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Budget address open thread

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 11:10 am - Kevin and I will be providing updates on the budget address here. Use it as an open thread until it starts. If you’re not watching on Public TV, you can follow along on the Intertubes at this link.

We’re supposed to have a link soon where you can find budget stuff at noon. Stand by.

*12:10 pm - KEVIN: I have a copy of the Governor’s speech in my hand and will be periodically updating the blog in the next few minutes on the address. Here are the highlights:

* Illinois Works - a $25 billion capital plan. Pension funding reform by refinancing high interest pension debt into low-interest pension obligation bonds , to immediately add $16 billion in assets to the state pension funds and save the state $55 billion over the next 36 years. The speech also says that Illinois Works will be funded primarily through partial concession of the lottery.

* Illinois Child Tax Credit - to qualify a family must: have a dependent under 18, earn at least $3,000 a year through earned income, unemployment, or social security, and have an income of less than $75,000 annually for an individual or $150,000 for joint filers.

* Illinois Business Tax Cut - 20% for businesses that paid corporate income tax in 2007. To be eligible, employers must maintain their employment levels.

* A 3% across-the-board spending reductions in all areas outside of healthcare, education, and public safety.

* 12:28 pm - KEVIN: The Governor just ended his speech and I timed it at around 22 minutes. The speech was considerably shorter than his previous addresses that were timed around 45 minutes to an hour.

* The economic stimulus package will be funded by a one-time revenue source. One option, outlined in the Governor’s press release, is to securitize revenues into up-front payments. 18 states, including CA, NJ, OH, and VA have completed similar securitizations.

One example is tobacco settlement funds. In 1998, Illinois along with 45 other states signed a settlement with four major tobacco companies who agreed to pay hundreds of billions of dollars in damages for the ill effects of smoking. The amount Illinois receives is based, in part, on national tobacco consumption.

* 12:45 pm - KEVIN: Here is the breakdown of the capital bill as outlined in the Governor’s press release:

* $ 14.4 billion for road and bridge programs
* $ 3.8 billion for school construction
* $ 2.7 billion for public transportation
* $ 1.1 billion for higher education
* $ 1.1 billion for environment, energy, and technology
* $ 1.0 billion for economic development, including housing
* $ 600 million for improved and expanded state facilities
* $ 500 million for airports and rail

* 12:51 pm - KEVIN: update on funding Illinois Works. The Governor proposes a “partial concession” of the lottery. The State would then retain 20% ownership and the ability to regulate, which will continue the funding that currently supports education. The partial concession is estimated to raise between $10-12 billion, $7 billion of which will be directly used to fund Illinois Works. This means that the State will not have to issue any debt in order to pay for 65% of the program.

The State would then issue $3.8 billion in bonds to pay for the remaining 35%. Debt service on these bonds will come from $300 million in annual transfers from the Road Fund and “other sources.”

* 1:05 pm - KEVIN: I am looking over the health care proposals in the address, and it practically mirrors what the Governor has previously proposed. These include:

* Illinois Covered Choice and Illinois Covered Assist to allow small businesses and individuals guaranteed private health care.
* Illinois Covered Rebate to help alleviate health insurance premiums.
* Roadmap to Health & Electronic Health Records to introduce new efficiencies into the healthcare system.
* Healthcare Capacity Building to improve overall health status for schools, health care provider sites, and nursing homes.

* This will be supported by a proposed 3% payroll assessment on businesses of a certain size that do not spend at least 4% of their payroll on health care for their employees.

* 1:50 pm -
RICH: Sen. AJ Wilhelmi just said that the governor’s office warned him today that Stateville Correctional Center is on the list of facilities that could be closed in the next year. Wilhelmi is not pleased, to say the least, and this would not be great news for Senate Majority Leader Debby Halvorson’s congressional campaign.

Also, Senate GOP Leader Frank Watson told reporters that despite the governor’s reversal on gaming expansion, he still believes the idea for funding a capital plan is alive. Watson called the governor’s speech, “fluff,” said the state probably could not afford the economic stimulus plans proposed by Blagojevich. Watson was more open about another pension obligation bond scheme, but wouldn’t completely commit.

State Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias called the governor the “anti-Obama” this afternoon, noting how, unlike the presidential candidate, Blagojevich is universally divisive. Giannoulias expressed some doubt about the Lottery lease and other proposals because he had yet to see details.

* 2:00 pm - KEVIN: Speaker Madigan’s Statement Response to the Governor’s Budget Address:

* “Above all else, I believe that there is a strong desire among lawmakers to avoid a repeat of the 2007 budget debacle. The people of our state simply will not tolerate another prolonged, acrimonious encore of last year.”

“… We ca always count on Governor Blagojevich to give a fine speech. However, we have learned from hard-won experience that the devil is always in the details when dealing with his fiscal plans.”

“In addition to the normal appropriations committee hearings at the Capitol, in the near future we expect to initiate a series of regional hearings across Illinois to take state government to the people and give them an opportunity to learn firsthand about the budget and offer their views to lawmakers. We will hear testimony from those representing front-line social service providers, local governments, health care facilities, school districts, universities, labor unions, business groups, and civic organizations.[…] Our objectives are to put a human face on the budget, increase the transparency of the budget process , build broad consensus for a spending plan and promote greater public understanding of the ways that budget decisions made in Springfield have real world effects for communities, families, and individuals throughout Illinois.”

* Note: The regional hearings were also proposed last year after the Governor’s 2007 Address.

* 3:50 pm - The Illinois Federation of Teachers has weighed in on the Governor’s Budget Address, and it ain’t pretty:

” …the funding methods listed in the Fiscal Year 2009 budget proposed proposed by the Governor today do not appear to be sufficient to address the underlying structural deficit under which our state struggles. This budget request also calls for an additional 3 percent cut, which will further harm state agencies already operating with greatly reduced staff and resources.”

[…] “We are also concerned about the continued lack of funding for higher education. Our colleges and universities are constantly forced to raise tuition because the level of state funding has decreased over the years. Under this budget proposal, higher education funding in FY09 would be less than it was in FY03. This downward trend must stop.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Budget updates *** Updated x2 with several details ***

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

How would you fund a multi-billion dollar capital construction bill? Gaming expansion? Asset sales/lease (like the Lottery)? Tax hike? Something else? Explain fully.

  62 Comments      


Levine’s alleged drug use can be issue at trial

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The US Attorney was handed a significant defeat yesterday…

Stuart Levine, the government’s star witness against indicted political fundraiser Tony Rezko, had a serious drug problem, which included using marijuana, cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, Special K and Ecstasy — a fact that can be used as fodder by Rezko’s defense team to question how the drug use affected Levine’s memory, a federal judge has ruled.

U.S. District Court Judge Amy St. Eve ruled this week that Rezko’s attorneys can question Levine on his drug use on evenings prior to key meetings referred to in the government’s case, as well as whether he initially failed to disclose his drug use and the extent of it to the government.

Federal prosecutors had asked to bar Rezko’s attorneys from questioning Levine about the drug use at all, arguing Levine only used the drugs during social activities, and the drugs did not impair his memory.

Special K and X? What, is he a college student?

* Despite the US Attorney’s claim, Rezko’s lawyer pointed to the prosecutor’s own evidence that showed Levine may have used drugs at work

In her ruling, the judge recounted how Levine’s former secretary told prosecutors in 2005 that Levine used cocaine daily in his office.

Two years later, she told Rezko’s lawyers that Levine had often been high when he came to work and locked himself in his office for up to three hours at a time to snort cocaine. The secretary said she often found cocaine residue and drug paraphernalia in his office.

* And the memory loss thing? Well, that was put off for another day

St. Eve said she will rule later on whether she will allow a medical expert hired by the defense to testify at trial on the impact of Levine’s drug use “on his memory, attention span, and his ability to perceive and understand events accurately.”

According to a fact sheet by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Ketamine is a tranquilizer most commonly used on animals that can cause “long-term memory and cognitive difficulties” among other side effects in humans.

* This is important because Rezko’s attorneys claim that Levine made up a bunch of stuff. I’ll have more on that soon.

* The defense didn’t win everything yesterday

The judge declined to let Rezko’s attorneys question Levine about unspecified other “personal social activities” because any potential relevance they may have would be outweighed by “its extreme prejudicial impact” on the jury.

That must be some heavy stuff. Please, no speculation in comments. Thanks.

  18 Comments      


Budget tidbits

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rebecca Rausch talked to the SJ-R about today’s upcoming budget address. Here are a few highlights of the story

She said that could include “sweeping” money from special-purpose funds, which has been done in some past years and she said could be done “pretty painlessly.”

As I told subscribers this morning, if he closes his budget hole by relying on fund sweeps, it’s pure smoke and mirrors. It’s doubtful that legislators will agree to huge sweeps.

* More…

Another recurrent proposal from the governor, but rejected by lawmakers, is a plan to increase the tax certain corporations pay for software programs, which could generate $65 million annually. Closing the “canned software loophole,” Rausch said, is among “things that should be done” for the current fiscal year.

That idea has failed every year he has proposed it.

* And the theme of today’s address?

“The governor’s focus is again on helping working families,” Blagojevich spokeswoman Rebecca Rausch said Tuesday. “We have a keen awareness of the national economic picture and what’s going on nationally, and we think that if you start by helping families, that will improve the economy.”

* The Post-Dispatch has another piece

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration today is expected to propose that the casinos be required to withhold the state’s 3 percent income tax from all gambling winnings of $1,000 or more before paying out those winnings.

The idea is to collect that owed tax while the gambler is still standing there in the casino, instead of trying to collect it at tax time — which is virtually impossible if the person doesn’t file an Illinois state income tax return.

* We’ll live-blog today’s budget address in a different thread. I may be on Public TV just before the speech begins, if you care about that sort of thing. Kevin will be handling the live blogging duties.

* Here are some more budget-related stories….

* Blagojevich Unveils Budget Proposal Wednesday

* Lawmakers await state budget

* Blagojevich a control freak with state budget

* One Version of the Budget Address

* Backlog of maintenance needs building to state facilities across Illinois

* Taxpayers pick up $10,000 tab for DNR chief to commute to work

  7 Comments      


Rednour: I’m for Obama

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday, I noted that John Rednour was a Hillary Clinton-supporting super delegate. Lee Newspapers contacted Rednour and he denied it

In a complicated campaign for president, longtime Du Quoin Mayor John Rednour appears to be part of a case of mistaken identity.

Rednour is a so-called “superdelegate,” one of hundreds of party faithful including elected officials and national committee members who get to vote for a Democratic nominee at the party’s convention.

With the race between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama so close, many have tried keeping track of the commitments of those superdelegates because their decisions could help decide the primary election.

Rednour is often listed as a Clinton backer. But Rednour said Tuesday that he supports Obama. And last March, he gave Obama’s campaign $1,000, according to records.

“Where all this has come from, I don’t know,” Rednour said.

One theory: His son.

* Actually, the confusion stems from the Clinton campaign itself. Here’s a press release from the campaign issued on 11/30/2007…

The Clinton campaign today announced its Illinois Steering Committee, made up of community leaders from across the state who will mobilize grassroots support for Hillary leading up to Illinois’ February 5th primary. […]

John Rednour, Mayor of DuQuoin

I can’t find a correction anywhere on Clinton’s site this morning. But Rednour’s statement to Lee means, of course, that there are exactly zero known Clinton super delegates in Illinois.

  10 Comments      


Quote of the week

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rep. Kevin McCarthy (D-Orland Park), says he has suggested to Gov. Blagojevich that he more fully explain and/or pare down his ambitious plans. For instance, the guv’s state lottery sale idea wasn’t properly marketed to legislators and the public, McCarthy says, and his health insurance plan should have started out as a pilot program…

“I feel like he listens to me, but then when I leave, he listens more to his ‘yes’ men,” McCarthy says. “They tell him to go for the whole Cadillac when he should be buying the Chevy.”

That’s the biggest problem for everyone who thinks they’re having some sort of impact on the governor’s thinking. And I mean everyone.

Blagojevich listens only to himself and to those who agree with him. McCarthy, after all these years, ought to know better. He was a mostly reliable vote for Blagojevich last year. Maybe that will change, but don’t hold your breath.

  5 Comments      


Morning shorts

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Kevin Fanning

* AMEREN wants 10 percent profit

* Major change in count

The number of flood-damaged homes in Pontiac went from 246 to 443 as a result of the new damage assessment conducted Sunday and Monday, Mayor Scott McCoy told the City Council Monday.

In Watseka and Iroquois County, the number rose from 246 to 559, he said.

* Millions for tribute, not a penny for defense

* Pension Problems: Not Causing Just a Bloomington Budget Problem

* States to compete for $30 million for improvements to passenger train service

* Durbin: ‘Expanding Amtrak to Q-C makes sense’

* Post-Vote Battle Over Real Estate Transfer Tax

A forty percent hike in Chicago’s real-estate transfer tax won’t go into effect until April, but there’s already controversy over how the city aims to collect it.

Chicago’s Revenue Department is drafting rules that clarify when home buyers have to pay. For example - one idea’s to pay the whole transfer tax at once, even when buyers purchase homes by installment.

Another’s to have the city keep the tax even when a buyer forfeits a down payment and the deal’s nixed.

5th Ward Alderman Leslie Hairston worries the revenue department is moving too fast.

* Stroger ends bid for hospital funds - Wanted 120K for PR for facility named after his father

Cook County Board President Todd Stroger is laying the groundwork to turn to taxpayers for more money to help in his struggling public relations efforts.

In a proposal to the County Board, Stroger’s hospital chief asks for $120,000 for a five-month contract with a clout-heavy PR firm to spread the good word about the hospital and its services.

It comes as the cash-strapped county is in the final days of a budget battle. But Tuesday, after the Chicago Sun-Times asked about it, Stroger staffers said the request was withdrawn, claiming it was put on today’s meeting agenda by mistake.

* Split GOP in Kendall issues call for unity

* Bill Foster’s “Blue Plate” Special

* Bill Foster the “Mad” Scientist

* Costello, Shimkus vow to restore some Rend Lake funding

* Former labor leader named to state development job

* Court Date for Owner of Horses in Illinois Trailer Accident

* Illinois Offering Horse Rescue Licensing Option

“There have to be checks and balances for rescues,” Ewing said. “With this licensing, Illinois has become a model state for helping horses.”

* NU to build $90-million home for music school

* Regime change in Cuba won’t be boost for Illinois

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Meeks; Black; Guns; Mendoza; Flowers; Smokers; Gaming; Gordon; Gay rights (use all caps in password)

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Starting off on the wrong foot

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

Reporters, legislators and a whole lot of others are pretty upset today because the governor will not hold any budget briefings tonight. Historically, off-the-record briefings are held the evening before a budget address, which allows reporters to get their stories ready (or simply break the embargo altogether) and allow appropriations staffs to prepare analyses for their respective caucuses.

So, no briefing means no analyses tomorrow, and no analyses means seriously grouchy legislators. I’ve talked to several today (in the House and the Senate in both parties) who all had about the same response: “This is not a good way to start off the session.”

Indeed.

…Adding… Aaron Chambers notes

By the time state officials settled on a new state budget last fall, it little resembled the one Blagojevich introduced last spring. The governor’s ambitious plan for universal health care did not pass. Neither did his plan for a gross receipts tax on Illinois businesses (it would have been the largest tax hike in state history). Lawmakers took the budget in another direction. Blagojevich retaliated by cutting more than $400 million of their earmarks and other spending.

When Blagojevich announces his next budget plan on Wednesday, the question will be: How much does his budget plan even matter?

  42 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The setup

Seventeen-year-olds can serve in the military, drive cars and hold down jobs. But until they turn 18, they cannot vote.

That could change in Illinois if state Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, has his way. Lang has proposed a state constitutional amendment to lower the voting age in Illinois to 17. […]

Eleven states already permit 17-year-olds to vote in the primary if they are 18 by the general election. Iowa, Washington and now Illinois have pending proposals to take that a step further and lower the voting age eligibility for all elections. […]

The U.S. Constitution, which lowered the mandatory voting age to 18 in 1971, says only that states must permit citizens age 18 and older to vote.

* The question: Should Illinois lower its voting age? Why or why not? Explain fully.

  54 Comments      


Off and running?

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My syndicated newspaper column takes a look at some curious new developments…

The 2008 general election is almost nine months away, but you don’t have to listen too closely to hear some of the first shots of the 2010 governor’s race being fired.

The column goes on to discuss Paul Vallas poking his head up a while back, Joe Birkett’s press conference on ending the death penalty moratorium and Comptroller Dan Hynes’ editorial board tour, which was ostensibly about all the red ink in the budget…

If you think I’m being too cynical about Hynes’ motives, you should also know that Hynes went to the editorial boards armed with statistics showing that the number of uninsured Illinoisans did not decrease at all between 2003 and 2006, despite the money and effort expended by Blagojevich (Barack Obama’s presidential campaign may not have appreciated that shot, considering Obama’s claim to have insured so many people here, but the point has so far been lost in the shuffle). Hynes even talked about the decreases in higher education spending while at the Sun-Times editorial board meeting. This was obviously more than a budget horrors tour.

It concludes…

President George W. Bush has been so unpopular that candidates started actively and openly campaigning to replace him two years before the 2008 election. People wanted him gone, and that partially explains the record turnout by primary and caucus voters in both parties in several states to date. Blagojevich’s unpopularity rivals that of Bush’s, and the same early campaign scenario looks to be playing out here.

The federal corruption trial of Blagojevich fundraiser and adviser Tony Rezko will most likely only heighten interest and activity, particularly now that we know an FBI mole will testify to seeing one of the governor’s aides take a wad of cash at Rezko’s office. The U.S. Attorney’s office claims Rezko had weekly meetings with the governor’s patronage chief, and the feds have announced that Blagojevich administration “insiders” will testify at Rezko’s trial.

Discuss.

  35 Comments      


Entrance fees for state parks? Plus, could the bond auction fail?

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* An entrance fee for state parks shouldn’t be surprising, since Gov. Blagojevich has never been to a state park…

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s proposed budget could target everyone from people who use state parks to big businesses.

Although the final touches are still being made to the governor’s latest spending proposal, officials acknowledge they’ve considered imposing entrance fees at state parks as a way to balance the budget in tough financial times.

Word’s going around that the new budget could eliminate nearly all General Revenue Funding for the Dept. of Natural Resources. More at Illinoize.

* Also, there’s bad news on the capital bill front

State officials haven’t approved a major capital construction plan since 1999, the first year of former Gov. George Ryan’s administration.

Whether they pull it off this year — amid continuing, maybe growing, acrimony in Springfield — is anybody’s guess. But even if they manage to clear their political obstacles, they may an emerging financial one. As Stateline.org reports, bonding — the type of borrowing the state must do to support a capital plan — is getting more expensive.

And here’s the Stateline story…

The problem isn’t with cities or states issuing the securities but with the insurance carriers that promise to pay interest and principal on municipal bonds in the unlikely event that states or local governments default. In recent years, the insurance carriers also began guaranteeing securities based on car loans, commercial real-estate deals, credit card debt and mortgages, including subprime loans that are now defaulting.

The bad loans are threatening to cause securities ratings firms such as Moody’s Investors Service, Fitch Ratings Ltd. and Standard & Poor’s to drop the credit rating of the insurers, which in turn would drop the credit rating of bonds they insure.

A ratings drop would drive up costs for state and local governments, forcing them to pay higher interest rates to borrow, or could keep investors away in a time of tight credit.

The story has numerous examples of failed bond sales, including this one…

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the region’s airports and runs the World Trade Center, got a rude shock this week when it tried to get buyers for a special type of bond whose rate is set at frequent auctions. They found no takers.

Bottom line: Even if there is an agreement on expanding gaming to pay for a capital bill, there might be a big problem selling the bonds.

* More budget stuff, compiled by Kevin…

* Fiscal feud

* Blagojevich. Budget. Brick wall. Bang head

* Tribune: ‘My fellow deadbeats . . . ‘

* The danger in big promises

* Lawmakers face budget puzzle

* Budget cuts threaten Pilcher programs

* Local officials say politics aren’t in our favor

* Andy McKenna: Talk of change, but not much walk

  33 Comments      


Unintended, but completely predictable consequences

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is not surprising at all

More horses are being sent to Mexico for slaughter since last year’s closure of three U.S. horse-slaughter plants in Illinois and Texas for violating state laws.

The grueling cross-border journeys stretch for hundreds of miles with horses crammed in double-decker trailers. They face deaths there that are sometimes far more gruesome than they would have been in the United States; some horses have been killed by repeatedly being stabbed.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture says more than 45,000 horses went to Mexico for slaughter last year, up from about 11,000 the year before.

“People have no place to go with them,” said Wayne Earven, a former state livestock inspector who was recently selling a horse at a Willcox auction. “To be real honest with you, we haven’t seen the worst of it yet.” […]

But in Mexico, a number of recent media reports and videos show that horses were being stabbed repeatedly to sever the spinal cord.

We can pat ourselves on the back for “saving” horses by banning slaughter in this state at the behest of the “lovely” Bo Derek, but the horses appear to be worse off now than ever before. We’ve essentially exported our problem. Out of sight, out of mind.

  19 Comments      


Needless hand-wringing

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Peoria Journal Star, which has a history of allowing some ugly, rancid coments on its site, writes about anonymous commenters

A male teacher from an area high school stood accused of having a sexual relationship with a teenage female student.

The news story, in its online version at pjstar.com, drew the collective scorn of a group of people that seemed gleefully eager to blast the teacher with comments on the Journal Star Web site. Online editor Jerry Smith watched as anonymous rumor followed anonymous rumor. Invective followed invective. Hate piled atop hate.

Smith pulled the plug.

“I took down all the comments and made it impossible for any new ones to be added,” Smith said. “I’d had enough. It was all way over the top.”

* I was shocked when I read that piece. Why allow even one hate-filled, rumor-mongering comment? One just leads to more when commenters figure the green light is on, and that will likely lead to a flood.

Comment policing can be a pain, but plenty of bloggers seem to accomplish it without too much trouble, and they’re mostly one-person shops. Counting my intern, Kevin, we’ve got two sets of eyeballs trained on comments here, but even we can’t be around all the time. Commenters do a pretty good job of restraining themselves here, but it wasn’t always this way. I moved to a WordPress platform mainly so I could block and filter the goofballs.

Instead of whining about nasty anonymous commenters, just ban them from posting. And crack down on the idiots right away, rather than let things get out of hand.

It’s really not that difficult, and it’s worth it if you want to run a respectable shop.

* The Tribune’s public editor explains why that paper shut down comments on some stories, including political stories…

Earlier this week, the Tribune shut down comment boards on its Web site for all political news stories. It also took down comments on an opinion column about Muslims, and on a story about the Illinois governor and a story about a violent crime in which a child was killed.

Those are the latest on the list of volatile topics — including race, immigration and rape — that bring out anonymous writers who are so nasty, obscene and racist that the boards were beginning to read like a community of foul-mouthed bigots.

One writer started a rumor about an affair between two candidates for local office; others made salacious allegations about candidates and corruption.

Frankly, I thought the Tribune pre-approved comments on political stories, because when I’ve commented about a factual error in the pieces the comments have never appeared.

* Billy Dennis has this observation about what happened after he got tough with the morons

Another effect is that fewer comments are being made here. And my hit counts and page views are down. That’s not making me happy, but I’m hoping the improved quality and trustworthiness of the comments translates into growth over the long haul.

That’s exactly right. Quality over quantity is the way to go. Some will complain about “censorship,” but what they’re really whining about is that somebody finally told them that their idiotic rantings are unacceptable. You don’t want people like them around anyway, because they lower the level of discourse.

For the life of me, I can’t imagine why newspapers like the PJ Star can’t figure this out. Who would advertise on a website that allowed such craziness?

  22 Comments      


On the NIU shootings

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The day after the tragic shootings at NIU, congressional candidate Aaron Schock had this to say…

A state lawmaker says recent shooting sprees that killed people at Northern Illinois University and a Chicago-area shopping center might have had “different outcomes” if Illinois law allowed citizens to carry a concealed firearm.

* Schock told the Tribune even more and was rebutted by a Chicago legislator…

“It wasn’t until the individual at NIU turned the gun on himself that the killing stopped, and perhaps it would have stopped sooner had there been a security guard present or had there been somebody with a concealed weapon.”

[Rep. Ed Acevedo] called that kind of thinking “ridiculous.”

“What’s going to happen when someone pulls out a hairbrush that someone else thinks is a gun?’’ Acevedo asked. “Are we going to turn this state into the Wild West, where everybody gets to carry guns?”

* I just wish all politicians would take a deep breath in situations like this. Rep. Ruth Munson struck the right tone, as far as I’m concerned…

“I just ache for all these parents whose children didn’t come home,” Munson said. “I’m just really thinking about the parents and the victims right now.”

* The reason I didn’t want a discussion on the shootings last week is because when tragedy strikes everybody in the world wants to blame said tragedy on his or her pet peeve, whether it’s gun control, or increasing police response times and technology, violent imagery in the media, or Satanic tattoos, or drugs, or whatever, everyone has something to point to as the “Eureka!” moment, including snarky partisan politics

So to extend Mitchell’s logic, I guess Kazmierczak was an Obama voter.

* For once, I completely agree with Steve Sauerberg…

“Far too often in the wake of tragedies, we see opportunistic politicians attempt to exploit the pain and suffering of others to promote their own agenda. In the aftermath of the tragedy at Northern Illinois University, I urge politicians on both side of the partisan aisle to show restraint. Now is the time that we should unite as a state and as a nation to pray for the victims, and their families and friends, of this terrible event.

“In the months ahead there will be plenty of opportunities for political debates and policy discussions about how tragedies like this can be avoided, the morning after, however, is not the time for politicians to look to score cheap election years points at the expense of the suffering of others.”

And that’s why I’m still not opening comments on this topic.

…Adding… I forgot to mention this story

Illinois lawmakers moved swiftly after last year’s massacre at Virginia Tech to make it harder for anyone with a history of mental illness to buy guns, fortifying what already were some of the nation’s toughest weapons laws.

But the new measure does not take effect until June. And whether it would have prevented last week’s bloodbath at Northern Illinois University is far from clear. […]

The measure, when it takes effect, will require health professionals to inform state authorities about patients who display violent, suicidal or threatening behavior. Right now, such information is reported to state officials only on people who have been institutionalized, not on those who receive only outpatient treatment.

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Rezko angles and super delegates list

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s all in the perspective. Bloomberg leads its Obama/Rezko story this way…

The couple who sold Barack Obama his Chicago home said the Illinois senator’s $1.65 million bid “was the best offer'’ and they didn’t cut their asking price because a campaign donor bought their adjacent land, according to e-mails between Obama’s presidential campaign and the seller. […]

The Obamas submitted three bids: $1.3 million on Jan. 15, 2005; $1.5 million on Jan. 21; and $1.65 million on Jan. 23, according to a copy of the sale contract shown to Bloomberg News. […]

The e-mail between Wondisford and the campaign adviser also says that the sellers had “stipulated that the closing dates for the two properties were to be the same.'’ In January 2006, Rita Rezko sold the Obamas one-sixth of the lot, for $104,500, to expand their yard. She later sold the rest of the land to Michael Sreenan, who said by e-mail yesterday that he bought it in late December 2006 for $575,000.

That seems to clear up a lot. The seller didn’t just take a first bid from Obama, and it was the seller who wanted the closing dates on the same day. Also, note that Rezko sold the land for a profit - He bought it for $625K, sold a slice to Obama for $104.5K and sold the rest to Streenan for $575K. So it doesn’t appear that he paid an exhorbitant amount. One of the criticisms has been that Rezko subsidized the house purchase.

* But this is how the Tribune leads its story…

Before he bought his South Side mansion in 2005, Sen. Barack Obama took his friend and fundraiser Antoin “Tony” Rezko on a tour of the premises to make sure it was a good deal, Obama’s campaign revealed Monday. […]

Obama was able to buy the house for $300,000 less than the listed price while Rezko, in his wife’s name, paid the full $625,000 asking price for an undeveloped side lot.

You get an entirely different and more sensational picture from that article, perhaps because the Trib wasn’t given the e-mails that Bloomberg obtained. Newspapers are jealous that way.

* Meanwhile, some of you have asked me for a list of Illinois superdelegates. Here are the committed delegates. It appears that John Rednour, the Mayor of DuQuoin, is the only Illinois “Super” for Hillary Clinton.

Uncommitted Democratic super delegates are here. Congressmen Dan Lipinski and Rahm Emanuel top that list, which also includes Steve Powell (the UFCW 881 official), Edward Smith (I think that’s the Laborers’ Union chieftain, not the alderman) and Margie Woods (Will County Board).

…Adding… The Bill Foster campaign points out that if their guy wins next month’s special election to replace Denny Hastert, he’ll also be a super delegate. And considering that Obama is doing a TV ad for Foster, his convention intentions seem pretty clear.

  52 Comments      


Morning shorts

Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ald. Burnett discloses he is a is a “registered security agent” for D.J. Mosier Financial Services while advocating more bond business for minorities…

Burnett wanted a guarantee that 50 percent of future pension business would go to minorities. CTA Chairwoman Carole Brown, who works for the Lehman Brothers investment bank, said she couldn’t make such a promise.

* Feds probe city records on alderman’s zoning changes

* Whistleblower suspended 18 days

* Illinois politicians owe thousands in fines

* Bernard Schoenburg: Davlin gets attention with fiery pension rhetoric

* All aboard? Not quite yet

* Legislators urge staffing for juvenile justice agency

* Not many smoking ban complaints filed

* Shifts at the top

* Is there a lesson from Fenway?

Amid concerns, no matter how unlikely, that the Cubs could flee the Friendly Confines, state officials have shown interest in buying the stadium, with language written in the lease that would force the team to play at Wrigley Field for decades to come.

* Alvarez: State needs more reforms, public input before lifting moratorium on death penalty

* Our Opinion: Do not resume executions

* As the national housing crisis spreads, the Peoria area remains stable

In Peoria, home sales dropped by 5 percent in 2007 over the previous year, but that shows stability when compared with a 12.8 percent drop across the nation and a 16.8 percent decline in Illinois.

* Durbin focuses on foreclosure problems on visit to central Illinois

Some frightening numbers were released today regarding local foreclosures. The mortgage meltdown looks worse here than the national average. […]

A report released Monday predicts Peoria and Tazewell County being above the nationwide average for foreclosures

* Day-care danger: Do you leave your kids too close to a child sex offender?

* Everywhere a (digital) sign

* On Halvorson, Republican claims, and Oboyovich

* Special 14th District election voting to start

* Fifth-graders keep tabs on their candidates

* Bill Foster’s new TV ad

  11 Comments      


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