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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

UPDATE: This is interesting news

The Blagojevich administration has expanded a state health insurance program to cover more adults, even though a legislative committee rejected the proposal earlier this week. […]

“JCAR’s role is merely advisory - it does not have the constitutional authority to suspend the regulation,” Abby Ottenhoff said in an e-mail. […]

“The administration may be inviting the legislative branch to sue,” Leitch said.

Ottenhoff would only say that the governor’s office has no plans of its own to challenge the committee’s authority in court.

According to an internal memo obtained Friday by GateHouse News Service, Family Care caseworkers were told to begin signing up Illinoisans who earn as much as 400 percent of the federal poverty level, or $82,600 for a family of four. The income cap had been 185 percent of the poverty level, or $38,203 for a family of four.

* Rep. Fritchey has more at Illinoize.

——————————————–

Another week is in the books. I’m done. Head to Illinoize if you need more…

And now, for your listening enjoyment, Rip Lee Pryor and Devin Miller, with a special appearance by a currently infamous 1963 Cadillac convertible…


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Caption contest!

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

Keep it clean.

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Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

Every now and then, usually when I’m distracted elsewhere, I ask readers to come up with their own ideas for our “Question of the Day” series. That day has arrived yet again.

Question: What QOTD would you suggest? Explain, if you can.

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Sign the thing, already

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday, in an ironic twist, the Southern Illinoisan published a letter to the editor from Christopher A. Koch, the State Superintendent of Education. Koch bitterly complained in the letter that the House had not yet approved a budget implementation bill, which had already passed the Senate…

The price of the House’s unfinished business is hundreds of millions of dollars for local schools - $547,117 for Carbondale Elementary School District 95; $404,485 for Carbondale Community High School District 95; $430,960 for Trico CUSD 176.

By not approving the implementation bill that authorizes the State Board of Education to release these dollars, school districts have to put on hold plans to hire new teachers, reading specialists or tutors, as well as the purchase of new textbooks or laboratory equipment.

This simply isn’t right. I ask you to contact your legislators and urge the House to pass legislation that allows schools to receive the funding they were promised.

Trouble is, the House has, indeed, passed a BIMP bill and the Senate quickly followed suit. The letter had apparenty been sitting in the Southern’s in-box for several weeks and nobody at the editorial page bothered to check if the Superintendent’s complaint was still valild.

Oops.

* But here’s the rub: The governor has not yet signed that BIMP bill, which Superintendent Koch was so impatient to see enacted when he wrote the original letter…

Blagojevich spokeswoman Rebecca Rausch had little to say on the matter Thursday.

“The BIMP is under review,” she wrote in an e-mailed response.

* Over a month ago, Superintendent Koch had this to say

State School Superintendent Christopher Koch wrote to local school chiefs that general state aid payments would decline beginning in November unless Blagojevich and lawmakers agree to raise the foundation level. Through October, the board intends to make general state aid payments at last year’s levels.

“We cannot continue to pay … at (fiscal) 2007 levels past the second payment in October,” Koch wrote.

* And more than two months ago, Gov. Blagojevich was whacking Speaker Madigan for not hurrying up already…

Gov. Rod Blagojevich sent letters to every school district in the state Friday, warning local superintendents that inaction by lawmakers means they’ll lose millions in state money.

In the letter, the governor laid the blame squarely on House Speaker Michael Madigan, a fellow Chicago Democrat he has squabbled with all year. […]

“The Speaker of the House, Michael Madigan, is the only person who can call an implementation bill for a vote,” Blagojevich writes in the letter.

Get on with it, already.

* More budget and session stuff, compiled by Paul…

* Daley: Republican leaders making CTA a scapegoat

* CTA Union bosses threaten strike as ‘doomsday’ looms

* Transit unions fear demise of deal on pensions, health care

* New CTA ‘doomsday’ threat is transit workers strike

* Judge: Can’t punish schools for breaking silence law

* Silence on hold for now

* Chicago Public Radio: Illinois’ moment of silence in legal limbo

* Moment of silence on hold

* Law could be silenced

* Tribune Editorial: A moment to lose

* Editorial: A sensible reflection bill

  12 Comments      


Blagojevich signs on to greenhouse gas agreement

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This isn’t getting a whole lot of play in the big media, but it’s significant

(S)ix of the 12 [Midwestern] governors signed a greenhouse gas accord that would set up a cap-and-trade system to reduce the gases over the coming decades. The governors haven’t agreed yet on how much emissions will be lowered, but several states are developing plans to cut emissions 60% to 80%.

Environmental groups hailed the agreement as significant because it would put the Midwest in a position to capitalize on its strength in renewable energy, such as wind and biofuels, as movement builds to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.

“The Midwest is now breaking the logjam when it comes to changing global-warming policy in this country,” said Howard Learner, director of the Environmental Law and Policy Center.

Congress will take notice that states that rely heavily on coal are ready to reduce emissions, he said

That includes Illinois, where Gov. Rod Blagojevich this week made the “difficult” decision to sign on to the accord, Learner said; the task was tougher for Blagojevich than for most Midwestern governors because Illinois is a coal-mining state with coal-mining jobs and 60 coal-fired power plants.

Those six states were Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Illinois ranks sixth in the nation for the most carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. Indiana, which didn’t sign the agreement but did sign onto other pledges, ranks third.

* Gov. Blagojevich’s statement

“I’m proud to join my fellow Midwestern governors to strengthen our energy security and fight global warming. America’s heartland is ready to lead our nation toward a smarter, cleaner energy future because Illinois and the Midwest can’t – and won’t – wait for federal action,” said Gov. Blagojevich. “We can have economic prosperity, energy security and a healthy environment at the same time – because innovation and investment in next-generation clean technologies will make us more competitive and create jobs, while saving energy and cutting greenhouse gases.”

* This is part of a national move to try to do something about an issue that has Washington, DC paralyzed

The Midwestern governors expressed similar impatience with the slow pace in Washington on global warming and energy issues. They have banded together to set up a regional emissions control program, to expand production of biofuels and to cooperate on environmental and energy infrastructure projects, like an interstate pipeline for moving carbon emissions from power plants to underground storage vaults.

Gov. James E. Doyle of Wisconsin, a Democrat who is chairman of the Midwestern Governors Association, said that the individual states in his region were all moving independently toward greater energy efficiency and planned to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and that it made sense to work in concert.

“In the absence of a federal plan we have to move forward,” Mr. Doyle said, speaking from Milwaukee, where he was the chairman of an energy summit meeting of the Midwestern governors. “On top of that, this recognizes that, federal plan or no federal plan, the Midwest is uniquely positioned to be a major force in the developing new energy world.”

He predicted that sooner or later Washington would adopt a national cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions, but he was not optimistic that it would act before President Bush leaves office.

* Some details

2 percent energy efficiency improvement in natural gas and electricity by 2015 and 2 percent annually thereafter. And the leaders pledge to have at least one commercial advanced coal gasification facility delivering power by 2012, capable of being fitted for carbon capture. Also by that year, they agree to site and permit a pipeline to transport that carbon dioxide for use in enhanced oil and gas recovery.

All the details are here.

Discuss.

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Astounding numbers

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Unreal

The city this year will collect more than a half-billion dollars in property taxes from little-understood but fast-growing tax-increment financing (TIF) districts — six times as much as the controversial tax hike that won narrow approval Wednesday in the City Council.

A report issued Thursday by Cook County Clerk David Orr said the take from Chicago’s TIFs for the tax year for which bills just went out is $500.4 million. That’s $114 million more than last year, a 29% increase, and represents more than a tripling compared with just five years ago.

* Just how big is this pile?

For instance, revenues from just the two largest of Chicago’s more than 100 TIF districts will exceed the $144 million in property taxes Cook County will spend on its network of public hospitals and health clinics.

* And how much has it grown?

After averaging $60 million in annual growth between 2001 and 2005, TIF revenues exploded by $114 million between 2005 and 2006, 57 times the roughly $2 million the entire program took in 20 years ago. The city’s total take since the first TIF was created in 1984? $2,534,701,105.72.

* The Civic Federation has one idea to help deal with this situation…

The federation wants TIF spending to be included in the annual city budget, rather than handled in isolation on a case-by-case basis.

What we have here is an off-budget account controlled almost soley by Mayor Daley. That money could go a long way towards solving a lot of problems, including the CTA and, in Cook County, the public hospital situation. Instead, it’s used for other stuff, like “creating jobs”…

(A)ccording to a recent article in Crain’s Chicago Business, city officials are proposing to fork over a $40 million TIF handout to CME Group Inc., the combine created when the Chicago Mercantile Exchange bought out the Chicago Board of Trade.

As part of the merger, CME plans to fire over 400 employees […]

In this case, the city’s effectively offering CME $100,000 property tax dollars for every job it eliminates.

* TIF districts, which allow municipalities to siphon off all income from property tax growth from schools and other governmental units into tightly controlled accounts, can do a lot of good. But they’ve obviously gotten way out of hand and need to be reined in. With a huge percentage of the city now within TIF districts, taxpayers can expect a whole lot more tax increases in the future and/or reduced services.

* More city tax and budget items…

* Southwest OKs Daley plan to privatize Midway

* Big step toward privatizing Midway

* City to pour on pitch for tap water

* Sun-Times Editorial: City sold on reusable water bottles

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Little Lip’s tangled web *** Updated x1 ***

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Little Lip’s situation just gets more bizarre all the time. Kristen McQueary had an excellent column this week that we unfortunatley overlooked. The piece is about the all too convenient connections between Congressman Dan Lipinaksi and his father, former Congressman Bill Lipinski. Here’s a little background…

Dan and William Lipinski share office space at 5838 Archer Ave. for political purposes. The building serves as William Lipinski’s headquarters for his business, Blue Chip Consulting, and Dan Lipinski’s campaign office… The All-American Eagle Fund, which the elder Lipinski operates, also lists 5838 Archer Ave. as its headquarters along with the 23rd Ward political operation.

* According to McQueary, Bill Lipinski’s All-American Eagle Fund has made payments to both Dan Lipinski’s chief of staff, Jerry Hurckes and Dan’s former communication director, Chris Ganschow.

Little Lip’s response? “I don’t see how that is an issue.”

Strike one.

Why? Because Bill Lipinski, who runs the All-American Eagles Fund, is also a lobbyist…

You’ve got Dan Lipinski, a congressman, promising to bring a Central Avenue underpass to Bedford Park and serving on the House Transportation Committee, while his father, former U.S. Rep. William Lipinski, collected fees from Bedford Park as a paid consultant to lobby specifically for the underpass.

* Dan Lipinksi swears that he and his daddy don’t talk about official business like that project in Bedford Park, even though daddy’s lobbying firm is located in Danny’s campaign office and daddy is paying two of Danny’s advisers from his All-American Eagle Fund, which is supposed to be about helping children, but isn’t doing a lot of that, unless we’re talking about Bill Lipinski’s child.

Strike two.

* Ah, but it gets even better. Dan Lipinski’s campaign fund shows payments to his daddy’s lobbying firm…

“It was for advice I received from Bill Lipinski, just like anyone would pay a political consultant,” [Dan Lipinski] said. […]

The advice was not related to any Blue Chip clients but, rather, some pointers on how, after his election, to put together an office, Dan Lipinski said. He described the advice as “random issues that anyone goes to a political consultant for. I could not go to anyone to get better advice in my current job than to him.”

* OK, so let’s sum up, shall we? Bill Lipinski games the system to get his kid elected to Congress. The son keeps his dad’s cronies on the payroll, and two of them (includng one who remains on the payroll) are getting payments from his father’s childrens’ charity fund, which doesn’t appear to be doing a lot of charitable work except for Dan Lipinski’s benefit. Dan shares an office with his daddy’s lobbying firm and even pays that firm for advice, but he insists he never talked with daddy about a project that the elder Lipinski is working on.

Strike three.

* More congressional stories, compiled by Paul…

* Early departure for Hastert to trigger special election

* Hastert wraps up 20-year House career; more here

* Objection filed vs. ‘mystery’ candidate

*** UPDATE *** Some Oberweis stories…

* Oberweis dumps helicopter for fireplace in new TV spot

* Oberweis: hard line on immigration - GOP candidate backs border fence, rejects amnesty

* Tribbies: Oberweis returns to immigration issue

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Morning shorts

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson

* PeoriaPundit: Motley Fool says GateHouse is one of the ‘worst stocks in the world’

* Poll: Homeless concerns rising nationwide

* IDOT outlines 20-year plan

* Illinois Review: Abstinence program could be next state budget fiasco victim

* Editorial: A little ‘too far’ indeed

Schock showed the kind of swagger reminiscent of President George W. Bush standing beneath a banner reading, “Mission Accomplished,” when he said that “The Chinese will come around, I have no doubt.” Pardon us if we don’t share your confidence, Rep. Schock. We’ll be in the bomb shelter awaiting your all clear.

Two positives came out of this craziness. One, the criticism of Schock’s dangerously naïve foreign policy approach was so strong, that by this week he had acknowledged he was wrong to suggest the sale of nuclear weapons to Taiwan, saying he had gone “too far.” Like to Pluto.

* Confusion over job guarantee for 50 laid off ISAC workers

Walker said the layoffs announced earlier this month are not a result of the loan sale. Rather, he said there are several national factors, including the high cost of borrowing and federal legislation that cut funding.

Still, some lawmakers were skeptical.

“I don’t believe that, no,” said state Rep. Mike Bost, a Murphysboro Republican.

State Rep. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, said initial guarantees of jobs were “misleading,” but that he remembered ISAC officials conceding that they couldn’t guarantee jobs at committee hearings this year.

“For once, I can’t say I’m surprised or shocked or anything,” Rose said.

* Less classroom training to keep prisons staffed

The union representing most of the 11,500 Corrections employees points to the change as proof that state prisons need to hire more workers.

“There’s no debating IDOC’s rationale: The prisons are so desperately short of staff that they cannot afford to take employees off their posts for training,” said Anders Lindall, spokesman for the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees.

* Illinois Review: Democrats stand tall, two Republicans bow to Governor on JCAR

With billions of dollars in unpaid medial bills piling up, it’s hard to think of anything less appropriate than allowing the governor to massively increase state health expenditures without the approval of the General Assembly or the people of Illinois.

Representatives Mulligan and Hassert, members of a Republican Party that claims to stand for limited government, have no excuse. Their vote for the governor’s power grab looks like blatant pork-barrel politics at its worst.

* Bernie Schoenburg: Republican presidential delegates, Sen. Rutherford’s recall effort

* Chicago judge tapped for Justice post

* Poor marks for Chicago schools

In reading, where Daley ordered a huge push after his 1995 school takeover, CPS eighth-grade Hispanics topped Hispanics in every other city tested, and CPS low-income eighth-graders beat their peers in all but one other city.

But CPS white students produced the second-worst reading scores among whites, in both fourth and eighth grade. Their math scores weren’t much better.

CPS blacks scored near the bottom of the heap in most tests.

* Public school scores stagnant on national tests

* Stormfront grows a thriving neo-Nazi community

To the thousands of white supremacists who regularly visit Stormfront and its forum, Kelso is best known by his e-moniker, “Charles A Lindbergh.” He signs off all his posts with a quote from Lindbergh, a well-known racist and anti-Semite: “We can have peace and security only as long as we band together to preserve that most priceless possession, our inheritance of European blood.” […]

In the three years he’s been a senior moderator of the site, it has grown from fewer than 10,000 registered users to, as of mid-June, an astounding 52,566. And while many thousands of that ever-growing total probably haven’t visited in years, independent Web monitors recently ranked Stormfront the 338th largest electronic forum on the Internet, putting it easily into the top 1% of all sites on the World Wide Web.

* Friday Beer Blogging: Elephant Edition

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Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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A message to people who send me e-mails

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

If you’re sending me a press release, please try mightily to avoid sending me pdf and .doc documents. It’s a lot more helpful to me if you’d just paste the darned text into the body of the e-mail so I don’t have to download your “pretty” files. I’m receiving more and more press releases every day in the form of attached files and it’s starting to get frustrating. If you want your release posted somewhere on this blog, then you might want to try to make my life a little easier. Thanks.

PS: Overly long file names get massively messed up on AOL Mail. Keep the file names short, please.

PPS: Attachments that include supporting documents are fine. But keep the press releases in the body of the freaking e-mails.

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This just in, Part 2… Job action at CTA? *** Ban on silence law goes statewide *** New “silence” proposal introduced *** Daley lashes out ***

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped to the top.]

* 1:14 pm - That last thread was getting a bit unwieldy and buried, so here’s a new one with some fresh news. CTA union threatens job actions

“We are about at wits’ end,” said Rick Harris, head of the CTA’s rail union, at a morning press conference in Chicago. “Maybe we have to show you exactly what a doomsday looks like. Maybe that is the signal that needs to be sent.” […]

…the seriousness of the CTA union’s threat of strike-like actions remains unclear. Under state law, transit unions are not allowed to strike, but local AFL-CIO president Dennis Gannon said unspecified “job action” could stifle the system.

And the RTA Chairman has opened the door to a fare hike

“Responsible people have to act now before the end of the year,” said Jim Reilly, head of the Regional Transportation Authority, as he slammed his hands repeatedly on the podium. […]

Reilly said he wasn’t sure using casino money would be politically viable because it would mean downstate residents might end up footing the bill for Chicago area transit. However, he did open the door to a modest fare hike as part of the deal, a concession Republicans see as a bit of sugar to help the tax hikes go down.

* 1:55 pm - The Tribbies reported a little funny last night about the leaders meeting with Mayor Daley…

Meeting with the four legislative leaders and Mayor Richard Daley, Blagojevich hinted that legislative inaction was rooted in endless political sniping. The governor told reporters he opened the meeting by joking with Mayor Daley that “I’ll trade my legislature for his” after Daley’s City Council on Tuesday easily passed a sweeping tax increase package to increase city revenues.

But they didn’t provide the full quote. Here it is…

“We began the meeting by me trying to cut a deal with the mayor: Basically I’ll trade him my legislature for his, because his can vote for all kinds of onerous, terrible tax increases for people, and I’m trying to get mine to save the CTA.”

A bit different, don’t you think? Here’s the relevant audio clip…

[audio:1348.mp3]

* 2:02 pm - Reaction of Sen. Jeff Schoenberg to a federal judge’s blocking of the “moment of silence” law…

“Judge Gettleman has made the right call in questioning whether this unnecessary state mandate is constitutional. For teachers and their students, minutes in the classroom are like precious grains of sand, so we in the General Assembly should instead be concentrating our energies on providing greater investment and innovation into our schools rather than look for new ways to fix the ill-conceived ‘Moment of Silence’ mandate.”

Schoenberg also argued that the ambiguous new law has potential to jeopardize teachers and administrators who could be challenged by individuals or organized political advocacy groups who did not feel that they were sufficiently carrying out the new state classroom requirement, and failed to adequately protect students from overly enthusiastic teachers who might seek to emphasize prayer in their classrooms.

“The expression of faith plays a central role in the lives of many families in our communities and its intrinsic value in shaping our children’s value systems cannot be discounted. These intensely personal experiences should be realized in our homes and in our communities’ fine houses of worship, not in our public schools,” he said.


* 2:04 pm -
Sen. Schoenberg was reacting to this news

A federal judge today ordered the superintendent of the Illinois State Board of Education not to enforce a new state law mandating a moment of silence at the start of the school day, but stopped short of a statewide injunction.

U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman said his move was meant to preserve the status quo while a lawsuit against the law goes forward. The order today prevents the schools superintendent from issuing any directions or orders for the moment of silence to be held, but only Township High School District 214 in the northwest suburbs is under a preliminary injunction barring the moment from being held.

*** 3:18 pm *** Democratic state Rep. John Fritchey and GOP Rep. Roger Eddy have just introduced new legislation that could address many of the problems the federal judge has had with the state’s current moment of silence law.

HB 4180 changes the title of the law from the “Silent Reflection and Student Prayer Act” to the “Student Silent Reflection Act.” It allows, rather than mandates, a teacher to conduct a brief period of silence at the opening of every school day. It removes language about “silent prayer” and leaves it up to individual pupils. Here’s the actual language striking out the old stuff and inserting the new…

The trouble they’re going to run into is it dilutes the original law, before it was even changed this year. The sponsors of the embattled law wanted to make things mandatory and they wanted the word “prayer” to remain in the statute (where it was before).

* 4:05 pm - It looks like they had a smaller meeting instead

Gov. Rod Blagojevich did end up meeting with some top lawmakers about mass transit funding as service cuts and fare increases loom for Chicago-area commuters. […]

Blagojevich spokeswoman Abby Ottenhoff said later in an e-mail that the governor went ahead and met with Republican legislative leaders and Democratic Senate President Emil Jones.

*** 5:05 pm *** Hizzoner is getting a bit testy

Mayor Daley today accused Republican legislative leaders of demanding unwarranted fare hikes and trying to make the CTA the “scapegoat” for their failure to agree on long-term funding for mass transit. […]

Daley said he walked out of a Wednesday transit summit called by Blagojevich — and refused to attend a second meeting that was scheduled for today but was abruptly canceled — because the primary focus was gambling, not transit.

“This is not all about casinos and gambling and poker machines and slot machines. . . . The highest priority is not about . . . who gets a casino or where the casino’s gonna be. The highest priority deals right now [with] people who use public transportation,” Daley said.

Pressed on why he refused to attend today’s follow-up meeting, Daley said, “My role is not to be the governor of the state of Illinois. That’s his role and not my role. . . . That’s their role to figure this out.”

Daley walked out of Wednesday’s summit at the Thompson Center, disgusted that he had been lured to the meeting in what a top mayoral aide later called a “classic bait-and-switch.”

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Live broadcast of Hastert retirement speech at 1:30 today

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

CLICK HERE or the banner below at 1:30 pm Central for a live CBS 2 broadcast of Former House Speaker Denny Hastert’s Farewell Remarks [Coding changed at 1:34, so if it’s not working, refresh the page and try again.]

Background here and here.

* Here’s a news feed I cooked up for the occasion…

* Tribune

Aides to Hastert say the resignation will not be official until later this month, a deadline Hastert wanted to meet in the hopes that a special primary could be held on the same day as this spring’s regular primary.

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Non-issue? Looks that way

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There’s been an attempt recently to try to pivot on Barack Obama’s statements about the Clinton archive records…

Barack Obama, who’s been scolding Hillary Rodham Clinton for not hastening the release of records from her time as first lady, says he can’t step up and produce his own records from his days in the Illinois state Senate. He says he hasn’t got any.

“I don’t have - I don’t maintain - a file of eight years of work in the state Senate because I didn’t have the resources available to maintain those kinds of records,” he said at a recent campaign stop in Iowa. He said he wasn’t sure where any cache of records might have gone, adding, “It could have been thrown out. I haven’t been in the state Senate now for quite some time.”

Obama’s statement that he has no papers from his time in the Illinois statehouse - he left in 2004 - stands in stark contrast to the massive Clinton file stored at the National Archives: an estimated 78 million pages of documents, plus 20 million e-mail messages, packed into 36,000 boxes. While any file from Obama’s time in the state Senate would be far smaller, the idea that no papers exist at all is questioned by one historian.

“Most of those guys do keep this stuff, especially the favorable stuff. They’ve all got egos,” said Taylor Pensoneau, a historian who has written about Illinois legislators and governors and worked with them as a lobbyist for the coal industry. “It goes in scrapbooks or maybe boxes. I don’t think it’s normal practice to say it’s all discarded.”

And

The real issue, Clinton’s campaign said, is the availability of “schedules, memos and other documents” from Obama’s time in the state senate.

On Meet the Press Sunday, Obama said he did not have a scheduler and therefore there are no schedules to be had. A spokesman for the Obama campaign said Obama passed along many of his files to his successor, Kwame Raoul.

* I sent an e-mail to a handful of legislators this morning asking about their record-keeping practices. Here are the responses I’ve received so far…

* Rep. Lou Lang…

I think we all have large file cabinets and diaries that we keep for a while but there is not a special requirement that we keep any particular records in any particular way

* Rep. John Fritchey…

I would venture to say that I keep better files than most, but the only record of my meetings would be on the personal calendar that I keep. I do keep most substantive correspondence going back several years though. I would doubt that at the state legislative level, anybody keeps the type of contact records that they are referring to. There is a big difference between the state house and the White House.

* Sen. Jacqueline Collins…

As it relates to records. No, I don’t keep an account of who I meet with. My secretary may have the information jotted down on a daily schedule but I don’t think she retains that information because of the volume of paper we receive on a daily basis.

* Rep. Sara Feigenholtz…

We have old message books and my Chicago staff puts everything in outlook. I keep a lot of stuff… but after 13 years we have to purge so we don’t hoard.

* I’ll post more as they come in, but it looks to me like this Obama thing is just another national non-issue.

* Rep. Susanna Mendoza…

…I don’t religiously keep a detailed file or anything; it’s more like folders on bills with corresponding notes or info in them. Regarding my scheduling, I definitely don’t keep records of that and don’t really know anyone who does. So many of the meetings we end up having are not even scheduled and end up being with people who drive to Springfield to meet with legislators without a previous appointment. I’d be surprised if anyone keeps detailed records of their schedules and definitely believe Obama when he says that there probably aren’t any files or records of his to look over.

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Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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This just in…

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 9:51 am - From the governor’s office…

The leaders meeting originally scheduled for 10:00 has been cancelled. Speaker Madigan and Mayor Daley declined the invitation. We’ll try to reschedule a meeting with the leaders soon.

Madigan had a prior commitment and offered to send a surrogate. Daley apparently had enough of the crud yesterday.

* 10:00 am - I just noticed this tidbit in today’s Sun-Times…

State Comptroller Dan Hynes’ new Web site that allows people to search campaign contributions made by state contractors logged 171,768 hits in its first 21 days. The site — www.openbook.illinoiscomptroller.com — went live Oct. 2.

Wow.

Also…

A Web site set up by Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn to encourage Gov. Blagojevich to sign a bill aimed at curbing pay-to-play drew several hundred hits in the two weeks it was online.

Not so wow.

* 10:04 am - Yet another round of Hastert’s impending resignation stories has appeared

Former Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) will announce on Thursday that he is retiring from Congress soon, although the exact date of his departure is still unclear, according to House insiders.

Hastert is expected to tell the House Republican Conference of his decision on Thursday afternoon, and then make his final floor speech sometime after that.

More

Sources told Fox News the former House speaker’s resignation is expected to become effective in December or January, although no date had been set for a formal announcement. Hastert had said in August he planned to leave Congress but at that time didn’t disclose whether it would be before the end of his term.

* 10:54 am - Those Hastert rumors may be true. From an e-mail sent by Hastert’s chief of staff…

Hey everyone. Tomorrow, Thursday, November 15, Speaker Hastert will
deliver his farewell address on the House Floor. Many people have called me to express interest in seeing him do this from the House gallery. We have secured space for people who are interested.

So…. If you want to do this, please let me know.

Speaker Pelosi’s office is telling us that it will happen at approximately 2:30pm; however, I suggest you be in the gallery by 2:10, which means you need to pick up your gallery ticket in H-164, The Capitol by 2:00pm at the latest (1:45pm would be preferable). As you know, timing is never perfect around this place.

Thanks everyone, and PLEASE, email the many others in this town I have
probably left off this email that you think would want to do this.

Thank you.

Sam Lancaster

Chief of Staff
Former Speaker J. Dennis Hastert

* 12:01 pm - From the Union League Club…

Seven of the eight declared candidates for the office of Cook County State’s Attorney will appear in a Candidate’s Forum at the Union League Club of Chicago , 65 West Jackson Blvd., 5th floor parlor, tomorrow, Friday, November 16 at 10 a.m.

  25 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

I haven’t been able to get this song out of my head all week…


I was a big Thin Lizzy fan when I was 15 or so, and went to see them open for Styx in concert around the same time. Yeah, that dates me, I know. Still, I can’t for the life of me figure out why this song keeps dancing in my brain. It’s not even my favorite Thin Lizzy tune.

Anyway, somebody told me once that if you share a song that’s been playing in your head you can get rid of it. Consider it shared.

Question: Have any songs been pestering your mind lately? Share.

  51 Comments      


The wake of the flood

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The post-meeting spinning was apparently fast and furious in Chicago yesterday. Mayor Daley left the meeting with the four leaders and the governor saying nothing but positive things. But his people told a different story to reporters later in the day. Here’s the Sun-Times’ take..

But City Hall sources said Daley departed angry and frustrated because he kept being stymied in his efforts to discuss bailing out the CTA well ahead of the agency’s latest deadline for fare increases and service cuts: Jan. 20.

The mayor walked out after a little more than an hour.

“It felt like a classic bait-and- switch,” one City Hall source said. Daley “was led there to believe they were talking about the CTA when the aim was to talk about gaming.”

* Tribune

A frustrated Daley offered little after exiting the governor’s Chicago office, but his spokeswoman later said Daley left the bi-partisan meeting when the discussion turned to gambling expansion rather than fixing the mass transit crunch, with service cuts looming Jan. 20.

“Clearly the mayor understands that gaming is likely a part of the overall solution to the transit issue, but everybody knows it would take at least two years for that to happen,” Daley spokeswoman Jacquelyn Heard said. The mayor “kept trying to bring the conversation around to that this morning, but to no avail … I think he felt he said all he needed to say, and there apparently was little interest in talking about the immediate crisis.”

* And then there was this little problem

The powerful house speaker stormed out of the meeting after a heated exchange with state Senator Rickey Hendon about how to guarantee that minority investors and communities benefit from an expansion of gambling in Illinois, which was also part of the discussion.

“There was just a lot of nonproductive shouting, threats and allegations,” Madigan said.

“I didn’t raise my voice. You guys know me. I talk loud just naturally. I come from the West Side. You have to talk loud to be heard. That’s all,” said State Senator Rickey Hendon, (D) Chicago.

The meeting was supposed to be for the principals and their top staff, but Jones brought Hendon with him and, well, Hendon is Hendon.

* As I told you yesterday, the governor couldn’t help but jump into the fray

Speaker Madigan is the only one who doesn’t agree that African Americans ought to participate in the ownership of the [casino licenses],” Blagojevich said.

Madigan denied that through his spokesman, Steve Brown.

Madigan, Brown said, backs a proposal by the House black caucus that minority and women casino owners would be selected through lotteries. Those lotteries, Madigan says, would help prevent problems that plagued the failed Emerald Casino project in Rosemont. When asked whether he perceived Blagojevich as trying to accuse Madigan of being racist, Brown said, “He’s trying to, but it doesn’t wash.”

Abby Ottenhoff, the governor’s spokeswoman, said the governor simply was trying to explain what took place between Madigan and Hendon.

* This is a bit misleading

Meanwhile, Cross and his Republican counterpart in the Senate, Minority Leader Frank Watson of Greenville, said transit riders should pay a modest fare increase as part of a funding solution. Democrats oppose a fare hike.

Listen to the raw audio and you’ll hear Senate President Jones dodge questions about whether he could support a fare hike.

* And this, from the same article, is a drastic understatement….

Cross continued to push an alternative idea to tap a share of state gasoline sales tax revenue for mass transit, but that would require filling a hole in the state budget. There are differences of opinion on how to offset that deficit.

There are not only “differences of opinion,” there is no real plan yet.

* And Jones gets the most overly optimistic quote of the day award

Democratic Senate President Emil Jones was optimistic the governor and legislative leaders were close to a deal to bail out mass transit agencies and pay for construction projects around the state.

“I believe we can wrap this up in the next day or two, really, because the issues that are separating us are very, very minute,” he said.

* Mark Brown points to a particularly big failure by the governor yesterday…

The addition of Mayor Daley to the group was supposed to be a positive sign because it would bring all the major decision makers directly into the discussion of how to solve the public transit funding riddle — the ulterior reason for the meeting being to isolate Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan in his running dispute with Gov. Blagojevich.

But the big summit meeting apparently devolved into the same sort of failure to communicate that makes me think we’re going to need to bring in “Dr. Phil” to sort out all the ill feelings before there’s going to be any deal to fund the Chicago Transit Authority. And Daley continued to back Madigan’s play, anyway.

Splitting Daley from Madigan is not gonna be nearly as easy as Blagojevich has hoped.

* More session stuff, compiled by Paul…

* Lawmakers summit ends with angry words, no progress

* Officials discuss transit funding; still no deal

* Chicago Public Radio: Transit meeting breaks down with shouting

* Foes of casino expansion fade in Illinois

* Bethany Jaeger: Time for Plan C

  44 Comments      


Judge blocks moment of silence law

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I had this on the blog yesterday, but the news came in so late that many of you may not have seen it or had a chance to comment…

A federal court judge Wednesday found that a new state law ordering a moment of silence for prayer or reflection at the start of the school day was “likely unconstitutional.”

U.S. District Court Judge Robert Gettleman blocked a northwest suburban school district from following the mandate, and he could extend the ban to schools statewide today. In his preliminary ruling, Gettleman found that the law was vague and questioned how teachers and school officials were supposed to follow it and how it was to be enforced.

* More

Gettleman said the Silent Reflection and Student Prayer Act isn’t specific enough about what is a “moment” and when it should take place. It also may cross the line into unconstitutionality by giving students a choice to pray, the judge said.

The statute states that students shall be given an opportunity for silent prayer or reflection on the anticipated activities of the day.

That would in essence tell a child “you’ve got to think about praying,” the judge said.

Gettleman said he also is concerned about whether a child could or would do something physical in an act of prayer, such as take out a Bible or a Muslim prayer book.

There are only two choices given by the statute, he said. “One is an endorsement of prayer,” he said. “If that’s the way it’s being interpreted, then I think we have a problem.”

* What will the attorney general do? Uknown at this point, but she has already kinda sorta intervened

The attorney general’s office had been asked at an initial court hearing two weeks ago whether it intended to defend the law, and it had no specific answer then, either.

“The Attorney General has declined to intervene … from what I can tell,” Gettleman said Wednesday.

He encouraged the office’s representative, Thomas Ioppolo, to come back to court today at 11 a.m. with a more definitive answer.

Lisa Madigan’s office said it never intended not to defend the law, but was simply deciding which legal avenue was best to pursue. Because the statute so vastly deviated from normal legislation in that it did not name any party responsible for enforcing the law, there is technically no constitutional officer responsible for it. The office must now determine if it wants to file a motion to intervene or pursue some other avenue of defense. […]

[Madigan’s chief of staff, Ann Spillane] said Ioppolo had written a 15-page brief defending the constitutionality of the law and had argued as much in court Wednesday.

In fact, Gettleman said, for someone who hadn’t officially intervened on behalf of the law yet, Ioppolo’s brief was so persuasive that it forced Sherman’s lawyers to concede to much of his arguments.

* Meanwhile, Eric Zorn wants the General Assembly to step in and rewrite the law

The state can either fight for this unnecessary and intrusive law by waging an expensive court battle, or members of the General Assembly can attempt to re-write and pass a similar law that overcomes the Constitutional objections.

Best advice: Drop it.

Thoughts?

  23 Comments      


Rough waters ahead?

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Buried way down in this well-done article is some disturbing news

Meanwhile, the administration is spending its Medicaid dollars at a fever pace. Lawmakers appropriated $6.9 billion for Medicaid spending through June 30, the end of this fiscal year, said Carol Knowles, spokeswoman for state Comptroller Dan Hynes. But by Nov. 8 — roughly one-third of the way through the fiscal year — the state’s health-care agency had spent 45 percent of that money, she said.

“It has been common for that agency to run out of appropriation authority sometime in the spring,” she said. “But at the pace that the agency is going, it likely will run out earlier than ever before.”

Steve Brown, spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, said lawmakers may need to approve additional spending in the spring, but it’s not clear where the state might find the money. […]

“I don’t know where he finds the money for a supplemental appropriation,” Brown said.

Rep. Dave Winters, R-Shirland, predicts the administration will slow its payment cycle to stretch its dollars.

* Add this Medicaid overspending stuff to the previous reports of a potential revenue shortfall this fiscal year, and we could be heading for some serious rough waters next spring…

With the ink barely dry on a new state budget, two recently released financial reports already are raising concerns about whether state revenues will keep pace with spending.

Both the bipartisan Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability and Comptroller Dan Hynes issued reports warning that income from some state revenues — particularly the sales tax — could be lower than expected. […]

COGFA does economic forecasting for the General Assembly. It found that for the first three months of the state’s new budget year — July, August and September — sales tax receipts are down by $55 million from a year ago, a 3 percent drop. Corporate income taxes also dropped by $18 million during the period, a 4 percent decrease.

A bright spot was that personal income taxes increased by $120 million. But officials are worried about the drop in sales taxes, which provide more than 25 percent of the state’s revenue. […]

Worse, COGFA doesn’t think things will turn around. The report says both the sales tax and corporate income tax “may well find growth elusive over the remainder of the fiscal year.”

The budget was pretty flush this year and we still saw terrible problems getting things done. Imagine the nastiness if cutbacks have to be made. Not pretty.

  15 Comments      


Morning shorts

Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson

* NEW Russ Stewart: Shills, proxies set to do battle in primary

* NEW Press Release: New Study Finds African Americans, Low-Income Voters, Students and Seniors Least Likely to Have Valid Voter ID at Issue Before Supreme Court

* Chicago Public Radio: Strike threat looms for local news radio

* GOP opponents face off in Peoria

Absent from Wednesday’s debate was any discussion on Schock’s earlier proposal to sell nuclear arms to Taiwan as a way to get China to go along with U.S. policy toward Iran. Schock retracted that statement on Tuesday.

* 18th District Republican candidates participate in forum

* Clout Corner: Co defendants out alleged Troutman target

* Eight aldermen split on Daley plan, tax hike

* Tribune Editorial: More bleats from the sheep

After the last municipal election, many of the aldermen privately boasted that they intended to be the big, bad wolves of City Hall. No longer would the mayor’s every whim go unchallenged. Evidently, though, much of that was empty bravado […]

Maybe the museum folks will step away from their fixation on Grant Park. Maybe the mayor will offer them any of several alternate sites in wards longing for new development and not so burdened with traffic congestion.

Or maybe the Chicago City Sheep will beg Daley to tell them his wishes — and anxiously bleat their approval.

* Dick Simpson: Chicagoans have a lot to say No about

Joe Chicago, Mary Chicagoland and Aunt Molly need us now to amplify their voices to Bush, Daley, Stroger and all the powerbrokers. The people are possessed of more common sense and idealism than many of their leaders.

Chicagoans are saying no. No more Iraq war. No scapegoating immigrants. No corruption taxes. Chicagoans have always been willing to work and willing to sacrifice. We are willing to have a higher, fairer state income tax. But we won’t support bad wars, bad policies and unfair taxes.

Unfortunately, too often we elect bad politicians who don’t listen to the little people anymore.

* 47 days until new tobacco laws go into effect

* Perjury gets HDO official 15 months

* Hispanic political organizer gets 15 months for perjury

* Chicago Public Radio: City worker sentences for corruption convictions

* The Watchdogs: 22 convictions? Not a problem

At the time, three years ago, City Hall had an unwritten policy against hiring ex-cons. But Felske had clout: He was helping register voters for the Hispanic Democratic Organization, then a powerful patronage army delivering votes for Mayor Daley.

* School chief relents, teen protesters can come back

“I don’t regret the protest because I brought a lot of people to this question — about Iraq and what it’s doing to our country,” senior Joshua Rodriguez said.

He and other suspended students and parents protested the possible expulsions, along with the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and other activists, garnering national attention.

Rodriguez and others insisted their protest — both against the Iraq war and military recruiters at their school — was peaceful.

  2 Comments      


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Thursday, Nov 15, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller

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