybe, just maybe, address this city’s struggles with homelessness. * Crain’s | Here’s how Fritz Kaegi feels about the Mag Mile: Magnificent Mile hotels have recovered all of their lost value from the COVID-19 pandemic and then some, if you ask Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi. That’s probably hard to buy for hoteliers along one of the city’s biggest tourist destinations. At the InterContinental Chicago hotel at 505 N. Michigan Ave., a comeback from the pain of the public health crisis has pushed the 45-story building’s assessed value to $96.2 million, newly released assessment data shows. That’s a whopping 284% higher than the property’s final assessed value last year after the owner of the 792-room inn appealed to the Cook County Board of Review. * Northwestern Medill | Writer Underwriting Writer: After the Chicago Tribune didn’t replace retiring architecture critic Blair Kamin, he funded his own successor: Kamin is paying for the Tribune’s next architecture writer out of his own pocket. Why would he do such a thing? “I’m a realist, and I realize that, given who the Tribune is owned by now and given the realities of the business model of journalism having collapsed, either somebody was going to do something, or nothing would get done,” he said. * News-Sun | Former Lake County clerk challenging incumbent circuit court clerk: Two-term incumbent Erin Cartwright Weinstein, a Democrat, is seeking another four years in office. She is facing Republican challenger Carla Wyckoff, a former Lake County clerk in the Nov. 5 election. During the forum, both agreed that the most important part of being the circuit court clerk is administering the changes to the court system, as they are revised and implemented by the state Supreme Court and the General Assembly. During the forum, Wyckoff criticized Weinstein for a lawsuit that three former circuit court clerk employees filed against Weinstein. The employees, who supported Weinstein’s opponent in the 2016 race, alleged that Weinstein fired them for political reasons. * SJ-R | Massey Commission requests for review of hiring practices, procedures of sheriff’s office: In one of its first acts, the 14-member Massey Commission voted that a formal request be sent to the U.S. Department of Justice, the Illinois Attorney General and the Illinois State Police requesting they conduct “a full review of the hiring practices (and) procedures” of the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office. The commission, formed after the fatal shooting of Sonya Massey in her home in an unincorporated area of Woodside Township by a now-former sheriff’s deputy on July 6, held its first hearing on Monday. * WCIA | Decatur leaders going green after approving compost plan: Decatur City leaders are going green after unanimously voting yes on a new plan to help with food diversion. It’s part of their economic development plan. They’re trying to figure out how the City could make better use of green waste and how to create compost from green waste instead of putting it in the landfill. * SJ-R | ‘Project Capitol’: What we know about the proposed warehouse development in Springfield: The company which will be the end user for the warehouse has not been confirmed yet, but there have been rumors about the mecca of online stores, Amazon, as the end user to the warehouse. Caitlin Tully, the Chicago regional public relations lead at Amazon, could not confirm Amazon would be the end user of the location. “At this time, I cannot comment on our future roadmap,” Tully said. “I cannot talk about the project at all if it is or isn’t Amazon.” * KSDK | ‘They can’t simply live off this wage’: Hundreds of Eaton B-Line workers on strike in Illinois: More than 400 workers are on strike in the Metro East, bringing production at a power management company to a standstill. Union members for Eaton B-Line have been picketing since midnight, all fighting for better pay. Members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Engineers, known as IAM, walked off the job Monday at midnight. They’ve been outside of both Eaton B-Line facilities in Troy and Highland ever since and said they’ll continue all day and all night until they reach an agreement on fair wages. * WGLT | In a Bloomington district, McLean County Board incumbent faces challenge from advocate of limited government: Stevens said he doesn’t see the need to take any steps to reduce the carbon footprint. “I don’t really see any real problem with the carbon we have in the atmosphere right now,” Stevens said, adding he does not believe global warming is a concern. “I think it’s just a hyped-up problem that a lot of people use just to spend money on certain businesses and make profits.” * WCIA | Multiple Central IL counties issue burn bans: Multiple counties and cities in Central Illinois have issued burn warnings and burn bans as of Tuesday afternoon because of a high fire danger. The Danville Fire Department said that the City has issued a ban on all opening burning within city limits. * WCIA | ‘It’s like a family’: Meet the Urbana retirement community taking a bus to every Illini Volleyball game: The group has built up its own “fan club” over the years and always strives to support each woman and coach behind the team. In fact, the Finnertys and Gross agree, they’ve formed their own “family” through Illinois Volleyball. * WaPo | John Grisham poached material for new book, media outlets say: Prolific author John Grisham has written a nonfiction collection about wrongful convictions, and it looks likely to join his oeuvre of legal thriller novels as another bestseller. But the New York Times and ProPublica now say Grisham went too far in his use of their reporting on a murder case in Texas, and they want changes made to the book. * AP | Hospitals’ IV fluid shortage may impact surgeries for weeks: The federal government and medical suppliers have taken several steps to help ease the supply crunch created by Hurricane Helene, which forced Baxter International to close its North Carolina plant late last month. But experts say supplies are still choppy, and improvements will take time.
|
In which I try to defend an expansion of a wildly unpopular policy
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I’m fully aware that lots of folks hate speed and red light cams. This is just one reason why they’re superior to human enforcement…
Everyone has a beef. People with some political power or savvy can often talk their way out of tickets, so they hate automated cams. As the study shows, Black people are slightly more likely to speed in the first place, so they have a reason to gripe. But the number of speeders on expressways and streets is just ridiculous. And it’s not fair to the people who drive by the rules to see these crazies never or rarely held accountable. * The study is here. From the explainer…
With all of the unsolved crimes in the region, expanding speed and red light cams to free up cops to do actual police work would be a good thing. It would also give law enforcement even more data to solve crimes. Getaway car drives too fast or runs a red light? Well, you now have evidence that could tie a suspect to the scene. * The cams are derided for being cash cows, but they do their job without bias, as long as their placement locations are not biased. I mean is it really too much to ask to stay within a reasonable margin of the posted speed limit and not brazenly run red lights? We should have more, not less. And if it brings in more money? Have a debate on what it should be used for, like safer roads or property tax rebates. And as someone who’s been caught by a couple of speed cams, I reject the “Big Brother” notion because there’s one very good way to escape the cams: Don’t violate extremely basic, well-posted and universally understood traffic laws. Also, if you have questions about the methodology or other details, click here for the study link before popping off in comments. Thanks.
|
Energy Storage And Clean Energy!
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the next few years, Illinois can expect increases in demand for electricity not seen in decades. While the state is currently experiencing a clean energy boom, the growth is not enough—which puts families and businesses at risk for higher energy bills and unreliable service. Luckily, there is legislation that would expand the use of a technology that can capture and store clean, cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day -large- and small-scale battery energy storage. Energy storage will help avoid the cost spikes ratepayers may experience due to insufficient energy capacity. The need to accelerate the adoption of energy storage is urgent. Springfield is faced with a choice: support policy that will build out clean, cost-effective energy storage or allow families and businesses to have to rely on dirty, unreliable, and expensive natural gas plants. Meanwhile, Illinoisans agree: recent polling shows 72% of Illinois residents support incentives for energy storage. Paid for by Counterspark.
|
Push-back against Leader McCombie’s abortion comments (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I told subscribers about this earlier today, but I’ve received two responses, so let’s all take a look at House Republican Leader Tony McCombie’s statement…
* Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…
* Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago)…
Discuss. …Adding… Gov. JB Pritzker…
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Final arguments filed in challenge to Illinois’ assault weapons ban
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Background is here if you need it. Center Square…
Click here and here for the final briefs. * From the state’s filing…
|
Opening statements begin in Madigan trial
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Courthouse News…
* AP…
* WTTW…
Yes, he was so very altruistic /s * Tribune…
Madigan made plenty of demands. But he also didn’t need to always make those demands because people could see what had happened to those who didn’t follow the program. Also, he could pull a million strings on you if you stepped out of line. Others would make the demands for him. * Sun-Times…
ComEd and AT&T were not gigantic campaign contributors. What MJM wanted was “jobs” for his people so they had plenty of free time to work and manage campaigns, or perks (like ComEd internships) so that he could entice others into “volunteering.” He saw nothing wrong with squeezing a big corporation. The feds begged to differ. And here we are.
|
Today’s quotable
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Chicago Tribune ran a story this week entitled “Mayor Brandon Johnson faces political headwinds from his progressive base.” The whole thing is definitely worth a read because the mayor comes under some sharp criticism from his left base. But check this out…
Calling lifelong, committed lefties “pseudo-progressives” ain’t gonna get him and his ever-shrinking cadre anywhere. Nobody takes these taunts and threats seriously because the mayor is so fabulously unpopular. * Maybe take a minute to read the room. Plenty of folks want to help. But the people in charge refuse to see that while they’re in bunker mode. And they’ve opened the door for folks like the Illinois Policy Institute and their ilk to step in. And if the other side win a bunch of school board seats, it’s only gonna get worse for the mayor… ![]()
|
Open thread
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson to shut down migrant shelters, combine with existing homeless system in 2025. Tribune…
- Under the new Chicago setup that takes effect in January, the city will have 6,800 total beds for homeless people, whether they are new arrivals or not. - The current homeless shelter system under the city’s Department of Family and Support Services has 3,000 beds, so the city will add 2,100 while the state will fund 1,700 additional beds. * Related stories…
∙ Axios: City cracks down on migrant shelter eligibility ∙ Block Club Chicago: City Shutting Down Migrant Shelter System By End Of The Year Governor Pritzker will be at Maryville Academy at 11 am for a ribbon cutting for new DCFS facility. Click here to watch. * Sun-Times | Illinois House races to watch, where suburban challenges could affect Springfield power balance: State Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, faces a deep-pocketed challenge from Democratic nominee Maria Peterson as he vies for a third term at the helm of this far northwest suburban district that stretches north to Wauconda. * The Grist | The nation’s first commercial carbon sequestration plant is in Illinois. It leaks.: The emerging technology has become a cornerstone of government strategies to slash fossil fuel emissions and meet climate goals. Meanwhile, the Biden administration’s signature climate legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act, has supercharged industry subsidies and tax credits and set off a CCS gold rush. There are now only four carbon sequestration wells operating in the United States — two each in Illinois and Indiana — but many more are on the way. Three proposed pipelines and 22 wells are up for review by state and federal regulators in Illinois, where the geography makes the landscape especially well suited for CCS. Nationwide, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is reviewing 150 different applications. * Sun-Times | Illinois launches push to combat distracted driving: Under the new program, starting in January, teens applying for their instruction permit will have to watch a video that explains the consequences of distracted driving. In addition, the Secretary of State’s Office will partner with the state Department of Transportation to erect signs to remind drivers to pay attention to the road in areas with high rates of distracted-driving crashes. * Crain’s | Johnson’s deputy mayor for education steps aside amid CPS fight: Jen Johnson, deputy mayor for education, youth and human services, is taking an indefinite leave of absence from the Fifth Floor. […] Johnson’s leave of absence is due to health issues, according to a senior aide to the mayor, who is not permitted to speak publicly about personnel decisions. The mayor’s office did not comment on her departure. * Tribune | Chicago Public Schools halts board meetings until December amid board and mayor’s office shake-ups: CPS did not immediately respond to requests for comment about its plans in light of the canceled meeting. The district has not released how the canceled meeting will affect the activities of the newly appointed board. Chicagoans will vote for their district’s elected school board member in just two weeks, which will replace Johnson’s appointed board. The other half of the new 21-member board, plus the board president, will still be appointed by Mayor Johnson. The new board will assume their positions in January. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson urged to fire Chicago cops tied to Oath Keepers after ’sham’ investigation: A leading national civil rights group, more than a dozen local activist organizations and 10 elected officials sent a letter Monday to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson urging him to fire police officers with ties to what they called “hate and extremist groups.” The letter from Color of Change and the others came one year after WBEZ and the Sun-Times identified officers whose names appeared on the membership list of the Oath Keepers, a group involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. * Sun-Times | Lowering city speed limit to 25 mph gets committee OK — but final Council vote slowed down: The ordinance to lower speed limits on all city-owned roads was approved 8-5 by the Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety, with its chairman, 1st Ward Ald. Daniel La Spata, saying the measure “sets us on the pathway to save hundreds of lives in the next decade.” Though the full Council meets Tuesday, the proposal won’t be voted on at that meeting, La Spata said, to allow time for more public conversation. He told reporters after Monday’s meeting that he plans to bring it for a vote before the end of the year. * WGEM | Gov. Pritzker celebrates Illinois’ quantum future at Chicago summit: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) spoke at the summit Monday morning. He has a lot to celebrate as he works to transform the state into a quantum hub. “Here in the Midwest, we believe that quantum science and research are on an accelerating timeline, and as governor, I want to make sure that we are focused on bringing opportunity and history-making innovations to the people of the United States and the world as soon as we can,” he said. * Crain’s | How Chicago got ahead of the curve on quantum computing: “The University of Chicago’s previous president came to see me. I had just become governor, and we’re passing a capital bill to invest in roads and bridges and other big capital investments, including things at universities,” Pritzker told a crowd at the University of Chicago’s annual quantum summit this morning in Hyde Park. “He said: ‘This is an opportunity for Illinois and for Chicago, not just the University of Chicago, to lead. If the state can help us, it will spark more investment from the federal government and private investors. Seeing the state step up will give people faith.’” * NBC Chicago | Chicago reigns as ‘America’s Rattiest City’ for 10th straight year: Chicago’s decade-long stint atop the rankings of America’s Rattiest Cities remains intact according to new research released by Orkin. […] According to the company, Chicago’s “infrastructure and environment” are appealing to rats, along with the prevalence of alleys, which allow rodents plenty of hiding places and plenty of garbage that they can eat. * Crain’s | These are Chicago’s Most Innovative Companies for 2024: * Tribune | Democrats looking for another clean sweep of Cook County races: The down-ballot races for Cook County clerk and Circuit Court clerk could spell big changes to the county’s administrative hinterlands. Each office is known either for its paper pushing, its reputation for political patronage hiring, or some combination of both. In the court clerk race, three candidates are vying to become the next head of the massive office that serves as the records manager for one of the largest court systems in the nation. The winner will succeed outgoing Clerk Iris Martinez, who lost in the Democratic primary in March. * Daily Herald | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin to face at least two challengers in 2025 election: It’s official now: Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin is seeking a third term and will face at least two opponents in the 2025 election. He and Alderman-at-Large John Laesch and 3rd Ward Alderman Ted Mesiacos filed their petitions for the position on Monday morning, the first day candidates could submit them. * WGN | Dolton drama: Judge sides with trustees over Henyard in meeting squabble: Henyard filed a complaint after a majority of trustees moved the meetings to a Dolton Park District building to accommodate large—and sometimes raucous—crowds. […] Henyard asked a judge to invalidate decisions made at the meetings and force them to gather at village hall. The trustees say the judge has sided with them and agreed that their meetings do not violate the Open Meetings Act. * Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk countersues county officials in ongoing bill saga: DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek is suing the DuPage County Board, Auditor Bill White and county board Chair Deborah Conroy in a move to assert her right to control how she runs the clerk’s office. The lawsuit was filed earlier this month in response to a lawsuit filed in September by DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin, who is seeking a judge’s order to compel Kaczmarek to comply with county regulations regarding the payment of bills. * Fox Chicago | Suburban Chicago school district cracks down on reckless drivers with new tech: This school year, one district is gearing up to get more drivers to stop when students are getting on and off buses. Their approach is similar to using a red-light camera, but this time it’s on a school bus. […] This new camera, which sits right next to the school bus stop arm, recorded the violation of the suburban Chicago student who was nearly struck. All buses transporting District 204 students have one this year. * Sun-Times | Benet star Daniel Pauliukonis commits to Southern Illinois: Even while putting up modest numbers last season, Benet’s Daniel Pauliukonis had the look of a blossoming prospect. He emerged over the course of the spring and summer, garnering recruiting attention along the way. Now the ultra-skilled 6-9 Pauliukonis is one of the fast-rising prospects in the senior class — and one of the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s top 10 prospects in the state. * Capitol News Illinois | 17th District looms large in tight battle for U.S. House: The seat is currently held by first-term Democrat Eric Sorensen, of Moline, a former TV weatherman for a local station in Rockford. First elected in 2022, he serves on the House Agriculture Committee and the Science, Space and Technology Committee. He faces Republican Joe McGraw, of Rockford, a retired judge in the 17th Judicial Circuit. A graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the Northern Illinois University College of Law, he spent nearly 20 years as presiding judge in the criminal division of the circuit court. * TSPR | Daughter seeks damages in McDonough County jail beating death: The lawsuit, filed Oct. 16 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois in Rock Island, also claims Darrell Hocker’s constitutional and civil rights were violated when he was housed in a cell with a man known to be violent and mentally ill — a man who had not undergone a mental evaluation before he was removed from isolation. Hocker, 51, died in the early morning hours of Nov. 8, 2023, after an altercation with Timothy Smith, now 41, in a locked cell. Hocker was repeatedly struck in the head, neck and chest during the altercation. * Pantagraph | Rivian to start construction on logistics facilities near Normal plant: The Normal Town Council on Monday approved site plans for the electric vehicle maker’s proposed $200 million development that includes two buildings spanning a total of roughly 2.4 million square feet. In September, the council approved a preliminary subdivision plan called “NN2 WH” for 381 acres the company bought in 2021 across Rivian Motorway from the plant in west Normal. At the time, the plan designated two 90-acre parcels for future development. * The Southern | Congressman discusses CTE Funding Impact Expansion at JALC: Illinois Democrat congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi participated in a roundtable discussion on workforce development Monday morning at John A. Logan College. Krishnamoorthi, a key proponent of CTE, emphasized the significance of visiting communities in person to see firsthand how federal funding impacts them. […] John A. Logan College is growing its Career and Technical Education Center with help from a $4.2 million grant from the Economic Development Administration. * Herald-Whig | ‘We need vocational trades’: Tracy learns about vocational programs in QAVTC tour: alton Tournear made one thing clear to the visitors to his diesel technology class. “You learn more hands-on than you do sitting in a classroom,” Tournear said. State Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy, included in his audience, readily agreed. Tracy toured Quincy Area Vocational Technical Center on Monday, hearing about available programs from students and staff. * Labor Tribune | Illinois AFL-CIO’s Devaney upbeat in Belleville appearance: Unionists at the annual awards banquet of the Southwestern Illinois Central Labor Council were urged to turn out for Democrats in the general election and told about efforts being made on workers’ behalf in the state Capital in a speech by one of Labor’s strongest proponents, Pat Devaney, secretary-treasurer of the Illinois AFL-CIO. Devaney reported that the legislature had approved a $45 billion economic development package, the biggest in the state’s history, with Labor’s support. * WSIL | Marion team wins International Lineman’s Rodeo competition: A Marion, Illinois, team finished first in the International Lineman’s Rodeo over the weekend. Ameren Illinois stated a trio of journeymen linemen, as part of the Marion Operating Center, finished first overall in the 40th International Lineman’s Rodeo in Overland Park, Kansas. They also placed second in a couple of individual competitions. * WaPo | Elon Musk targets Michigan with voter misinformation: Two weeks before the presidential election, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D) accused billionaire Elon Musk of spreading “dangerous disinformation” about voting in her state after Musk, owner of X and Tesla, shared a post suggesting falsely that the state’s voter rolls, swelled by large numbers of inactive voters, were likely to result in widespread fraud. * The Atlantic | The Invasion That Wasn’t: The Haitians had come to Sylacauga by bus. Two buses—possibly even three. But certainly more than one; of this, one resident was sure. As he explained on Facebook, he’d been told by someone who’d spotted them unloading in the Walmart parking lot. The federal government had chartered their transport, locals were saying—an effort to cripple the welfare state of this small Alabama town as punishment for voting red. * Vanity Fair | Inside the Bungled Bird Flu Response, Where Profits Collide With Public Health: When dairy cows in Texas began falling ill with H5N1, alarmed veterinarians expected a fierce response to contain an outbreak with pandemic-sparking potential. Then politics—and, critics say, a key agency’s mandate to protect dairy-industry revenues—intervened.
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Live coverage
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
« NEWER POSTS | PREVIOUS POSTS » |