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Auto Industry is Part of the Solution
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Capitol Fax Blog Advertising Department The following is a paid advertisement Last December, the federal government passed the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. The centerpiece of this historic legislation was an unprecedented forty percent increase in Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards. The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, a trade association of ten car and light truck manufacturers, was instrumental in passing this groundbreaking energy bill. The legislation is a comprehensive and aggressive federal response to the climate change issue. Lawmakers and the environmental community alike have hailed the legislation as “landmark” as it will reduce greenhouse gas emissions from new automobiles 30 percent by 2020 and save 18 billion gallons of gasoline per year. Rather than follow the federal standard some in IL are seeking to adopt California’s standards and create a confusing and inefficient program at the state level. That is why the Alliance, as well as many partners in the agriculture, manufacturing, and labor communities, oppose House Bill 3424. CA LEV not only binds Illinois to excessive state-wide fuel economy standards, but it contradicts the state’s commitment to E85 fuel and technology and relinquishes Illinois’ air quality authority to California.
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Bill Anderson, Richard Piccioli
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * Statehouse lobbyist Bill Anderson passed away Saturday. Bill had one of the strongest wills to live that I’ve ever seen. His doctors told him he was a goner long ago, but he survived and continued living a full life right up to the end. A friend passed this along about the services. I’ll update when I get more info…
Here’s his lobbyist registration photo, which isn’t very good but it’s the only one I have… ![]() * Also, if you’re looking for service information for Richard Piccioli, click here.
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Question of the day
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * In your snarkiest opinion, what is the Allmighty trying to tell Illinois with these events?
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Bill would force “conversion” of private nursing homes, hospitals
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * The SJ-R does a pretty nice job of summing up Rep. Mary Flowers’ bill to establish a single-payer healthcare system in Illinois over ten years…
* The huge tax hike required to implement the program probably dooms the proposal. Buried way at the bottom, though, is this little nugget which, if it stays in the bill, pretty much guarantees a rough road in the House…
* Read the bill. Discuss.
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Poll shows strong support for recall, term limits; Weak opposition to Con-Con
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * My syndicated newspaper column isn’t posted yet over at the SouthtownStar, probably because I was sick on Friday and didn’t get it finished until early Saturday morning. Oops. But, since I also just happen to have a copy we can look at it anyway…
* There was another aspect to that Institute poll…
* Con-Con arguments, both pro and, um, con, were tested…
* And the big finish…
* More on the poll here and here. * Related stories…
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Another false red herring
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * Not long ago, some IL politicians were saying, “If we don’t pass a capital bill right now, all the federal money will go away.” That breathless warning was bunk, but the propaganda keeps on coming. * For instance, the governor had this to say last week…
* Not.
* And that “pass it now or the money will go away” line? Well, it’s still out there…
Durbin told the mayors that whopper despite informing the Pantagraph earlier this month that the claim was false…
* There’s no doubt that Illinois is in great need of a capital bill. Not only is our infrastructure crumbling, but the jobs would be a welcomed cushion against continued economic decline. But do the proponents have to rely on so many untruths to get it passed? * Side note to whomever is publishing the pro capital bill Illinois Works Coalition website: Reprinting newspaper stories in their entirety is a violation of federal copyright laws.
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Morning shorts
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Kevin Fanning * Nicor wants $140-mil. rate hike * Chicago Tonight: Children’s Museum
* Public Affairs with State Rep. John Fritchey * Bill proposed to extend honorary degree eligibility
* 2 yrs. later, is Illinois still ’state of shame’? * Health care job eludes Iraq vet
* Gavel-to-Gavel: This morning, Rezko a ‘free’ man * Rezko freed on $8 million bond, home monitoring * State helps fill local food pantries’ shelves * Want Obama’s Senate seat? Join the crowd * Suburbs try to angle ComEd transmission line * A training exercise or free pool boys? * Brenda Sexton, public libraries team up on book-film series * Tollway tale gets more tangled * Fix the toll collection system — now * Strong aftershock reported in Illinois * Inspections follow shaky morning * Bridges Inspected For Possible Damage * Autism Center waiting for money * Single-Sex Ed Takes Hold in South Carolina * SJ-R: Misguided bid to ‘protect’ marriage * Energy speaker: Don’t underestimate the power of coal
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Note to subscribers
Monday, Apr 21, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller I was ill Friday afternoon, so I wasn’t able to work. Therefore, there is no Capitol Fax today. The General Assembly is not in session, so Capitol Fax will be published Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday this week.
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Saturday Music Blogging - Too Long in the Wasteland
Saturday, Apr 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller * Back in 1990, or maybe it was 1991, a handful of my best friends in the world gathered at Jason Hammond’s place for a taping party. Back then, of course, all of us still had cassette players, but Jason and a few others had some CDs, and the idea was to share what we had with each other, have a few beers and enjoy each other’s company.
It didn’t take more than a few minutes before I was just as enthusiastic as everyone else. Too Long in the Wasteland was one of the best albums, from the best new singer-songwriter that I had heard in years. “Play it again,” I begged after the CD ended. “We played it three times before you got here,” Jason said. “Please, play it again.” So we did. Again, and again, and again, and again. Every song told a story, mostly about working class people caught up in all too common maelstroms of everyday life - meaning lots of disappointments, missed expectations and regret. * McMurtry’s album was produced by John Mellencamp, and the driving beat by Mellencamp’s drummer is best featured on the album’s first song, Painting by Numbers…
You jump when they say jump I don’t think we listened to anything else that night. We just played that CD to death, and my taped copy got a lot of use over the years. * There aren’t many YouTube songs from that first album, but here’s a cover by somebody I don’t know of “Song for a Deckhand’s Daughter,” which my buddy Scott Simpson used to play on Sunday nights at the old Bruce’s Tavern… Shut off the tractor with the field half mowed * I did manage to find this live solo performance by McMurtry of a song from that album, “Talkin’ at the Texaco,” of which Rolling Stone critic Jimmy Guterman wrote: “an offhand charmer so loose-limbed it sounds like it was recorded accidentally”… The preacher drove by in his Cadillac * And here’s another cover, this one of the title song, which I think has one of the best stanzas about drinking ever written… Well, I hadn’t intended Too long in the wasteland * “Terry’s off the Track,” about a kid counting the moments until he gets out of reform school, has some of the starkest imagery on the album. Listen to an excerpt by clicking here… There’s no turning back or questioning why It was the heat of the moment, a flash in the pan Blood on the gravel and a longneck in his hand * Almost all of us at Jason’s party had moved to Springfield from somewhere else, so “I’m not from here,” resonated with us… I just live here Grew up somewhere far away Came here thinking I’d never stay long I’d be going back soon someday * “Crazy Wind,” hit me hard that night… Wasn’t it just yesterday you turned twenty-one Does it still matter what you might have done had you tried? That song helped motivate me to get my life together. I spent the better part of my twenties just knocking around, but I took that refrain as a wakeup call. I realized I had been “too long in the wasteland” myself, and it was time to get moving. * Many of those dear friends who were at that party are long gone. Jason moved to New Mexico. Herb is in Dallas. Others just drifted on. Most of us still get in touch with one another, and I see Herb whenever I go to Texas to visit my brother. But for as long as I live I will always remember that magical night at Jason’s place, completely focused on this new voice of the forgotten and the doomed, with a beat you could dance to. It seems like yesterday. Goin’ East ‘cross the Neches like the one I got off of a long time ago Outside of a little town where I never meant to settle down Not knowing the seeds I would sow
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By the time I got there, my friends were already enthralled with a CD that my friend Herb had by 





