* 10:46 am - Mayor Daley just said during his budget address that if “Springfield” doesn’t pass the property tax assessment cap, it would be “difficult” to raise property taxes in Chicago. In other words, taxpayers are gonna get hit either way. Listen live at this link.
* 10:52 am - Governor ready to compromise on his formerly hardlie “Plan B” position?
Through a proposed new option, pharmacies would be allowed to work by phone or fax with an off-site pharmacist — one without moral objections to emergency contraception — to process a patient’s prescription. The settlement says a pharmacy technician or store manager would be allowed to sell the patient the medicine so she wouldn’t have to go elsewhere.
Pharmacies still would be required to fill prescriptions for emergency contraception, commonly sold under the name Plan B, if the medicine is in stock.
But the settlement, filed this week in Springfield’s U.S. District Court, would give pharmacies another way to avoid fines or the loss of operating licenses even if they employ pharmacists who believe that Plan B is a form of abortion and would refuse to dispense the drug.
* 10:56 am - The Tribune has a brief bit on Mayor Daley’s budget address…
Daley said his budget avoids substantial layoffs or services. But, having exhausted other options, Daley said, “We must ask taxpayers for more.”
The mayor blamed state lawmakers for failing to enact funding reforms for education and mass transit, which he said further pressures city taxpayers. He also called on lawmakers to approve an extension of a property tax break for homeowners.
“For their inaction, Chicagoans pay the price,” Daley said.
* 12:01 pm - The Senate is scheduled to convene at noon. Listen here. The House will attempt to convene at one o’clock. Listen here.
* 12:03 pm - From Crain’s, which promises to update this story later…
Blaming bad economic times and Springfield infighting, Mayor Richard M. Daley on Wednesday rolled out more than a quarter of a billion dollars in proposed tax hikes and fee increases to balance his 2008 operations budget.
Leading the list is a requested $108-million increase in the city’s property tax levy — an item that is already stirring stiff opposition among aldermen and may require all of Mayor Daley’s legendary political muscle to pass.
* 12:21 pm - New Lenox Mayor Tim Baldermann is definitely in the race to replace Congressman Jerry Weller. Both men are Republicans and Weller is with Baldermann. The Herald News has his campaign co-chair list..
Jack Partelow, chairman of the Will County Republican Party; Don Green, the mayor of Kankakee; Keith Cain, the mayor of Princeton; and Tom Templeton, the LaSalle County sheriff.
*** 12:52 pm *** Tim Baldermann is already on the attack. From his campaign kickoff press release…
“Debbie Halvorson has been the number two leader in the state Senate for the past four years and if anyone has followed the news to any degree at all, they know our state government is as badly managed as is conceivable,” said Baldermann. “Our federal government has problems, but the last thing we need is to have the proven dysfunction of Springfield infect Washington.”
Among Baldermann’s biggest contributors were the campaign committees of William Beavers, a Democratic Cook County board member…
*** 1:38 pm *** The master of understatement strikes again. The guv wants lawmakers to uphold his veto of a bill that would allow trucks to drive 65 mph on the interstates…
Blagojevich says lawmakers who vote to overturn his veto will effectively be voting to kill people.
* This line was buried way down deep in today’s Sun-Times story on Mayor Daley’s new budget proposal, but it should have been the lede…
Chicago taxpayers almost always take it on the chin in the city budget that follows a mayoral election.
* Details…
Mayor Daley is expected today to unveil a 2008 city budget balanced with nearly $200 million in higher taxes and fees. They include a $40.8 million water and sewer rate increase and the largest property tax increase in Chicago history to build and maintain libraries. […]
Chicagoans will pay more for everything from gasoline, liquor, parking, restaurant meals and telephone service to bottled and tap water, city stickers and Taste of Chicago tickets. The mayor even wants us to pay more for renting movies and leasing vehicles.
* As we’ve discussed before, the race is on between the city, the county, mass transit and the state to see who can raise taxes first. Daley’s hand will be played today.
Cook County Board President Todd Stroger’s tax hike route was apparently detoured again…
This week, it’s a backlash by frustrated commissioners who said they were working with Stroger to find an acceptable tax plan when they learned from the Sun-Times that Stroger had hired the girlfriend of his ally, Commissioner William Beavers — and then reversed himself when the paper began questioning it.
“At this point, we’re in a total war,” said Commissioner Larry Suffredin, calling the hiring of Patty Young “a real slap in the face” that makes some commissioners “unsure [Stroger] deserves any more revenues.”
Stroger’s plan to raise the sales tax was on life support a week ago and, on Tuesday, Suffredin delivered what could be the death knell.
* Daley, meanwhile, is planning yet another trip abroad when he ought to be here helping negotiate a deal with the state, county, etc…
Sneed hears Daley is heading to China and Korea at the end of the month.
So, no leadership from Daley, bolloxed leadership from Stroger and we all know what’s happening with the Statehouse crew. It’s a perfect storm of incompetence.
Among the options aired before a legislative panel in Chicago were proposals to levy a tax on commercial parking spaces […]
The alternative tax proposals, however, elicited no apparent support from lawmakers or civic groups at the hearing. No sooner was the parking-space tax proposal raised than it drew withering fire from civic groups and organizations representing retail merchants and manufacturers, who labeled it a levy on jobs and an extension of the property tax.
Skeptical lawmakers also raised numerous questions, such as who should pay the tax — owners or users of property — and how it would be collected. The questions remained unanswered, largely because such a tax has never been enacted elsewhere, officials said.
Needless to say, it’s way past time that the governor propose a solid alternative to the agreement worked out by mass transit unions, officials and legisltors. So far, all he’s officially offered up are veto threats. His failure to lead speaks volumes and his goofy parking tax proposal shows that he’s not serious about getting into this game.
Transit officials postponed “Doomsday One” fare hikes, service cuts and layoffs last month, when Gov. Blagojevich let them borrow against next year’s state aid. Top transit executives now say that only worsened their financial crisis, increasing the odds that the cuts will take place next month.
The region’s top transit executive delivered a harsh message that a short-term bailout is not an option, meaning service cuts and fare increases may become a reality soon.
“We will not accept a short-term fix again,” said Regional Transit Authority Executive Director Steve Schlickman.
Ridership on Pace buses significantly increased in Naperville after a summer ad campaign, but now looming service cuts have officials fearing the effort may have been in vain.
“Naperville would be hit real hard” unless the transit agency gets additional money from the Regional Transportation Authority, said Patrick Wilmot, a Pace spokesman.
Service could be cut as of Nov. 4, with an estimated 700 or more commuters left without a bus to ride, officials fear. […]
There is a two-year waiting list for a parking permit at the Illinois Highway 59 Metra station, a five-year waiting list for a permit at the Kroehler lot near downtown Naperville and an eight-year waiting list for a permit to park at the downtown station.
Those numbers played a role in Naperville launching its $35,000 ad campaign to persuade more people to ride the bus.
A leading suburban Republican, though, suggested that budgetary doomsday might actually be good for the CTA.
“We should see what doomsday looks like. And I’m not sure that the populace in general is totally convinced that our transit system is as efficient as it could be,” State Sen. Christine Radogno (R-Lemont) said.
Radogno does make a good point, which is too often missed by people who prefer to complain about the lack of “state funding” for mass transit. The negotiated agreement on the transit bailout is a pretty good bill, and it’s probably the best we’re gonna see, but Radogno is right that it doesn’t do enough to force the transit systems to prioritize their spending and improve service.
* I wrote about this development in this morning’s Capitol Fax, but now I see that the Tribune blog also covered it, so here it is…
It’s not usually a good sign when the words “disturbing” and “unemployment” are linked together in a report about Illinois, but there they are in a legislative commission’s review of the state’s economy.
“Particularly disturbing is the sharp deterioration in Illinois’ unemployment situation in recent months,” according to the state’s bipartisan Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability. “After recording a lower unemployment rate than that of the nation during the second half of 2006, Illinois’ unemployment rate has jumped up and now well exceeds the national rate.”
Citing a U.S. Department of Labor report released last month, the commission notes nine states registered “significant” unemployment rate increases from a year earlier. The largest of these occurred in Illinois, where unemployment rose from 4.4 percent in August 2006 to 5.4 percent last August. The national rate stayed basically the same, dropping from 4.7 percent to 4.6 percent during the same time frame.
The report says if the employment trends in Illinois continue, that’s not a good sign for the state’s treasury. At least that’s the drift from the commission’s viewpoint; or in economist speak, the state’s sales and income tax revenues will be “undoubtedly negatively” affected.
* Meanwhile, we linked to Bernie’s Sunday column yesterday, but it deserves another visit in light of the above report. It’s a bit confusing, but Bernie appears to be saying that the Blagojevich administration is vastly overinflating both the number of jobs that the capital projects bill will create and the quality of those jobs. Here are a few excerpts, with all emphasis added…
(E)conomists who use multipliers for job estimates say it’s better to talk about supporting jobs, not creating them, because some people who will work on those projects already have jobs. And job totals can’t be limited to a single state, because materials bought for projects can come from other states or countries. The governor also talked about “good-paying” jobs, but economists said low-wage spin-off jobs are included in their estimates. […]
On Chicago radio station WBBM-AM’s “At Issue” show Sept. 30, Blagojevich described the proposal as a “public works program that will create 700,000 good-paying jobs. …” Later in the show, taking a shot at House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, Blagojevich said, “I can’t imagine why he would oppose a publicly owned Chicago casino that would do all of these things, like build schools and create 700,000 jobs.”
Even I don’t think the governor meant to say one casino would do all that. But he was saying the casino expansion plan would do that, and he shouldn’t be using the term “create.”
The casino plan projects road spending of $15.625 billion, and the multiplier of that gets to 625,000 jobs.
Expect the Blagojevich administration to spin the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability’s jobs report to his advantage. He’ll be right that Illinois certainly needs the employment (the actual number of jobs created in the past year has not grown at all), but if the recent and distant past are any guides, he’ll likely greatly overdo the rhetoric.
A Republican state senator Tuesday accused Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich of holding up health-care projects in Illinois because he hasn’t appointed members to an oversight board.
Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington, said the Health Facilities Planning Board has been unable to meet because two seats are vacant and one member has been ill. The result is that dozens of potential medical construction projects and equipment purchases have been unable to move forward.
The five-member board is appointed by the governor. Three members must be present for it to conduct business.
“He’s neglected to deal with a system that would have allowed tens of millions of dollars to be invested in health-care facilities throughout the state by not filling the vacancies on the planning board,” said Brady, considered a possible candidate for governor in 2010. […]
But because of the lack of a quorum, the board hasn’t been able to meet since late July. Spokeswoman Melaney Arnold said 60 projects are awaiting action.
* John Kass: Public’s trust hinges on two big appeals
In the separate cases of two convicted and corrupt politicians, Republican George Ryan and Democrat Robert Sorich, the federal judges on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have to decide where they stand.
Do they throw out the convictions and stand with the boss hogs that run the bipartisan Illinois political combine, the same combine that brags publicly that it put some of the justices on the federal bench?
Or do they uphold the convictions, and stand with you, the taxpayers of Illinois, the folks who work hard and make sacrifices, only to get hammered, year after year with tax increase after tax increase, as the combine and its soldiers feed from the public trough?
* Mark Brown: “Free poker” vets at odds with state
In an effort to stay within the bounds of Illinois’ gambling laws, organizers of the poker league charge no fee to play in their tournaments, ban wagering and offer only nominal prizes to the winners such as gift certificates from the host establishment.
And that’s why Signore can’t understand why the Illinois Liquor Control Commission has effectively shut down the “free poker” league by cracking down on liquor licenseholders that host the games.
“We should have a right to play as long as we’re not gambling,” says an angry Signore, who lives in West Beverly and owns a catering business.
Maybe some legislators bought that argument. But safety experts sure don’t. “There’s no way you can argue that letting large trucks go faster makes the roads safer,” said Russ Rader of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. “Study after study shows that, in general, when you increase travel speeds, you increase deaths on those roads.”
Illinois last year logged the lowest fatality rate on its roads since 1924. That’s impressive.
So why would anyone want to put that success at risk?
“This is a growing list,” said Laurence Msall, president of the Civic Federation, a tax watchdog group. “The city and some of the other units of government in northeastern Illinois have sought out new sources of revenue. Those are appropriate use taxes if you are able to make the case you are providing services related to the tax. In the case of the tire tax, the cost of recycling or servicing local roads can be connected.
“[But] I don’t think most Chicagoans are cognizant of who is responsible for which of the government services they receive, and there is little opportunity for citizens to get a comprehensive list” of what they pay.
* 19 new Chicago public schools wanted in next two years
These are part of Renaissance 2010, a plan to create 100 new schools by 2010. About 55 have opened so far. Fifteen of the 19 schools hope to open next fall if approved by the Chicago Board of Education Oct. 24.
The proposed Chicago High School for the Arts would put Chicago on par with New York, Los Angeles and most other large cities that have public performing arts high schools.
* Eric Zorn starts off a blog post with this unbelievably goofy quote from LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon executive director Carey Pinkowski….
Is there anything we could have done better? No. We anticipated the weather. I’m very proud of the way things went
What’s so bizarre about this comment is it was made today. After one runner died and hundreds ended up in the hospital.
Zorn comments…
Sunday’s event was calamitous, as these things go — one runner dead, hundreds hospitalized, thousands angry at what they say was a lack of fluids on the course — and Pinkowski is only making it worse by offering excuses, pointing the finger at others and otherwise trying to spin the story
* Once again, Pinkowski…
“Our participants were not drinking the water, they were cooling themselves with it,” Pinkowski said. “That’s something that, I’ll be honest with you, we didn’t anticipate.”
Don’t runners often douse themselves with water, particularly when it’s a hot day? I certainly did back in the (very long ago) day when I ran cross-country races.
* And what about that claim made by runners and initially disputed by organizers that the aid stations ran out of water (notice Zorn’s hedging on this topic above)?
Over at Illinoize, John Ruberry displays this video about one aid station that clearly ran out of water, which completely contradicts marathon organizers’ earlier assertions that they had plenty of fluids and that nobody ran dry…
I took some water from my fuel belt and kept on. The energy from the spectators was great. Everyone was so encouraging and excited for the race. We turn to go down LaSalle…over the river…and to the next water stop.
Nothing.
A few blocks later I run by my parents. I didn’t even stop. All I could do was yell to them “GET GATORADE FOR MILE 11. THEY’RE OUT OF EVERYTHING.”
* Zorn thinks Pinkowski is the right guy to fix things. I can’t understand why. Pinkowski presided over a colossal failure and then claims everything went according to plan.
Then again, Pinkowski’s spin is no different than much of what we’ve seen out of the White House, the governor’s office and the 5th Floor at city hall. Flatly deny that the disaster/meltdown/etc. exists even when everyone can plainly see it with their own eyes and dozens of actual victims/participants/reporters dispute the false propaganda. Then, when finally busted cold claim that, well, maybe some mistakes “were made” but they certainly couldn’t have been foreseen, despite common sense to the contrary.
* Sen. Dick Durbin has been far more vocal about Illinois politics than any member of the state’s congressional delegation. He kept it up over the weekend…
“I really, really think we ought to stop and catch our breath and say, ‘Is this the future of Illinois - that every time we want to do something, we’ll just build more casinos?’” he said. “When that becomes the answer to every question, I start to worry about it.”
He said most casino visitors are not tourists.
“Most of the people who go in are low-income people and elderly people who lose money that they can’t afford to lose,” Durbin said. “That to me seems like a wrong way to finance the important programs that we need in this country.”
* And he had some harsh words for the Powers that Be…
“I think they should be more honest with people,” he said. “Selling off state assets and building casinos will only take you so far. […]
“I wish I could blame the Republicans, but I can’t figure out how to do it,” Durbin joked. “I hope that they’ll come to their senses and that the Democratic leaders down there will get together and compromise.”
* Meanwhile, the Sunday SJ-R editorial was all over the place, but it was partly about Senate President Emil Jones’ refusal to call the House’s veto override motions on the budget, and its conclusion didn’t make much sense…
In a just world, Jones would not have the right to simply block democracy like this. But justice and the General Assembly often part ways. So Jones can block this vote if he chooses to put loyalty to Blagojevich above what is right. Some people in Gov. George Ryan’s administration operated that way. We know what eventually happened to them.
Dragging out the George Ryan bogeyman when someone disagrees with your position is a bit bizarre, but whatever.
Ryan’s conviction on federal corruption charges have been well-documented, but his reputation as a deal maker could be seen in the existence of the Illinois FIRST program.
* Ryan may have been a crook, but he was smart enough not to fire the wife of Madigan’s chief of staff. My syndicated newspaper column has more details on this event…
Ironically enough, the firing came the day after all four legislative leaders met with Gov. Rod Blagojevich for the first time in months. The meeting was arranged by House Republican Leader Tom Cross and was specifically designed to try and convince the five men to set aside their personal and political differences and attempt to work together on solving the state’s numerous problems. The Democrats, who control all of state government, have been fighting like cats and dogs this year, and just about nothing is getting resolved. […]
But taking action like this against the wife of Madigan’s most trusted aide is wholly unprecedented at the Statehouse. Not only is she Mapes’ wife, but she’s the political version of a noncombatant. The political honor code dictates that family members are not supposed to be messed with.
After trying three times to explain the firing, the Department of Human Services finally claimed that the federal government made them do it. But DHS’s story is so full of mysterious holes, the timing of the dismissal is so questionable and the governor’s office has told so many lies that even if this one is true, nobody will ever believe it.
Plus, any explanation the governor’s office provides, no matter how legitimate it may sound, will simply not be trusted in Room 300 - Madigan’s suite of Statehouse offices. Madigan’s press spokesman labeled the administration’s explanation as “an absolute lie,” which was not unexpected. Nobody with real power trusts anybody else with real power in Springfield these days.
And that is the most important aspect of this story, not the DHS response. As I’ve been trying to tell people all year, the three Democratic leaders (Madigan, Blagojevich and Jones) believe they are engaged in a fight to the political death. So they’re always on the lookout for any tiny slights. And this thing is way beyond tiny.
It probably doesn’t help matters that some of the governor’s top guys have been heard chuckling and bragging about the firing to intimates.
Madigan, contacted after the firing story leaked out, did not want to speak about the situation on the record, but the man was more thoroughly angry and disgusted than I have ever seen him in all my years.
If you think the Madigan vs. Blagojevich fight was bad before, you ain’t seen nothing yet.
[Rep. Rich Myers] read from a column by “Capitol Fax” writer Rich Miller, which also listed the uncle of Madigan ally Rep. John D’Amico. Representatives Gary Hannig, D-Litchfield, Eddie Acevedo, D-Chicago, and Careen Gordon, D-Coal City, all had brothers employed by the state who have either been fired or demoted.
In addition, Myers, said, the Blagojevich vetoes targeted the Illinois Arts Council, which is chaired by none other than Madigan’s wife, Shirley.
“When you put together all of the incidents, then you start to see a pattern that anyone who is connected with (Madigan) becomes a target,” Myers said.
* More mess stories, compiled by Paul…
* Editorial: Six years running IL has no capital construction plan
* McQueary: Channeling the governor via Rep. McCarthy
* Editorial: Jones needs to shut door on one-man show
* Schoenburg: You can count on the governor to fudge the numbers
* Statehouse Insider: Blagojevich’s remarkable string of coincidences continue
Commissioner Larry Suffredin originally said he’d keep out of the sales tax battle—but now says he’s resolved concerns about a possible conflict of interest.
SUFFREDIN: I’ve come to the conclusion that I will vote under the ethics act, and my intention is to vote no.
Suffredin says Commissioner Earlean Collins is also a no—and Commissioner Roberto Maldonado, thought to be a swing vote on taxes, says he’ll vote no too. Which, means, if put up to the 17 member county board the sales tax hike would be defeated.
* If true, that could help the backers of a proposed quarter-point increase in the sales tax to bail out mass transit. The more likely it is that Cook raises the sales tax, the less likely that legislators will want to do the same thing. Voters are angry enough already without provoking them even more.
Transit is not failing in Illinois. It’s busier and more popular than at any time since the car euphoria of the ’50s and ’60s. What’s failing is transit’s funding mechanism: Its sponsors—the governor and the General Assembly—have failed to shed their antiquated views of what transit does and for whom it exists. It’s not a business, it’s not a welfare function that prosperity will erase, and it’s not just for Chicago. Transit is a fundamental mobility resource essential to the entire state.
Maybe it’s time for our elected officials to do something they’ve never done before: ride their transit systems. When they see how transit and its ridership are changing, so will their views and their votes.
The Chicago Transit Authority this week will unveil a new and more severe round of service cuts and fare hikes to take place Jan. 1 unless the stalemate over state transit funding is broken.
The first phase of the transit meltdown is set for November 4 if Governor Blagojevich and the general assembly can’t agree on a bailout plan. The transit meltdown scheduled for mid-September was postponed for seven weeks. The governor loaned CTA, Metra and Pace nearly a hundred million state subsidy dollars to relieve a cash flow crisis.
Doomsday would then be doubled in January because the CTA’s deficit increases by $50 million in 2008. Details will be spelled out at a board meeting Wednesday.
* Tribune blogger Scott Kleinberg thinks the doomsday is hype and doesn’t believe it, but he says he refuses to pay any more for his daily CTA ride, and adds…
(T)he CTA could start by being a little more smart with how they spend. That’s first and foremost. And then the state should realize how ridiculously important mass transit is to Chicago.
Pretty much everybody understands transit’s importance at the Statehouse. Getting them to agree on a solution is the problem.
“Do I think there could be fat somewhere? I think in a government this large there’s probably always going to be some fat. Do I think we have $307 million worth of fat? No. There could be up to a million dollars worth of fat, maybe.“
* Is the Lipper scamming contributors? Mark Brown details how former Congressman Bill Lipinski sent out a “hearwarming” fund-raising letter soliciting contributions for his “All-American Eagles program,” which purports to run various programs for kids, “including an art contest, track and field meet, bicycle races, spelling and history bees and other programs designed to build the confidence and poise of young men and women.”
Well, the problem, as I explained, is that I’m looking at the last two-plus years of disclosure reports filed by Lipinski’s All-American Eagles and there’s scant evidence he has spent its money on the type of youth programs described in his letter.
Instead, Lipinski uses the fund the same way most politicians use such funds: to make campaign donations to other politicians, to defray some of the incidental expenses of holding political office (even though Lipinski no longer holds any office) and in some cases for stuff that would appear personal.
Lipinski has spent some of the All-American Eagles money toward rent on an Archer Avenue office that also houses the lobbying business he started after leaving Congress. For a while, he was using it to pay for a leased car. […]
All-American Eagles has donated $1,000 to Dan Lipinski’s campaign, $5,000 to the Democratic Party of Illinois and $500 to Republican state Sen. Christine Radogno’s losing campaign for state treasurer, among others.
Illinois State Representative Dan Brady announced Monday he will not be seeking a seat for the 11th U.S. Congressional District left open by current Congressman Jerry Weller. Brady will however be seeking re-election as State Representative for the 88th District.
* I’m thinking any endorsement by Weller could be the kiss of death, but Balderman seems pleased to have it. Good luck with that…
Weller, a Morris Republican who is retiring after serving seven terms in Congress, is supporting New Lenox Mayor Tim Balderman for the GOP nomination.
As a Special Assistant to the President at the White House and from the Texas Rangers Baseball Club Front Office, Marguerite gained unique knowledge, has communicated with millions of our citizens, and can help your organization achieve better results
If Weller’s endorsement could turn out to be bad, having a candidate who has a long history with one of the most unpopular presidents in the past 100 years probably can’t be good, either.
* Murer ran the Correspondence office for the president, which issues form letter replies to citizens, but check out how she inflates that position on her site…
With the civilian rank equivalent to a two-star general, Marguerite charged forward leading Correspondence with solid business principles. From the war on terror and securing our homeland, to Medicare, Supreme Court nominations and the devastating Hurricane Katrina, Marguerite has communicated with millions of Americans…
General Murer? Please. And as we all know, that Katrina thing went so well.
After declaring his candidacy just three weeks ago [to replace former House Speaker Dennis Hastert], Lauzen, a State Senator since 1992, will report having raised over $210,000 from more than 265 donors. Lauzen is also kicking in a personal loan of $325,000, for a cash on hand total north of $525,000.
RCP also reported that Jim Oberweis began running TV ads during the Cubs’ playoff game. Oops.
* If Aaron Schock was at all worried that the new authors of the Peoria Journal-Star’s “Word on the Street” column wouldn’t use the same kid gloves treatment as their predecessors, he got a pleasant surprise yesterday…
State Rep. Aaron Schock has moved his congressional campaign headquarters to avoid drama within the Republican party and put a stop to the nitpicking surrounding his every move.
Republican Jim Nalepa has pulled the plug on a potential run for the GOP nomination for U.S. Senate and instead is backing the candidacy of Steve Sauerberg for the right to take on incumbent Democrat Sen. Dick Durbin.
* Its official, Versace will run for Congress to replace LaHood; more here
He placed 2 times in the Cubs game on 10/6. He also placed an order that runs 10/10 – 10/14 for a total of $30,318. The networks he purchased were CNBC, CNN, DISC, ESPN, FOOD, HGTV, LIFE, TBS, TLC, TNT, and USA.
He placed these on 6 systems within the congressional district. He placed in Elgin, St. Charles/Wheaton, Aurora/Naperville, DeKalb, Streator/Ottawa, and Crystal Lake.
Tragedy visited the family of former Illinois Attorney General Jim Ryan yet again Sunday night. His youngest son, Patrick, 24, apparently committed suicide in the family home in Elmhurst, police said.
Police don’t ordinarily make public announcements about suicides. But when they have to block off the neighborhood for hours near the home of the former Republican candidate for governor, police can’t go by the usual rule book, Elmhurst Police Chief Steve Neubauer said.
* Opinion: Studies support reasoning of uniform speed limit
Trucking companies have long documented their accident reports state-by-state, and those statistics show that a disproportionate number of accidents occur in those states with split speed limits. In fact, safety has been, and will always be, the top priority of the trucking industry.
Truckers are some of the most regulated workers — they are required to undergo mandatory drug and alcohol testing, are limited to the number of hours they can drive and must submit their equipment for safety tests. No such laws exist for the everyday automobile driver.
* Illinois get a look at details of the smoking ban
* Big Chicago law firm settles suit for $27.5 million
* Mark Brown: Scrapping park shows your tax dollars at work
After spending as much as $2 million to build a sculpture park on a corner lot in Bronzeville, the city of Chicago is scrapping the partially completed project and offering the land for sale to developers.
The park was supposed to be another anchor in former 3rd Ward Ald. Dorothy Tillman’s long-touted plans for a “Chicago Blues District” along 47th Street, but her replacement, Ald. Pat Dowell, has decided Tillman’s plan is unfeasible and that the property would be better used for commercial development.