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Yes, things could still turn ugly, however… (Updated)

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s last week

Downtown Chicago hotels that were counting on a Democratic National Convention bump in business might need a late surge of reservations to pull it off, based on booking data ahead of next week’s event.

As of Aug. 5, visitors have booked between 63% and 70% of downtown hotel rooms during the four days of the convention, which kicks off Aug. 19, according to data tracked by real estate information company CoStar Group. Those occupancy rates are slightly below the numbers downtown hotels saw during the comparable week of August last year, CoStar data shows

I reached out to CoStar and asked if they had any updated numbers. Turns out, those Crain’s numbers compared apples to oranges. Here is what CoStar told me about 2023 hotel occupancy in the Chicago business district for this year’s DNC dates…

On the books (42-45%), Actualized (63-75%)

The most recent 2024 numbers Costar has are for August 12…

On the books (60-68%), Actualized (TBD)

Crain’s was comparing actual numbers last year to pre-booked numbers this year.

However, if past is prologue, we can likely expect that the eventual “actualized” number to be significantly higher than the “on the books” number, which is from a week before the DNC began.

* Meanwhile, this is from the Washington Post yesterday

The Democrats’ 2024 convention seemed likely to unfold with echoes of the unrest that disrupted the ’68 gathering. And it’s still possible, with an estimated 40,000 demonstrators expected to gather Monday to protest the Biden administration’s position on the war in Gaza.

* But here’s the Washington Post today

Organizers of the Coalition to March on the DNC had predicted a crowd of tens of thousands as recently as Monday morning, noting that buses of protesters had arrived from out of state. But by afternoon, spare protest signs littered the ground and fewer than 2,000 protesters filled a portion of Chicago’s Union Park, according to police stationed nearby who had surveyed the area with a drone.

* More…

…Adding… Sun-Times

The group of protesters marching down Washington Boulevard was briefly split into two groups but have re-organized in the face of a roadblock — the media.

Photographers and a gaggle of media are getting in the way of the protest route. The protest briefly stopped to tell camera crews to get out of the way.

Hilarious…


  39 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The UAW is threatening to call a national strike against Stellantis, accusing the automaker of failing to uphold its end of the labor agreement it signed with the union last year.

At least seven local chapters were prepared to file grievances against Stellantis for backtracking on a promised timeline to reopen the idled assembly plant in Belvidere just east of Rockford, the UAW said. The union said it was prepared to use its right to strike over product commitments and investments — gained in the 2023 contract — if necessary. The alleged contract violation “imperils all of the other investment commitments the company has made,” it said.

“This company made a commitment to autoworkers at Stellantis in our union contract, and we intend to enforce that contract to the full extent,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in an Aug. 19 statement. “On behalf of autoworkers everywhere, we’re standing up against a company that wants to go back on its commitments and drive a race to the bottom at the expense of the American worker.” […]

The UAW said Stellantis “has been unreceptive in talks with the union” about the Belvidere plans. The automaker idled the Belvidere Assembly Plant in February 2023 before agreeing to reopen it in 2027 to build a new midsize pickup. The contract also calls for opening a Mopar parts distribution hub in Belvidere in 2024 as well as the start of a stamping operation there in 2025 for replacement parts to supply the new hub.

* Tribune

On the first day of the Democratic National Convention, Mayor Brandon Johnson on Monday skirted a question about recent remarks in which he described the war in Gaza as “genocidal,” while reiterating his call for an end to the conflict.

Speaking at a news conference on the city’s safety preparations, Johnson did not directly address an article published Saturday in the progressive magazine Mother Jones, where he was quoted saying: “What’s happening right now is not only egregious, it is genocidal,” in reference to the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas.

Nor did he respond to a suggestion that such a stance could be at odds with his role as host mayor of the blockbuster event, where Chicago will celebrate Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee for president. Instead, the mayor stressed that he had also condemned Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

“You can condemn terrorism and call for peace. It’s actually very customary within our tradition here in Chicago. Dr. (Martin Luther) King (Jr.) called for that,” Johnson said. “People across America are calling for that, for the immediate releasing of hostages, the end of these acts of terror and the end to this war. And I will continue to stand by that position because it is the moral position.”

*** DNC ***

* Tribune | Largest planned protest of DNC week begins in Union Park as Chicago officials promise readiness: Demonstrators bearing Palestinian flags and signs had gathered by noon for what is expected to be the largest planned protest of the convention week, ending with a march early this afternoon. Organizers said more than 250 separate groups were part of the demonstration. Rally programming in Union Park kicked off around 12:30 p.m. before a crowd of about 2,000 people, including scores of credentialed journalists.

* Sun-Times | Black-Palestinian solidarity has a long history: ‘We’re both extremely dispossessed people’: Chicago community organizer Nino Brown, who is Black, said his turning point to understanding the shared struggle was when Palestinians joined the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, after the police killing of Michael Brown Jr. in 2014. “We had tear gas canisters being repelled back by Black people in Ferguson, and they were the same manufacturers, the same tear gas being used to attack Palestinians,” the 33-year-old said. “For me that cemented the idea that we have common oppressors.

* Daily Herald | ‘Positive energy’: Democratic stars mingle with Illinois delegates: DuPage County Chair and delegate Deb Conroy said the enthusiasm about the ticket of Harris and vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is “contagious.” And with several Midwestern states up for grabs, “a lot of people in Illinois are so excited they’re willing to go to Wisconsin and knock on doors.”

* Politico | ‘Uncommitted’ delegates want to keep the pressure up on Harris: Leaders of the pro-Palestinian “uncommitted” movement are warning that Vice President Kamala Harris could lose votes — and, potentially, key swing states — if there is not an immediate and permanent cease-fire in Gaza and an arms embargo against Israel, something they acknowledge she does not support. “She is at risk of losing key swing states, especially in states like Michigan, where we have the largest concentration of Arab Americans and Muslim Americans — people who know firsthand the effects and the impact of American-funded bombing,” Layla Elabed, a leader of the “uncommitted” movement from Michigan, said in response to a POLITICO reporter’s question at a press conference this morning.

Capitol News Illinois, the Sun-Times and Block Club have live updates all day.

* Axios | Alexi Giannoulias hobbles into the DNC: Giannoulias showed up to the Illinois delegation’s breakfast meeting on Monday sporting a bulky leg cast and walking with crutches due to an injury from three weeks ago. What they’re saying: “I shattered my knee thinking that I’m younger than I am,” Giannoulias told Axios. “I tried to jump onto a fast moving treadmill and I got tossed like a rag doll. My kneecap ended up in my quad.”

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Abortion could become legal in Missouri in November. What does it mean for Illinois?: “I’ve been working all over the country to make sure we have referenda on the ballot, even in Florida,” [Governor JB Pritzker] told a State Journal-Register reporter during an impromptu press conference following Governor’s Day. “That’s not only going to help women in those states, protect their rights, but also bring people out to vote who are going to vote Democratic.”

* Tribune | Monarch butterfly numbers have dropped this summer in Illinois, Upper Midwest, experts say: At the national Monarch Larva Monitoring Project, which tracks the number of eggs the butterflies are laying, the counts are down, both in the Prairie State and the larger region, according to the project’s founder and coordinator Karen Oberhauser. […] The U.S. government has determined that the showy orange and black butterflies qualify for threatened or endangered species status, but has effectively waitlisted them.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | As DNC begins, nurses at nearby University of Illinois Hospital go on strike: The nurses, who are represented by the Illinois Nurses Association, say they want pay that’s on-par with other area hospitals, better staffing and more security at the health system, citing examples of nurses who’ve been attacked by patients. The nurses’ four-year contract expired Monday. More than 650 nurses had shown up to picket outside University of Illinois Hospital, as of Monday morning, according to the union.

* Crain’s | Chicago AI-software firm ModelOp gets $10M from Baird: Software maker ModelOp raised $10 million in a deal led by Chicago-based Baird Capital. Its software is used by customers to make sure AI models for data analytics developed by companies comply with internal and external compliance rules. Customers include Fidelity Investments, Bristol Myers Squibb and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, which regulates investment broker-dealers. Four of the top 10 financial institutions also are customers, says ModelOp CEO Pete Foley.

* Tribune | Chicago White Sox reliever Matt Foster has ‘new appreciation’ after returning from Tommy John surgery: The recovery and rehab from Tommy John surgery was complete. All that was left was getting back on a big-league mound. “As soon as the (seventh) inning finished, I was like, ‘All right, it’s time to go. Get back on again,’” the right-handed reliever said Saturday in Houston.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville police charge man with loaded gun at Topgolf lot — arrest no. 23 since August 2023: A convicted felon allegedly driving with open alcohol, cannabis and a loaded gun Sunday became the 23rd suspect to be arrested on an illegal firearm charge in the Naperville Topgolf parking lot, officials said. Courtney Bennett, 36, of Dolton, was taken into custody about 12:55 a.m. after Naperville police officers observed him and a female passenger drive an Alfa Romeo into the Topgolf lot, 3211 Odyssey Court, with a “gun in plain view in the center console along with two open cans of an alcoholic beverage, Spiked Minute Maid,” a Naperville Police Department/DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office news release said.

* Lake County News-Sun | Rock the Ride event raises money, awareness about gun violence; ‘We want to bring the community together’: Laurie Levin, the chair of the Highland Park Community Foundation, understands firsthand the continuing necessity to raise money to help those who experienced trauma or worse at the Fourth of July parade shooting more than two years ago. Marching in the parade when a lone gunman fired 83 rounds in 96 seconds, “killing seven, wounding dozens and causing trauma for countless more,” she said she understood the lingering effects while at Ravinia listening to Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” last month.

* Lake County News-Sun | Hawthorn Woods opposes proposed Aqua Illinois rate hike: Hawthorn Woods officials formally approved a resolution and drafted a letter to the Illinois Commerce Commission objecting to a proposed rate hike by its private water utility supplier. Kankakee-based Aqua Illinois wants an increase of approximately $30 per bill to fund infrastructure upgrades and rising operational costs.

* Daily Herald | Proposed beekeeping zoning change creates buzz in DuPage County: Before DuPage County Board members loosen beekeeping restrictions, some groups want them to consider the sting those changes may have on native bees. County board members recently delayed a vote that would have allowed beekeeping on smaller lots. Right now, beekeeping is allowed in unincorporated areas on lots that are an acre or larger.

*** Downstate ***

* Rockford Register Star | 89 faculty, staff lose jobs: What led to Western Illinois University’s most recent cuts: The announcement came just days before the beginning of a new fall semester at the Macomb, Illinois, public university and less than two months after 36 contingent faculty were informed that their contracts would not be renewed. WIU has found itself struggling with a shrinking student body, the fallout of the 2015-17 budget impasse and state appropriations that haven’t kept pace with inflation. Now, the university is trying to shrink its budget deficit and escape a cash crunch — and WIU officials say there aren’t many options left.

* NPR | As Democrats meet in Chicago, Illinois’ role in abortion access is in the spotlight: At Hope Clinic in Granite City, Ill., Dr. Erin King and her staff have rearranged the waiting room for patients who’ve been traveling here from across the country. There are spaces for children to play and for families to relax or watch TV. “Most of our patients have kids, and so if they’re able to come, they can bring their kids with them,” King says. There’s also a supply closet stocked with diapers, snacks and hygiene supplies that patients and their families might need during their trip. King describes it as a “little, mini 7-Eleven — but all free.”

*** National ***

* WIRED | Trump Shares AI-Generated Images Claiming Swifties Are Supporting Him: One of the screenshots Trump shared was from an anonymous pro-Trump account with over 300,000 followers that regularly posts AI-generated images. Following its post about Swifties for Trump, this account shared a follow-up post that said the original Swifties for Trump post was “satire.”

  4 Comments      


Speaker Welch asked about staff union lawsuit during DNC breakfast

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A reporter noted to House Speaker Chris Welch this morning that a status hearing is being held this week regarding the lawsuit filed by the Illinois Legislative Staff Association, a group of Welch’s employees who are trying to organize a union. Welch was asked how the lawsuit effects his message on workers’ rights

Well, my record is clear. You know, coming from a labor family, I am a big supporter of union rights. But we have a law in place currently that I have fought to change. I passed a bill out of the House overwhelmingly. I stand by that bill. I’m hoping that the Senate moves that bill to the governor’s desk and the governor signs it. There is a way to change the law. And I believe that the courts will recognize that the way the plaintiffs have decided to go with that is the incorrect way. I would encourage them to support the bill that I filed. I worked with several folks in the drafting of that, and if we need to change it and make it better, we should do that. But we have to change the law.

Thoughts?

  15 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US Sen. Tammy Duckworth was asked today what she thought about Gov. JB Pritzker running for a third term. He’s said in recent days that the decision was kinda up to his wife, MK. Here’s what Duckworth said

I think would be great if he’d run again. Remember that we’ve had six balanced budgets and nine credit upgrades under this governor. We were named the Midwest hydrogen hub. We’ve got the new quantum center that we brought in. He’s been a real partner to me and [former deputy governor] Christy George in particular has even traveled with me internationally to attract foreign investment into Illinois. So I’m really excited with what he’s done. And the work that he’s done also with the state legislature. The partnership, there has really allowed our state to come forward in terms of, you know, being a a bastion for reproductive healthcare, for raising the minimum wage, all the stuff that we’ve done for working families. So I urge him to run again.

Please pardon all transcription errors. Also, video is here.

* House Speaker Chris Welch was asked what the legislature’s large Democratic super-majority and a third term for Pritzker would mean to the state and to his working relationship

I think it means stability. I think it means continued progress. We will continue to move Illinois forward. You know the governor has said those comments to me several times before. So I’ve had an opportunity to kind of lobby his wife a few times and say, ‘Hey, I’d love for him to go for a third term.’ And I think I got a smile and a wink and an OK that he could do that. And so I’m certainly hoping that he continues to be our governor.

* The Question: Do you think Gov. Pritzker should run for a third term? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please. Also, I’m not asking if you think he will run, I’m asking if you think he should run.


  66 Comments      


Roundup: Illinois delegate breakfast kicks off Day 1 of DNC

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Minnesota’s First Lady Gwen Walz was a surprise speaker this morning…

  2 Comments      


Here are the districts where Speaker Welch claims he can pick up four to six House seats

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Subscribers know a lot more about these races, but here’s a quick overview via my weekly newspaper column

Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch has said he thinks he can flip somewhere between four and six Republican-held House districts to Democratic control, upping his supermajority to between 82 and 84 seats, from his current 78.

Which Republican districts are flippable? I talked with a high-level source close to Welch’s caucus who pointed to the following races:

47th House District: Rep. Amy Grant, R-Wheaton, vs. Jackie Williamson. President Joe Biden won this district by 12 percentage points four years ago. Every statewide Democratic candidate won the district two years ago, and Gov. JB Pritzker won it by 8 points.

Grant’s campaign had just $13,542 in the bank at the end of June. She’s since reported raising a mere $10,000. Keep in mind that the House Democrats have a vast and ever-growing fundraising advantage over the House Republicans. So the money that these Republican incumbents have raised so far is much more important to understanding their predicaments. Grant is a strong abortion rights opponent.

52nd House District: Rep. Marty McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, vs. Maria Peterson. Peterson lost to then-Senate Republican Leader Dan McConchie by just a few hundred votes two years ago. Biden won the 52nd by 6 points four years ago and all statewide Democratic candidates took it in 2022.

McLaughlin is personally wealthy, but he reported having just $100,000 on hand at the end of June and has reported raising $9,000 since then. He also has some labor support.

As with all of these districts, the Republican’s anti-abortion stances will play a major role in the Democrats’ campaigns.

114th House District: Rep. Kevin Schmidt, R-Cahokia Heights, vs. former Rep. LaToya Greenwood, D-East St. Louis. Greenwood’s 2022 loss to the Donald Trump-supporting Schmidt shocked the Black Caucus. Four years ago, Biden won the precincts in this redrawn district by more than 7 points. Before that, no statewide Democrat lost those precincts going back years. But the only statewide Dem who won the district in 2022 was U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth. The Republican Schmidt won it by almost 6 points.

The local NAACP and other Black leaders accused the House Democrats of taking too many Black precincts away from Greenwood during the remap and doling them out to neighboring white legislators. They ended up being right, at least as far as 2022 went.

The party line is that Greenwood lost because Black voters stayed home and Donald Trump voters surged to the polls. Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, the House Dems believe, will bring their base voters out in November. We’ll see.

104th House District: Rep. Brandun Schweizer, R-Danville, vs. Jarrett Clem. Schweizer was appointed to replace Rep. Mike Marron. Biden won the 104th by almost 4 points, and four out of six statewide Democrats carried the district two years ago (Kwame Raoul and Alexi Giannoulias both lost by 2 points). This has usually been a pro-union, pro-Republican region, but the tide may be changing after the remap, and the Democrat Clem has strong union support.

Schweizer isn’t well-known, and the Democrats think they can use their superior financial firepower to define him at will. Schweizer ended the quarter with $15,000 in the bank and has raised $21,000 since.

79th House District: Rep. Jackie Haas, R-Bourbonnais, vs. Billy Morgan. Biden lost this district by a point, and most Democrats lost the district in 2022, including Pritzker by 6. Even so, the House Democrats think they can pull this off, partly because the district is pro-union.

Haas ended the quarter with $62,000 in the bank and has reported raising $9,000 since then.

82nd House District: Rep. Nicole La Ha Zwiercan, R-Homer Glen, vs. Suzanne Akhras. La Ha Zwiercan was appointed to replace former House Republican Leader Jim Durkin. Trump won the district by 2 points, and no statewide Democrats carried it in 2022. Darren Bailey beat Pritzker by 3 points.

48th House District: Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro, R-Hanover Park, vs. Maria Vesey. Biden won the district by 2.6 points, and all statewide Democrats except Treasurer Mike Frerichs carried the 48th two years ago. The Democrats didn’t unearth photos of Sanalitro at the Jan. 6 “Stop the Steal” protests until very late in the game two years ago, so they’ll put that issue at the forefront of their campaign. Sanalitro insists that she wasn’t a protest participant. Sanalitro has been endorsed by the Illinois AFL-CIO, and the Workers’ Rights Amendment carried the district by 7 points two years ago.

Sanalitro ended the quarter with $69,000 and has reported raising $28,000 since then.

  20 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…

  14 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: The Democratic National Convention starts today…

* Block Club | First DNC Protest Kicks Off Downtown Sunday As Hundreds March For Gaza, Abortion Rights: Sunday’s rally and protest Downtown was organized by the Bodies Outside of Unjust Laws coalition, which includes a wide range of pro-choice, LGBTQ+, pro-Palestinian and various left wing groups. The march came about a week after the group was issued a permit, which it had to sue the city to obtain. The rally was held a day before the DNC officially kicks off Monday and will run through Thursday night.


* Tribe | Organizers worry about mass arrests and police violence during DNC: “We have seen throughout history, from 1919 to 1968 to 2020, that the Chicago Police Department has used violence and other forms of police misconduct to quell protests, and particularly protests that are challenging the status quo,” Sheila Bedi said. She is a clinical law professor at the Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, and director of the Community Justice and Civil Rights Clinic. “So there’s a real concern that some of those same strategies will go into play in response to protests for the Democratic Convention in 2024,” Bedi continued.

* Mother Jones | Chicago’s Mayor Owes His Career to Activism. How Will He Handle Demonstrators at the DNC?: Johnson’s political beginnings weren’t that different from those of the activists supporting his candidacy. He started his career as a public school middle school teacher in a neighborhood once dubbed “the most dangerous” in the city. He went on to become a paid organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union, known for its polarizing yet successful teacher strikes in 2012 and 2019. In an effort to re-open a shuttered high school in 2015, Johnson joined a hunger strike and refused to eat solid foods for more than a week. Amid the racial justice protests of 2020, Johnson authored a resolution as a Cook County commissioner to “redirect funds from policing” to public services. (On the controversial concept of defunding the police, Johnson once said on a radio show, “I don’t look at it as a slogan. It’s an actual real political goal.”)

* NBC Chicago | Pritzker confirms members of Illinois National Guard ‘on standby’ during DNC: During a press availability, Pritzker said that the Illinois Guard members in the city are trained as military police, but that residents shouldn’t expect to see them taking on an active role during the DNC. “They are really on standby,” he said. “They are at the perimeter. Nobody expects that we’ll have to use them for anything very serious. We also want to make sure we have additional law enforcement type folks who are in uniform, and who are trained to be police available.”


* Sun-Times | As DNC hits Chicago, Microsoft warns of deepfake artificial-intelligence attacks: President Joe Biden became a target of satirical, manipulated videos before he dropped his reelection bid. And a deepfake photo after the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump was altered to make it appear Secret Service agents smiled as they encircled him — apparently an effort to make the shooting appear to be a hoax.

* ABC Chicago | Illinois Governor JB Pritzker wants Chicago DNC to energize party, city: “Oh boy. Well, I have to say, if you look at the excitement level of the Democratic Party, and frankly, people all over the United States, independents and Republicans for the Harris-Walz ticket, you’ll see that this excitement is going to last all the way through the election,” Pritzker said. But the governor still expects the election will be close.

* Lake County News Sun | Lake County Democrats looking forward to ‘historic’ DNC: ‘I don’t think Hollywood could have scripted it better’: State Sen. Adriane Johnson, D-Buffalo Grove, a first-time convention delegate and attendee, said she is emotionally charged at the prospect of seeing a woman of color nominated to become president of the United States. Though the Democrats nominated former President Barack Obama as the first man of color in 2008, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as the first woman in 2016, Vice President Kamala Harris could be the first to break two glass ceilings.

* Sun-Times | DNC related events you can attend, no convention credentials needed: The party will be jumpin’ for five days straight in the heart of downtown, thanks to the city’s “Celebrating Chicago at Daley Plaza” event, spearheaded by Mayor Brandon Johnson, the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE), and the Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP). The schedule includes performances by House music DJs, youth tumblers and drill team members, and more. There will also be cultural activities, as well as local cuisine and unique items crafted by local vendors. From Aug. 19 to 23, Daley Plaza, 50 W. Washington St. Admission is free. Visit chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dca.html for the full schedule.

* Block Club | More Parking Restrictions Near United Center Added Ahead Of DNC: Officials previously revealed the areas around the United Center and McCormick Place where pedestrian and vehicle access would be restricted during the DNC, which kicks off Monday. But parking in some areas outside the designated “security footprint” also will be affected due to “security and logistical needs,” officials said in a press release Thursday. Restricted parking and access for cars now extends as far north as Lake Street, while restricted access for cars now goes as far as Hoyne Avenue to the west.

* Sun-Times | Democratic convention roll call to be transformed into a Harris-Walz rally with DJ, music and surprise guests: The vibe of the first-of-its kind roll call on Tuesday, Democratic convention planners say, is intended to be that of a celebration. The roll call comes before the prime time speakers take the stage, former President Barack Obama and, the Sun-Times has confirmed, former first lady Michelle.

* Shaw Local | Trump supporters rally in Woodstock ahead of DNC, vow to fight ‘Kama-nism’: Moms for Liberty co-founder Tiffany Justice spoke, calling Tim Walz, Harris’ running mate, as “the most anti-parent candidate” and saying “there is no such thing as a transgender child.” Former Trump advisers Roger Stone and Michael Flynn were among those billed to appear but was a no-shows. Stephen Moore, an economist and visiting fellow at the conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, spoke and referred to Harris and Walz as “fiscal pyromaniacs.” Moore also questioned how to pronounce Harris’ first name.

* WBBM | Chicago church gets visit from Georgia senator ahead of Democratic convention: Ahead of the Democratic National Convention (DNC), Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) visited Bronzeville’s Apostolic Faith Church with a message to the congregation. Warnock, who’s been a pastor for decades, gave a sermon focused largely on what he described as a “precious exercise” in self-governance.

* NYT | JB Pritzker Is Ready to Party at a Convention He Made Happen: In short, the city might be the mayor’s, but the party this week will be the governor’s. “I think his role can’t be overstated,” said State Representative Kam Buckner, an ally in the legislature and a rising star in Chicago politics. “The world is watching, and Governor Pritzker is acutely aware of that.”

* Tribune | Former Mayor Richard Daley expected to be in Chicago for DNC but keeping it ‘low key’: Bill Daley said he also expects to attend some of this year’s DNC events along with his brother John, a Cook County Board commissioner. He didn’t detail when or where his brother the former mayor will appear this year but noted how important it was that Chicago pulled off a successful convention in 1996, adding a “debacle” back then would have made it tough for Chicago to land this year’s DNC.

* NBC Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker proclaims Malort the ‘unofficial shot’ of the Chicago DNC: Pritzker has been a proponent of Malört for some time now, and he proclaimed it the “Unofficial Shot” of the DNC this weekend. During an interview with MSNBC host Jen Psaki, Pritzker described Malört as a drink that tests the “mettle” of the person consuming it.

* USA Today | Gov. JB Pritzker was Biden’s man in the Midwest. Where’s that leave him with VP Harris?: “So here we sit, a few months out from the election, struggling with the answer to a profound question: How do we save ourselves?” Pritzker asked the Ohio Democratic Party faithful at their annual gathering on a sticky July afternoon. […] “If we stop worrying about whether they might call us woke and instead worry about whether we’re actually waking people up,” he continued. “If we stopped being so damned afraid of a little chaos and just embraced it as a path from here to there: we will win.”

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | On the eve of historic DNC, Chicago named host city for NAACP’s 2026 convention: The NAACP National Convention will hold its 117th annual gathering in Chicago in July 2026, the civil rights organization and the city announced Sunday. Chicago was previously the site of the NAACP convention in 1926 and most recently in 1994, when some 40,000 attendees saw then-President Bill Clinton as a featured speaker. Two years later, Clinton would return to Chicago for the 1996 DNC, where he was nominated for his second term as president.

* WCIA | ISP hands Heinz Funeral Home investigation to State’s Attorney: The Illinois State Police wrapped up their investigation to Heinz Funeral Home in Carlinville and handed it over to the Macoupin County State’s Attorney. State’s Attorney Jordan Garrison told WCIA Friday that his office is reviewing the findings to determine if he should file charges.

*** Statewide ***

* Effingham Radio | Finalists And Winner Of 2024 Governor’s Hometown Awards Announced: Each year, these awards give formal recognition to those who contributed to projects that improved their community’s quality of life. […] Teen Turf is a year-round operation that operates a free after-school and summer program for children. They serve an average of 20-45 students from toddler to high school age with reading, creativity, and team building; additionally, they encourage community service through their “Clean and Green” program.

* Journal & Topics | Aaron Del Mar Named State GOP Co-Chair: Aaron Del Mar, one of three in the running last month for Illinois Republican Party chairman, was appointed state party co-chair on Thursday, Aug, 15. Del Mar, Palatine Township Republican committeeman and Republican state central committeeman for the 5th Congressional District said he was “humbled and honored” to be given the co-chair role by the party’s new chair, Kathy Salvi.

* Center Square | Wrongful conviction awareness now taught at all police academies: With Illinois being home to the top state in the country for wrongful convictions, the state agency that oversees police training has now signed off on a plan mandating Wrongful Conviction Awareness and Avoidance Training courses at all local police academies. Approved by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, the first of its kind courses come as data shows wrongly convicted individuals have spent upwards of 21,000 years in U.S. prisons before being exonerated.

* WTTW | Swarms of Dragonflies Are on the Move Across Illinois, Part of a Great and Mysterious Migration: “This is the time of year right now, this is the thick of it. It’s just so exciting to see hundreds of them aloft,” said Crosby, who coordinates dragonfly monitoring at Morton Arboretum and Nachusa Grasslands. “We’ll see 100, we’ll see 300 in a migrating swarm. You’ll see them move across interstates — I’ve seen them move across I-90.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Decayed State Street towers attract interest from Chicago developer betting on Loop turnaround: Federal officials, including judges in the U.S. District Court here, had deemed the buildings a security threat and Congress set aside $52 million to raze them. But because they are part of the Loop’s historic retail corridor, the GSA couldn’t act until it finished hearings about their future. In a surprising bureaucratic turn, the agency last week published its preference for renovation instead of wreckage, while attaching conditions that could scare off private sector interest. It said it must retain property ownership and it ruled out uses that could affect security such as creating residences, a hotel or worship space.

* Daily Herald | Strike by drivers hits Chicago paratransit riders: Pace warned paratransit riders in Chicago Friday about delays and reduced capacity on vehicles after workers with contractor SCR Medical Transportation went on strike. The action came after SCR Medical Transportation drivers voted to authorize a walkout Wednesday, leaders with Teamsters Local 727 said. “Service will continue to be provided, but this will likely impact service in the city of Chicago, resulting in limited capacity and service delays,” Pace administrators announced in a statement on their website.

* Sun-Times | For migrant kids in Chicago, a free soccer program offered a little summer fun: The Amigos Unidos FC, or United Friends, program mostly drew children who are from Colombia and Venezuela. Two friends at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign started it, aiming to reach migrant kids who love soccer.

* Sun-Times | Mike Royko exhibit aimed at people who admired the columnist and people who never heard of him: For a certain generation of Chicagoans, it’s unimaginable growing up not knowing the name Mike Royko. But a lot of people in their 20s and younger who grew up as print media declined have never heard of the famed Chicago newspaper columnist. Northwestern English professor Bill Savage and a group of curators at the Newberry Library hope to change that with an exhibition that opened Thursday entitled “Chicago Style: Mike Royko and Windy City Journalism.”

* Sun=Times | QB Caleb Williams flashes magic, eventually, in Bears’ victory: For 1½ quarters Saturday, Caleb Williams looked awfully similar to the ghosts of Bears quarterbacks past, stumbling through three consecutive three-and-outs, being flagged for intentional grounding and taking a sack. When he finally led the Bears to a field goal by Cairo Santos, he was aided in part by a 43-yard pass-interference penalty on a deep shot to Tyler Scott.

* Block Club | The Onion Is Back In Print: The Onion is known for its satirical headlines, but the latest news to come out of the Chicago-based publication isn’t a joke: It’s back in print after more than a decade. The Onion is offering 12 monthly print editions for a limited-time price of $60, including a special issue for the Democratic National Convention available for those who subscribe within the next two weeks. The price will normally be $99. Learn more and buy a subscription here.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Chicago area corrections officer brought drug-soaked paper into jail, police say: The Cook County Sheriff’s Office said Jones was paid $1,000 to take the paper and deliver it to a man in custody at the jail. Testing revealed the paper contained synthetic cannabinoids. Jones was hired as a deputy in June 2019 and has been on “injured on duty” status since July 15, 2024, after she was injured while attempting to intervene in a fight between two individuals in custody. She was de-deputized on July 25 after she was interviewed by investigators related to the drug case. The sheriff’s office is conducting a separate internal investigation and Jones may be subject to disciplinary action including being fired as a result of the probe.

* WGN | Dolton deputy police chief facing new lawsuit over overtime pay: Lacey is being sued by the Village of Dolton for overtime they say he paid himself but was never eligible to receive. The lawsuit alleges that between August of 2023 and July of 2024, Lacey submitted and approved nearly $140,000 in overtime for himself, even though he’s a salaried employee and not entitled to overtime pay.

* Daily Herald | ‘It’s all about the bumblebees’: Dogs looking for nests help effort to boost pollinator habitats and population: “Today, it’s all about the bumblebees,” explained Kathryn McCabe, wildlife ecologist. More precisely, finding bumblebee nests generally located underground. Finding them helps researchers studying habitat preference and colony behavior. There are 12 species in Lake County, including the federally endangered rusty patched bumblebee.

* Crain’s | Activist investor takes stake in Portillo’s: Engaged Capital, an activist investor with a track record of targeting restaurant operators including Shake Shack, has taken a nearly 10% stake in Oak Brook-based Portillo’s and said it has been in discussions with management about “potential steps to unlock the intrinsic value” of the business. In a filing with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission, the Newport Beach, Calif.-based investment firm disclosed that those conversations have included potential changes to the company’s board of directors and a possible sale of the business. Citing unnamed sources, the Chicago Tribune reports management changes are not being discussed.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sangamon Co. announces commission to address systemic issues after Sonya Massey’s death; volunteers wanted: The announcement of the new group came Friday morning. County officials said the purpose for the commission is to “address systemic issues in law enforcement practices, mental health responses, and community relations” and come up with tangible solutions to implement in the county. County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter said he has been working with Senator Doris Turner (D-Springfield) to come up with solutions since last month, and the latest board meeting affirmed the idea for the commission.

* SJ-R | Senior housing locations across Illinois listed for sale following bankruptcy: Two Springfield area elderly assistance locations have been listed for sale according to their parent company, Christian Horizons. The St. Louis-based senior housing company, which operates and owns Lewis Memorial Christian Village in Springfield and The Christian Village on South Seventh Street in Lincoln, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on July 16, according to Senior Housing News. The nonprofit company served 12 communities of independent living, assisted living and long-term health services for seniors across Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Missouri. The Christian Horizons website lists all of their locations currently operating.

* PJ-Star | Police reports reveal evidence of embezzlement by former WTVP CEO Lesley Matuszak: The Peoria Police Department would have had probable cause to arrest the former CEO of Peoria’s PBS affiliate on embezzlement charges had she not killed herself, according to a recently completed investigation. Police reports obtained by the Journal Star indicate that both police and the Peoria County State’s Attorney’s Office agreed that there would have been probable cause to arrest Lesley Matuszak, who served as CEO for WTVP from 2019 to her resignation in September 2023, on charges of embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from the station’s coffers over a two-year period from 2022-2023.

*** National ***

* NBC | Elon Musk’s rightward turn includes a fringe fascination: Civil war: Tech billionaire Elon Musk has repeatedly prophesied a future civil war related to immigration. Musk has posted about the subject on his social media platform X at least eight times in the past 10 months, according to a review of his posts by NBC News. And his posts usually include a specific prediction: He thinks that Europe in particular is headed toward a “civil war” due to the arrival of refugees from other continents.

* Bloomberg | CVS defeat shows quiet ways drug middlemen try to influence care: A recent court defeat for CVS Health Corp. is shining a light on how health-care corporations wield their financial might over doctors and pharmacies in ways that can put profits over patient care. With more than a dozen similar cases still pending in private arbitration, the pharmacy giant has millions of dollars on the line. The most recent conflict got so heated that members of Congress cited it as an example of CVS’s overreach during a July hearing where pharmacy benefit managers faced bipartisan scorn over the power they exert over patient care.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Aug 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* See you Monday

They’d put us on a railroad
They’d dearly make us pay for laughing in their faces
And making it our way

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Center Square

In the wake of tax hikes on sports betting apps in Illinois, one operator that announced surcharges to make up revenue is changing course.

DraftKings announced last month it would add surcharges to high-tax states like Illinois, which just hiked taxes on sports books from 15% to as much as 40%. Now the company says for the time being, no surcharges will be imposed.

“We always listen to our customers and after hearing their feedback we have decided not to move forward with the gaming tax surcharge. We are always committed to delivering the best value in the industry to our loyal customers,” the company said in a statement. […]

PlayIllinois.com managing editor Tyler Andrews said the surcharge announcement was a public relations nightmare for DraftKings.

* Capitol News Illinois

An appeals court last week reversed state regulators’ approval of a permit for the Illinois portion of an 800-mile, high-voltage transmission line, setting up a possible fight at the state’s Supreme Court.

The Grain Belt Express, or GBX, is owned by Chicago-based Invenergy and is meant to carry renewable electricity generated by wind farms. It would run through parts of Kansas, Missouri and Illinois before terminating just over the Indiana border. […]

The company received approval for a key permit from the Illinois Commerce Commission in March last year, but the 5th District Appellate Court overruled that decision last week.

Justice James Moore, writing the unanimous opinion for the three-judge panel, said the issue with the ICC’s permit is primarily a lack of evidence that its owners can actually pay for the development.

Kuykendall also said the company will “immediately appeal” the decision to the Illinois Supreme Court.

* Forbes

The increased utilization of artificial intelligence (AI) in employment practices has ushered in an era of unprecedented efficiency and innovation. However, with these advancements come new regulatory responsibilities, as demonstrated by Illinois’ recent legislative actions. On August 9, 2024, Illinois enacted HB 3773, a landmark law set to take effect on January 1, 2026, that will reshape how employers use AI in employment decisions. This legislation, amending the Illinois Human Rights Act, serves as a critical reminder that the adoption of AI in hiring, promotion, and other employment-related activities must be carefully balanced against the potential risks of discrimination and the need for transparency.

HB 3773 will establish comprehensive regulations governing the use of AI in the employment lifecycle. The law broadly defines AI as any machine-based system that generates outputs such as predictions, recommendations, or decisions based on input data. This definition encompasses generative AI, which produces content that simulates human output, such as text, images, and multimedia, and more traditional predictive AI, which assists decision-making by producing scores, rankings, and classifications.

Employers in Illinois will be required to provide notice to employees, including apprentices and applicants for apprenticeship, whenever AI is utilized for key employment decisions. These decisions include recruitment, hiring, promotion, renewal of employment, selection for training or apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure, or the terms, privileges, or conditions of employment. Although the law does not explicitly mention job applicants, its language suggests that AI tools used during recruitment will likely fall within its scope.

A critical component of HB 3773 is its prohibition against using AI in a manner that results in discrimination against protected classes under the Illinois Human Rights Act. Employers must also avoid using zip codes as proxies for protected classes in any AI-driven decision-making process. While the specific application of this provision remains somewhat ambiguous, it signals that employers need to be vigilant about the data inputs and algorithms used in AI systems to prevent unintentional bias.

*** Statewide ***

* Prairie Farmer | Who owns the most farmland in Illinois?: Nearly 60% of all farmland in Illinois is owned by absentee landowners and farmed by someone else. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints owns the most farmland in Illinois, with nearly 54,000 acres. Farmland Partners comes in second; Bill Gates is a distant sixth, with less than a third of the Morman church’s acres.

* Investigate Midwest | Corteva, Pioneer Hi-Bred settle lawsuit with farmworkers sprayed with pesticides: A group of migrant agricultural workers who were sprayed with pesticides while working in a central Illinois cornfield in 2019 reached a confidential settlement late last month with Corteva and its subsidiary, Pioneer Hi-Bred International, ending a three-year lawsuit with the seed giants. The case against the companies that owned and operated the aircrafts that sprayed the workers is ongoing.

*** DNC ***

* Tribune | DNC protest groups win concessions from city over stages, sound system for Union Park rally: A coalition of activist groups set for a massive protest at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week has won concessions from Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration allowing them to set up stages and sound systems for rallies in a park near the United Center. The agreement, which was reached after hours of back-room negotiations between the parties, nullifies an emergency motion filed in U.S. District Court earlier this week alleging the city had violated protestors’ First Amendment rights by restricting how the rallies could be staged.

* Bloomberg | Cops Vow to Avert Risk of Havoc From DNC Protesters Converging in Chicago: In preparation for the Democratic gathering, police studied the failures of 2020 and implemented enhanced training for about 2,500 officers. Chicago is also bringing in as many as 500 police from outside the city, who will be placed around the convention. Some will come from Milwaukee, where Chicago sent officers last month to help with the Republican National Convention.

* WGN | Downtown Chicago businesses board up ahead of Democratic National Convention: Crews with a business called Chicago Board Up Services say they’ve boarded up at least a dozen locations around the West Loop, downtown and Daley Plaza and have plans to work on additional businesses weekend. “If you feel you’re in any type of line where you feel there’s going to be a lot of commotion — we’re not pushing it — we’re hoping the city will be comfortable and there wont be no unrest. But if you feel you want your doors boarded, it’s better to have them boarded up than have to wait and replace glass,” said business manager Vicki Fichter.

* Block Club | Activists Fighting Protest Restrictions At Union Park As DNC Legal Battle Comes Down To The Wire: At a press conference Friday morning, Mayor Brandon Johnson said the restrictions aim to ensure the protesters can exercise their First Amendment rights in a safe environment “in an environment that allows their voices to be maximized and heard.” “As far as staging, microphones and all of that, that is being provided. We’re working out the details around porta potties,” Johnson said. “I’m going to make sure that these individuals have everything that they need to make sure that their voices are heard.”


*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | List of officers recommended for firing grows to 50 as process to discipline Chicago cops in the most serious cases remains frozen : The Chicago Police Department concluded nearly two years ago that one of its officers sexually assaulted a woman in the back seat of her car while she was intoxicated and unable to give consent. […] The officer in the assault case was hired in 2019 and is now 28 years old. He has remained on CPD’s payroll, though stripped of his police powers and assigned to desk duty since July 2022. FOP President John Catanzara told the Tribune that the union did not provide any legal assistance to the officer because the alleged conduct was not related to any sort of police action and allegedly occurred while the officer was off duty.

* Sun-Times | COPA releases video of Auburn Gresham police chase that caused severe head injury to man who died weeks later: As officers attempt to handcuff Curry, who is motionless on the ground, a witness off camera can be heard telling the officers “you didn’t have to slam him like that.” One of the officers replies “no, he tripped.” The man replies “He ain’t trip. You pushed him. I watched you.”

* Block Club | Chicago Public Schools Says Teachers Union Proposals Would Lead To $4 Billion Deficit By 2029-30: Granting just 52 of the union’s 700-plus contract proposals would widen the district’s deficit from a projected $509 million next fiscal year, to roughly $3 billion, said Mike Sitkowski, the district’s budget director. That gap would grow by another $1 billion by fiscal year 2030, he said. Deficits are already projected for each of the next five years, without the cost of a new contract, CPS officials have said. In order to balance future budgets, the district will have to find more funding or will make cuts to staff and programs, they said.


* Block Club | On The Cusp Of Chicago’s Strategic Plan Release, Charter Schools Demand More Details: In December, the school board backed a resolution spelling out its intent of breaking with choice and privatization. Charter advocates read privatization as code for charter schools, which are public campuses run by private entities. They have demanded reassurance from the district and the board that the plan won’t be an assault on charters. District officials have stayed mum on details of the plan, which also has caused some anxiety among families at district-run magnet and selective enrollment schools. Officials have said they wanted to first gather community feedback at a series of public meetings and in other settings this past spring.

* Sun-Times | Judge says Ed Burke got 2-year prison sentence for ’significant reasons’: Kendall cited Burke’s age — he’s 80. She said “prison will be more difficult” for him, and she mentioned his health problems. She said Burke “did not obstruct justice” like Cui. “He did not lie to the FBI.” And yes, she said, Burke “served in the military and the police.” The judge also said she documented “just dozens and dozens of good works” that “were not tied to the gravitas of [Burke’s] position,” but rather “acts of kindness and generosity that he did outside of his position as an alderman.” Then, she turned to Cui, ultimately giving him a higher sentence.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Calumet City aldermen skeptical of Mayor Thaddeus Jones plan to use TIF funds to abate property taxes: Jones has pitched a proposal to transfer $2 million from tax increment financing districts to the pockets of some residents. However, some aldermen are skeptical, saying the plan could face legal challenges and do more harm than good for the city’s long-term economic prospects. […] Jones’ plan, which he hopes to pass through the council once he drums up enough support, would transfer 80% of the city’s generated TIF funds to Cook County to offset some residents’ property taxes. An analysis by the Cook County treasurer’s office found Calumet City has the sixth highest municipal tax rate in the county, exceeding 20%.

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Township trustees say they need more information on bills, residents slam bickering by board: Henyard, at Thursday’s township meeting, said she tries to make herself available to trustees if they have questions about how money is spent. “My line is open to any board member sitting here,” she said. […] [Trustee Carmen Carlisle] said she has been contacted by vendors who’ve done work for the township and submitted bills, but that in some instances the supervisor doesn’t include them on the list of bills for the board to review and approve.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Sonya Massey Commission established to address systemic issues in Sangamon County: Sangamon County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter, and State Senator Doris Turner announced on Friday the formation of a citizens’ commission to address systemic issues in law enforcement practices, mental health responses, and community relations. “Since Sonya Massey’s death, I’ve been dedicated to ensuring our community trusts those elected to serve and those called to provide service,” said Senator Turner. “I hope the Sonya Massey Commission honors her life by finding solutions to advance our community.”

* WCIA | Champaign Police Training Institute aims to improve process, involve community: For the Police Training Institute in Champaign, they have a routine cemented in an almost 70-year tradition. Now, they’re looking to make some changes. Since 1955, the Police Training Institute on the University of Illinois’ campus has trained officers from all over the state, focusing not only on physical fitness and tactical skills but also on legal, ethical, and psychological factors of policing.

* The Southern | JALC construction projects look to revitalize and modernize campus: Dr. Kirk Overstreet, president of John A. Logan College, said that while the campus will see its fair share of dust in the short term, the projects will ultimately improve the college’s future outlook. “It would not be my first preference to be doing six projects all at once on campus,” Overstreet said. “But in the long run, it will have a whole new look on campus. It’ll freshen us up, and really bring us up to the 21st century.”

*** National ***

* Illinois Times | Legislating gender: A member of Congress who represents portions of Sangamon County is sponsoring legislation to define, in federal law, what is a male and a female. The move by U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, R-Illinois, stirred consternation among LGBTQ advocates and cheers from those skeptical of the concept of gender fluidity.

* Nieman Lab | “AI reporters” are covering the events of the day in Northwest Arkansas: Each story on the site is bylined by an AI avatar. Together the avatars form a ragtag newsroom of faux beat reporters. “Arlo Artiste” is apparently on the pulse of the arts and culture scene in Northwest Arkansas, “Miles Rythmic” is the designated music critic, and “Sammy Streets” is your bootstrap “street-level reporter.” They are each visualized as a literal robot, most with a microphone in hand.

* The Nation | California’s AI Safety Bill Is a Mask-Off Moment for the Industry: “Does SB 1047…spell the end of the Californian technology industry?” Yann LeCun, the chief AI scientist at Meta and one of the so-called “godfathers” of the artificial intelligence boom, asked in June. LeCun was echoing the panicked reaction of many in the tech community to SB 1047, a bill currently making its way through the California State Legislature. The legislation would create one of the country’s first regulatory regimes specifically designed for AI. SB 1047 passed the state Senate nearly unopposed and is currently awaiting a vote in the state Assembly. But it faces a barrage of attacks from some of Silicon Valley’s most influential players, who have framed it as nothing less than a death knell for the future of technological innovation.

* Atlantic | America Has a Hot-Steel Problem: A basic fact of thermodynamics is coming to haunt every foot of train track in the United States. Heat makes steel expand, moving its molecules farther apart, and as hot days become hotter and more frequent, rail lines are at risk of warping and buckling more often. Any fix must deal with this fundamental truth of physics. Railroads can slow their trains down, which avoids adding more heat. Or they can leave gaps in a rail (or cut them as an emergency measure), which relieves pressure that causes track to bulge but means a potentially bumpier and slower ride. Painting tracks white would help deflect heat, but the paint would need to be reapplied frequently. Adapting to this reality will be expensive, and might ultimately just look as it does now: slow the trains, cut the track, issue a delay.

* AP | Woman charged in brazen plot to extort Elvis Presley’s family and auction off Graceland: Lisa Jeanine Findley, 53, of Kimberling City, falsely claimed Presley’s daughter borrowed $3.8 million from a bogus private lender and had pledged Graceland as collateral for the loan before her death last year, prosecutors said. She then threatened to sell Graceland to the higher bidder if Presley’s family didn’t pay a $2.85 million settlement, according to authorities.

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State Fair roundup

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Times

Counting today, there are four more days of the Illinois State Fair. Have you been yet? It’s not too late, you know, to get a corndog at Vose’s, see a Grandstand show or take that ride on the Sky Glider. Once again, the Grandstand has a great lineup of remaining shows. […]

Chicago rockers The Smashing Pumpkins, led by Billy Corgan, play Friday with country singer Miranda Lambert on Saturday. Crossover artist Shaboozey with Restless Road and Reyna Roads will close the fair Sunday night. Besides the Grandstand shows, there is tons of music at the beer tents and various stages, including the Grand Central Stage. There’ll be plenty of motor racing action there this weekend with the USAC Bettenhausen 100 at 2 p.m. Saturday and the ARCA Menards Series 100 at 1 p.m. Sunday, plus a demolition derby Saturday. Be sure to check out the new attractions this year, including multiple circus performances daily, ice-skating shows, a ninja obstacle course and more.

* WAND

While we may no longer hear the cicadas screeching in central Illinois, the artwork inspired by the billions of cicadas will live on for years to come.

Many entries in various art mediums are on display at the Illinois State Fair, including cicadas in multiple forms. Some entries were judged by art experts from the Illinois State Museum and educators from the museum and Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Those winning entries will be on display until August 18.

The IDNR Director, Natalie Phelps Finnie, says, “The response to this contest far exceeded our expectations for how much interest there would be. I think the double cicada emergence really captured a lot of people’s imaginations.” She adds, “Not only were we thrilled by the volume of entries, we also were elated by the impressive quality of the artwork that talented and creative Illinoisans shared with us.”

Even a high school art teacher got in on the action, winning Best of Show for his ink and illustration piece, “Dawn of the Cicada,” which shows a molted cicada rising to meet the dawn.

* Behold, “Dawn of the Cicada”…

* More fair moments from the app formally known as Twitter…

* WICS

Once again, Illinois State Fair attendees will have the opportunity to visit the popular Piglets on Parade at the Birthing Center.

The Birthing Center, which is sponsored by the Illinois Pork Producers Association (IPPA), allows fairgoers to see newborn piglets up close. […]

Piglets on Parade is located next to the Illinois Department of Agriculture tent just East of the Coliseum and North of the Expo Building.

The Illinois Department of Agriculture has a live feed of piglets.

* WGEM

People who stopped by Illinois State Comptroller Susana Mendoza’s booth Tuesday at the Illinois State Fair in Springfield got to see some special visitors.

Wild Canine Rescue brought several of its dogs available for adoption to the fair. People visiting the Comptroller’s tent could play with the dogs and start the adoption process.

It’s part of the Comptroller’s Critters program that promotes pet adoption throughout the state.

Wild Canine Rescue Founder and President Jill Egizii said it’s her fourth year bringing dogs to the fair. She’s grateful it can help them find their forever home.

* More…

    * WCIA | Final harness races at Illinois State Fair rescheduled due to weather: A cancellation was initially made Tuesday night amid a rainy forecast. Now, state fair organizers say the races are set for Sept. 11 and 12. They added that the first race post time will be 11 a.m. both days. The rescheduling comes as the start time of Thursday night’s Jonas Brothers concert also moves up due to weather.

    * News-Gazette | After more than 70 years, Fisher’s Seten still loves her annual State Fair excursions: The former Rose Denny got hooked on going to the Illinois State Fair in Springfield as a 15-year-old. It was 1954, and she showed horses. Seventy-one years later, she still gets a thrill from going to the fair. Every year. […] Rose, who switched from showing horses to entering items in the food competition until a few years ago, said the state fair is popular because “for the average person, it’s an introduction to agriculture in Illinois.”

    * WICS | Illinois State Police to slide with Abraham Lincoln at State Fair: On Friday, August 16 at 11 a.m., Illinois State Police troopers will join Abraham Lincoln as they hit the bright yellow slopes of the Illinois State Fair Giant Slide. The officers are pleased to offer an excellent security detail as they slide down the iconic structure with Lincoln.

    * SJ-R | Springfield-area ice cream shop’s special sweet treat wins award at Illinois State Fair: Chatham’s own Scoop Du Jour is the winner of the 2024 Golden Abe Fantastic Fair Food Contest, a hotly contested race every year at the Illinois State Fair. The winning item was a fair exclusive: the donut ice cream sandwich which consists of a sprinkle donut with a cookies and cream ice cream scoop wedged in between.

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‘We’ve made a lot of progress but we can’t never stop’ - 1908 Springfield race riot site is now a national monument

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* C-SPAN


* Reuters

President Joe Biden on Friday designated a national monument to commemorate a 1908 race riot in Springfield, Illinois, that left several people dead, hundreds injured and destroyed dozens of Black-owned businesses and homes. […]

A ceremony held on Friday in the Oval Office featured civil rights leaders and community leaders from Springfield, which is also former President Abraham Lincoln’s hometown.

“We’ve made a lot of progress but we can’t never stop,” Biden said during the event, adding that it was important for people to remember what had happened. […]

“The new national monument will tell the story of a horrific attack by a white mob on a Black community that was representative of the racism, intimidation, and violence that Black Americans experienced across the country,” the White House said in a statement.

* NPR

The events in Springfield — the hometown of President Abraham Lincoln — were spurred by the July 1908 murder of a white resident, allegedly at the hands of a Black man. Tensions worsened a month later when another Black man was accused of raping a white woman.

The alleged rape victim later admitted to lying to cover up a consensual affair she was having with a white man.

In August, a white mob of thousands terrorized the city’s 2,500 Black residents. Citizens were attacked and brutalized, and the riots resulted in the arson of dozens of Black-owned homes and businesses. Parts of the rampage took place just a few blocks from Lincoln’s family home. […]

“One of the really shocking things about the well-publicized Springfield race riot — and its association with Abraham Lincoln — was that the North had a race problem,” Senechal de la Roche told NPR in 2008.

The crimes against the city’s Black residents so horrified Black people across the country that it inspired the formation of the NAACP, which remains in existence today.

* An excerpt of the 2008 story from NPR

As many as 1,000 people marched to the black business district and destroyed and looted virtually every black business downtown. The crowd moved to a nearby, very large, working-class and poor African-American neighborhood, where most blacks had either hidden themselves or left town.

The white mob “went from one end to the other looting homes, damaging homes and ultimately setting them on fire. By the time they were through, they’d displaced at least 40 families,” Senechal de la Roche says. The state militia arrived and found the mob preparing to lynch a black barber.

On the second day of rioting, the rioters began targeting high-status African-Americans. The mob’s first target was an 80-year-old retired cobbler and real estate dealer named William Donnegan. An excerpt from In Lincoln’s Shadow describes the crowd’s horrific actions:

The old man was dragged outside to the front yard and beaten with bricks torn up from the sidewalk. One rioter produced a razor and cut Donnegan’s throat. Dragging the dying man to the street, the rioters tied a small cotton clothesline around his neck and tried to hoist him to the limb of a small maple tree in front of the school across the street. When the militia and police arrived, most of the crowd had already fled, and the authorities could do nothing but cut William Donnegan down and carry him off.

Senechal de la Roche says Springfield residents resorted to this level of violence to avenge the two alleged victims and, because the “largely working-class rioters were expressing resentment over visible black success and influence in the community.”

* Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum…

* WAND

The monument will be located at the uncovered site of the race riot. The announcement came after several actions by community members and organizations to push for national recognition of the site.

“It’s important to educate the current generation as well as future generations, and this monument will stand alongside Lincoln and everything about Lincoln,” said Ken Page, President of the Springfield chapter of the ACLU and member of the 1908 Race Riot Monument Committee. “So maybe Springfield will eventually live up to Lincoln’s legacy of equality, justice, and all those other things.”

The monument will have national impacts as well, as it is the first time the site of a lynching has been memorialized, according to Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski (IL-13). She says it’s important that we recognize the bad parts of our history.

“We’re going to honor our history, which is often a complicated history, a dark history, but that we’re going to honor it and tell it truthfully, and we’re going to look forward, and that we have a lot of work to do,” said Budzinski. “We must tell the story, tell the truth, tell the history of our community. And again, it’s about the progress that we still need to make.”

…Adding… Sen. Tammy Duckworth…

U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) today joined President Joe Biden in the Oval Office for the President’s signing ceremony to officially declare the 1908 Springfield Race Riot Site as a national monument to be managed by the U.S. National Park Service through an Antiquities Act proclamation. Duckworth has been a steadfast leader in securing national monument recognition for the 1908 Springfield Race Riot Site, a critical event in American history that spurred the creation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). With less than a quarter of National Parks devoted to recognizing the histories of diverse peoples and cultures, designating the 1908 Race Riot Site a national monument will help guarantee that public lands reflect the diversity of our country.

“The 1908 Springfield Race Riot site is of extraordinary cultural and historical importance to our state and to this country—a searing, horrific incident that galvanized the creation of the NAACP,” Duckworth said. “I’ve been working for years to designate this site as a national monument to help ensure the painful lessons learned here will not be lost for the generations of Americans to come. I’m proud that President Biden took action to help ensure this history is properly honored and making our national parks better reflect our nation’s people and stories.”

116 years ago this week, a violent mob of white residents murdered at least six Black Americans, burned down Black homes and businesses and attacked hundreds of residents for no other reason than the color of their skin. Duckworth began calling for national monument recognition in 2018, first leading the Springfield 1908 Race Riot National Monument Act, with U.S Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), in 2019 and again in 2021. Last year they re-introduced the legislation, which was reported favorably out of committee, with U.S. Representative Nikki Budzinski (D-IL-13) introducing companion legislation in the House.

During an excavation as part of the Springfield High Speed Rail project, foundations and artifacts from homes destroyed during the riot were uncovered. An agreement with community members was reached in 2018 to excavate the remains and designate the uncovered site a memorial.

Duckworth has made elevating disenfranchised communities and their stories one of her main priorities while in Congress. Last year, after continued efforts from Duckworth, the Biden Administration designated the church that held Emmett Till’s pivotal open-casket wake in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood as a national monument. Duckworth’s leadership was critical in the site designation, originally introducing the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley, and Roberts Temple National Historic Site Act in 2021 and again in 2023.

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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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Rep. Harper complains her district is being short-changed by cannabis equity implementation

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Wednesday

Today, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) announced the recipients of $5.5 million in loans through Round II of the Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program. Through the program, 23 qualified, licensed social equity dispensaries are receiving $240,000 Direct Forgivable Loans (DFL) financed by the State of Illinois.

“Since day one, my administration has put equity at the forefront of building the most accessible cannabis industry in the nation,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “With the Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program, we’re giving social equity licensees the resources they need to grow their businesses - righting decades of injustice while providing opportunities for economic success in our state’s historically disinvested communities.”

After providing approximately $22 million through Round I of the Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program to craft growers, infusers, and transporters, DCEO opened Round II for adult-use dispensaries. Loan recipients are social equity Conditional and Adult Use Dispensing Organizations licensed by the Illinois Department of Finance and Professional Regulation (IDFPR). This round of funding was open to dispensaries who received licenses prior to the July 2023 dispensary license lottery. […]

“Social equity dispensaries have a real opportunity to succeed in our state by benefitting from this Direct Forgivable Loan program,” said Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford (D-Chicago). “The State of Illinois is committed to reducing barriers to entry into the cannabis industry and supporting communities that have historically suffered from disinvestment.”

“Illinois is paving the way by prioritizing equity through its cannabis industry loan programs,” said Representative La Shawn Ford (D-Chicago). “The latest round of the Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program is providing critical support to social equity dispensaries across Illinois.”

* Today from Rep. Harper…

State Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, issued the following statement after Gov. J.B. Pritzker, alongside the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, awarded $5.5 million in Direct Forgivable Loans (DFL) to 23 licensed social equity dispensaries as part of the ongoing Cannabis Social Equity Loan Program.

“Opportunity has been a long time coming for cannabis social equity license holders throughout Illinois. Though I am pleased to see the state following through on its word to assist social equity license holders—who have been waiting for this help—we still have a long way to go in ensuring true social and economic equity in the medical, recreational and hemp industries.

“Ensuring that communities devastated for generations by the failed war on drugs can now be full partners and beneficiaries in the vibrant and expanding cannabis and hemp industry is crucial, and failure to do so would undermine one of the chief benefits for which advocates and stakeholders have fought and sacrificed.

“For example, my district is still waiting to see licenses, dispensaries as well as already-approved grant money from programs which are fueled by cannabis tax revenue.

“Passing the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act and ensuring that it included measures to promote an equitable implementation required many days and weeks of tireless work by advocates, stakeholders and by my colleagues and I. That’s why I look forward to continued work with my colleagues in the General Assembly to ensure the state keeps its promises to these communities when it comes to equity in the cannabis industry and in the agriculture industry overall.”

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Terryl and Becky, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Your moment of zen

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel and I took the pontoon boat for a ride last night. While I was putting the boat away, she let Oscar out of the house and he waited for me on the back deck

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DNC Chicago coverage roundup

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

Police Superintendent Larry Snelling said this week the department won’t tolerate “violent actors” who are “committing acts of vandalism, violent attacks against the police, against each other, against our citizens.”

“The minute that starts, we have to put an end to it,” Snelling said. “When people become comfortable committing acts of violence and vandalism, that’s when it turns into a riot.”

Police can use batons, but CPD policy deems striking a head or neck with one to be deadly force and requires documentation justifying it.

CPD also allows police to use pepper spray, even on people who are not actively resisting cops. But this policy is out of sync with “national standards,” according to Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg.

The use of force should be “surgically focused on those who are attempting … to trigger chaos and mob action,” said Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson, who preceded Witzburg as IG.

* Chicago Reader

Civil rights advocates and oversight reports pointed to confusing policies, leadership failures, and poor compliance with existing rules as key elements behind the department’s chaotic and often brutal response. Police were caught on video covering their identification, using slurs, and beating demonstrators with batons. Their behavior generated hundreds of civilian complaints and was reflective of the CPD’s history of meeting periods of protest and civil disobedience with violence.

Experts warn the CPD is replicating many of those same conditions as it changes key policies and walks back protections for protesters in the run-up to the Democratic National Convention (DNC), where the city expects widespread demonstrations. […]

The CPD is also under fire for failing to provide arrestees with prompt access to a phone call and lawyer. In addition to state law, both are required by separate consent decree that emerged out of the mistreatment of protesters arrested in 2020.

* NBC’s senior national political reporter

* Washington Post

Vice President Kamala Harris aims to share the campaign trail vibes with the public in Chicago next week with free manicures, friendship bracelet making and campaign training at the city’s convention center.

The daytime programing, dubbed “DemPalooza” by party bosses, will take place at the McCormick Place convention center, about five miles from the United Center, where more than 4,000 credentialed delegates will gather Monday through Thursday for nightly televised celebrations of their presidential ticket. No credential is required to pass through the security perimeter at the convention center, party officials said. […]

DemPalooza will take place alongside the regularly scheduled meetings of 33 Democratic Party caucuses and councils, events that are expected to draw elected speakers. Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) are scheduled to address different groups at the convention center, along with the governors of Maryland, New Mexico and Massachusetts. Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), the youngest member of Congress, will stop by, as will Angela D. Alsobrooks, the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in Maryland, among others.

Unlike the arena events, which are open only to those with credentials, the off-site events are free and open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. There will be a space for live podcast tapings and other performances, the DNC announced.

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Here’s a look at protests planned during Chicago’s DNC: There’s also the “city-designated speaker platform” set up in Park 578, 1919 W. Maypole Ave., open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Thursday this week. The Secret Service, in cooperation with law enforcement agencies, has established security perimeters around McCormick Place, where party officials will meet during the day, and around the United Center.

    * Semafor | Here come the Democratic National Convention protests: Protest organizers in Chicago expect between 30,000 and 40,000 people to join Monday’s march on the Democratic National Convention, and are asking the city for a permit that would get them closer to the event itself. “We’re going to march regardless, but we’re fighting for the best route possible,” said Faayani Aboma Mijana, a spokesperson for the March on the DNC coalition. “We’ve got our park permit, but the City has refused to allow us to use port-a-potties, a stage, and a sound system.”

    * Sun-Times | Poor People’s Army plans to march to ‘front doors’ of the DNC next week — but not ‘to cause a ruckus’: The Poor People’s Army was granted a permit to march during the DNC on a technicality. The city failed to respond to the group’s application within its own 10-day deadline. Its march kicks off at 4 p.m. Monday from the National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts, 3015 W. Division St., in Humboldt Park. The 1.5-mile march will head east on Division Street and then south on Western Avenue.

    * Crain’s | Why the DNC could be a bust for Chicago restaurants: “We’re not seeing much of a change for our normal business,” said Jim Lasky, co-owner of Gold Coast steakhouse Maple & Ash. Reservations have remained relatively steady, he thinks, because DNC events are scheduled at night during Maple & Ash’s regular dinner hours. […] Lasky is one of many local owners who say the convention is not shaping up to be the business driver they initially thought. Other operators in River North, the Fulton Market District and the Loop said their reservations during DNC week are either on par with or slightly lower than last year during the same period.

    * Tribune | As the DNC looms, how will Mayor Brandon Johnson sell Chicago — and himself?: Johnson is slated to speak Monday evening at the made-for-TV event and plans to underscore the host city’s successes and significance in the Democratic Party, per sources close to the mayor. […] Monday evening will likely be the most visible moment Johnson gets inside the United Center, where dozens of speakers will be trotted out over four days to cheer on Vice President Kamala Harris’ nomination. For his part, the mayor intends to seize the opportunity to pitch Chicago to party bigwigs, out-of-town politicos, business titans, everyday voters, naysayers and other observers — while connecting the city’s liberal values to Harris’ candidacy, per his political team.

    * WTTW | Illinois Democratic Party Chair on the DNC: ‘There’s Just So Much at Stake Right Now’: “This is an opportunity for us as a party,” [Rep. Lisa Hernandez] said. “… We have targeted in particular, two congressional districts, the 13th and the 17th, which is Nikki Budzinski, Eric Sorensen, and this is an opportunity within those districts, if there is any other targeted districts, from bottom ballot all the way up, to make sure that people are coming out to vote in this ticket is a way to use, for all races of all government levels. So really taking advantage of that moment.”

    * ABC Chicago | DNC volunteer appreciation rally thrown at Wrigley Field; Gov. Pritzker, Lt. Gov. Stratton speak: “Our volunteers ages range from 16 to 102,” said JD Van Slyke, chairperson of the Chicago 2024 Host Committee. “I’m going to be at Chicago Midway greeting the VIPs coming in, greeting them off the airplanes,” said volunteer Crystal Flynn. “I’m going to be very proud.”


    * WGN | 12,000 volunteers aged 16 to 100 will help with Democratic National Convention: At Thursday’s party, volunteers will have the opportunity to take photos with the 2016 World Series trophy, stand on home plate, and hear from Gov. JB Pritzker and Cubs co-owner Laura Ricketts. Another welcome party for delegate and media will be held Saturday and Sunday at Navy Pier.

    * Tribune | The Rev. Jesse Jackson’s half-century at the DNC: Landmark speeches and presidential bids helped reshape a party: “Reverend Jesse Jackson paved the way for many of us,” said convention Chair Minyon Moore in an email. A Chicago native, Moore’s extensive political resume includes work on Jackson’s 1988 presidential campaign. “He is a giant in the Civil Rights Movement and embodies the spirit of the more perfect union we strive toward everyday. The Reverend’s legacy isn’t just cemented in the work he’s done, it lives and breathes in each of the lives that he has touched, including mine. His invaluable work has played a key role in propelling us to this historic moment, and his legacy will be reflected in the faces and stories we see on the convention stage.”

    * Axios | The Dems ditching Chicago: The Senate’s three most vulnerable Democrats are skipping next week’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago — an effort to fence their campaigns off from the top of the ticket. Sens. Sherrod Brown (Ohio), Jon Tester (Mont.) and Jacky Rosen (Nev.) all plan to campaign back home instead, Axios has learned.

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Open thread

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Banks file lawsuit challenging Illinois credit card fee law. Tribune

    - A coalition of banking groups on Thursday filed a federal lawsuit challenging a new Illinois law that blocks banks and credit card companies from charging retailers a small fee on taxes and tips.
    - Illinois earlier this year became the first state in the nation to enact such a law, prompting outrage and an oppositional ad campaign backed by some of the largest financial institutions in the country.
    - The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago, argues the law should not be enacted in part because it is preempted by federal law for national banks. Other existing laws say it shouldn’t be applied to Illinois or out-of-state banks, the complaint argues.

Click here to view the lawsuit.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* SJ-R | Days of continued licensing delays in Illinois could be coming to an end: With goals to modernize and streamline an archaic system, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation recently announced it had reached an agreement to secure a new professional online licensing system. The state agency, in charge of licensing for health care, occupational professionals and more than 100 other professions, will partner with NIC Licensing Solutions, LLC to create the new online system. The $9 million investment will be paid over the next three years, IDFPR said in a news release.

* Tribune | Parking meter payoff for NASCAR cost Chicago $600K over two years: Parking spot closures tied to the race cost Chicago $348,306 in 2023 and another $273,665 in 2024, a Tribune records request revealed. The over $600,000 in so-called true-up costs covered by the city and owed to the parking meter system’s private owner further complicates the cost-benefit analysis of the race as the city and racing authority weigh its long-term future.

* Crain’s | Another Illinois university stares down a huge deficit: Northern Illinois University reported a $31.8 million deficit for fiscal year 2024 and now faculty and staff brace for what’s next as the school year approaches. “Who is not going to be scared about that big of a deficit?” said Kerry Ferris, a member of the tenure-track faculty union who previously served as the unit president. “There is some anxiety among the faculty and probably also among the students about how the school will reduce that deficit.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Illinois bans legacy admissions at public universities: Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a law banning legacy admissions at state universities and colleges, making Illinois the most recent state to pass legislation prohibiting the admissions policy. The law capitalizes on recent backlash against the preferential treatment of legacy admissions, a movement that picked up momentum following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down the use of race as a factor in university admissions.

*** Republican Day ***

* SJ-R | Illinois Republicans see Harris’ polling surge as ‘honeymoon period’ that’s destined to end: But Republicans at the fair insisted Harris’ surge in popularity will be short-lived. Among them was the keynote speaker at the rally, Matthew Whitaker, an Iowa native who served briefly as acting attorney general during the first Trump administration. “We’re in a honeymoon period with Kamala Harris,” Whitaker said. “The left is so excited that they have a candidate with a pulse. That’s a fairly low bar. I mean, we have a president in Donald Trump that not only has a pulse, he has a fire inside of him to save this country.”

* Tribune | Illinois GOP urges focus on policies, not personalities during party’s day at State Fair: “So, taxes, cost of living, crime, corruption. The most corrupt state in the nation,” Illinois Senate Republican leader John Curran of Downers Grove said in an interview before the GOP’s afternoon programming at the state fairgrounds. “This is what Gov. Pritzker’s Democratic allies have brought to Illinois.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Republicans see Harris’ polling surge as ‘honeymoon period’ that’s destined to end: Several people attending the Republican Day festivities at the fair acknowledged the dynamics of the 2024 race have changed markedly since the GOP convention. At that time, former President Donald Trump was leading in most national polls and in key battleground states, and Republicans were euphoric after he survived an assassination attempt just two days earlier. Meanwhile, many Democrats were openly questioning whether their presumptive nominee, 81-year-old President Joe Biden, was capable of serving another term in light of his weak debate performance against Trump in June.

* Capitol News Illinois | Notes & Quotes: Illinois GOP needs ‘a little mothering’ as new chair walks familiar Trump tightrope: Kathy Salvi, the GOP’s new chair, took over position last month after former chair Don Tracy resigned. The mother of six and unsuccessful candidate for U.S. Senate in 2022 once again referred to the ILGOP as her “165-year-old seventh child.” […] She takes over a GOP that holds no statewide elected offices and is relegated to superminorities in each chamber of the General Assembly. Her message has been one of healing from the party infighting cited in her predecessor’s resignation letter.

* Sun-Times | Republicans admit ‘we got lazy’ in blue Illinois — but vow at State Fair to boost GOP turnout: Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, argued the party could snag several seats back from Democrats in November. But first, she said, Republicans need to acknowledge how they’ve ceded control to Democrats in recent years. “We are dealing with a party who wants to destroy small business, hurt our most vulnerable and make families feel that they need to be reliant on government for everything,” McCombie said of Democrats. “How did they do that? We let them. We got lazy. We believed the lie that our voice and our vote does not matter, but it matters.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor says he wants a CPS leader who will fight for more funding as fate of current CEO hangs in the balance: A day after the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ reported that plans are afoot to push out Chicago schools chief Pedro Martinez, Mayor Brandon Johnson stressed that he wants a leader who will fight for more funding for the school district so it can hire more staff, such as librarians and art and music teachers. The mayor declined to comment specifically on Martinez, calling it a “personnel issue.” Johnson credited Martinez with implementing some of his agenda, including a more equitable formula to distribute money to schools.

* Sun-Times | Under pressure from city’s watchdog, CPD reopens probe of cop who wore extremist symbol during racial justice protest: Officer Kyle Mingari was on duty and assigned to the protest when he was photographed wearing a face mask bearing the logo of the Three Percenters, a group allied with the anti-government militia movement. […] As the police department’s Bureau of Internal Affairs was investigating Mingari, reputed Three Percenters were charged in both the riot at the U.S. Capitol in January 2021 and a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s deadbeat migrant landlords get millions from City Hall despite tax troubles, other government debts: Remo Polselli went to prison for cheating on his federal taxes and then has had more tax problems with the IRS. Yet City Hall has spent $28 million to shelter migrants at two buildings owned by the Michigan landlord, the Sun-Times found. He’s one of two shelter landlords getting tax money despite owing the government.

* Sun-Times | Traffic may ‘grind to a halt’ after transit COVID-19 grants run out, RTA warns: Commuters could be spending a lot more time in cars starting in 2026 when the federal COVID-19 dollars propping up Chicago-area transit agencies run dry, according to a dire assessment from the Regional Transportation Authority. “The dense North Side of the city … is likely going to grind to a halt because more people [will] rely on cars to make trips,” the RTA’s program manager Peter Kersten said Thursday at the agency’s board meeting.

* Tribune | Dearborn Homes residents say their buildings are in disrepair; CHA says it is fixing the issues: Residents said at a news conference that tenants often get stuck in their units, unable to get groceries and attend doctor appointments, because the elevators are consistently broken. They also spoke about a rat infestation at the development, overflowing and inaccessible trash bins and safety concerns due to crime. […] The concerns from housing advocates and public housing tenants Thursday echo long-standing complaints from residents and their supporters for CHA to improve conditions at its properties and create more housing, as well as enduring calls for the agency’s CEO to step down or be fired by Mayor Brandon Johnson. Meanwhile, CHA said it is addressing the issues at Dearborn Homes.

* Tribune | CTA Red Line extension price tag jumps as project takes a major step forward: The contract also offers a window into how the costs of the massive project are shaping up. The latest estimates put the project at $4.8 billion before financing costs, about $1.16 billion over earlier estimates. Some of the project costs are expected to be covered by a large federal grant, and Chicago aldermen previously approved a special tax district that enabled the grant and will raise additional money. But the CTA wasn’t awarded as much federal funding as the agency initially sought, and will have to finance significantly more through bonds than initially planned.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Illinois comptroller stops some state payouts to Dolton, threatens fines: Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza said Thursday she is immediately suspending what are called “offset” fund payments to Dolton for the village’s failure to turn over annual financial reports to her office. The money this year is on pace to total $135,000, and Mendoza said she is also threatening fines if Dolton doesn’t file the required reports. Those fines could total $78,600.

* Daily Herald | Elgin officials suspect illegal dumping caused fuel slicks on Fox River: [Elgin Fire Chief Robb Cagann] said authorities are investigating, but it will be a challenge, saying the source could be someone dumping in the middle of the night or pouring something down a floor drain in the vicinity. “This is not going to end tomorrow,” he said. “If the source is stopped, then we still have residual all over the system in those pipes. And the only way for that to get out is over time as it flushes out with the rainwater.”

* Daily Herald | After nurse scandal, District 25 implements new rules for how students get medication: Arlington Heights Elementary District 25 officials announced new procedures for how medication will be administered during the school day, after a nurse was fired for dispensing the wrong meds to students. Namely, prescription controlled substances that are dropped off at schools by parents must be verified not only by the school nurse, but by a witness.

* Daily Herald | How police are using virtual training to handle real-world challenges: The department’s new Operator XR System will transform how the department prepares its officers, Chief Tom Stefanson said, especially when it comes to meeting state requirements for de-escalation training, or responding to active-shooter situations. To use the system, officers wear a VR headset that immerses them in a 360-degree environment — unlike older training simulations where they instead faced a large display screen.

*** Downstate ***

* NBC Chicago | Years-old attendance record broken at Illinois State Fair thanks to one artist: According to organizers, the record was previously set in 2011, when Jason Aldean packed 15,329 seats at the annual summer event. Aldean was followed by Florida Georgia Line, with 15,204 in 2014 and Reba McEntire with 14,823 in 2019. But in 2024, a new genre took the top spot as Lil Wayne brought 15,427 people to the fair Wednesday.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford leaders object to county solar farm proposal. Here’s why: At Monday’s Code and Regulation Committee meeting, Rockford City Council members voted unanimously to file a legal objection against the proposed 5-megawatt solar farm north of Rote Road. The solar farm would stand in the way of the city’s long-term land use and annexation goals as outlined in the city’s 2024 Comprehensive Plan, argued Scott Capovilla, the city’s planning and zoning manager.

* Daily Herald | Stein out, Bocek, Richards in for Buffalo Grove trustee race: Buffalo Grove Trustee Andrew Stein said he will not run for re-election. Meanwhile, Kevin Richards, vice chair of the village’s planning and zoning commission, said he is running for a two-year seat on the board, to fill out the unexpired term of Gregory Pike. Pike stepped down and was replaced by Denice Bocek.

* SJ-R | Chatham Township supervisor appointed to county board seat, will run in special election: The supervisor of Chatham Township was selected to serve on the Sangamon County Board. Justin Davsko, a Republican, will fill the District 26 seat vacated when John H. O’Neill III died on July 6. O’Neill served on the board 22 years.

* Rockford Register Star | Five fun facts about that giant Hard Rock Casino Rockford guitar: The giant marquee guitar is a replica of Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Nielsen’s famous checkerboard Hamer electric guitar. A similar checkerboard Hamer 1978 Explorer guitar he used as a backup instrument was on display at the temporary casino. Although the Cheap Trick rocker is known for sometimes using a five-neck custom job, the replica guitar is more traditional looking.

* WCIA | Springfield man reaches finals for national mullet competition: Here’s how to vote: Patrick Sosman started growing his mullet hairdo half-a-decade ago when he became a Twitch streamer. He said he wanted to stand out from the crowd. According to Sosman’s contestant profile, he believes the mullet “should be the official haircut of the USA,” and that “there is nothing more American than a mullet.”

*** National ***

* Herald-Tribune | New College of Florida tosses hundreds of library books, empties gender diversity library: A dumpster in the parking lot of Jane Bancroft Cook Library on the campus of New College overflowed with books and collections from the now-defunct Gender and Diversity Center on Tuesday afternoon. Video captured in the afternoon showed a vehicle driving away with the books before students were notified. In the past, students were given an opportunity to purchase books that were leaving the college’s library collection. Some discarded books included “Nine and Counting: The Women of the Senate”, “The War of the Worlds” and “When I Knew,” which is a collection of stories from LGBTQ+ people recounting when they knew they were gay. Several books from the GDC were retrieved by local activists from the SEE Alliance and a few students before they could be taken for disposal.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated x3)

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Aug 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Lil Wayne concert set State Fair attendance record

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wow…

Lil Wayne brought big numbers to the Illinois State Fair Grandstand Wednesday night.

Illinois State Fair officials announced that 15,427 people attended the show, surpassing previous records set in 2011.

The top ticket seller was previously Jason Aldean who packed 15,329 seats in 2011, followed by Florida Georgia Line in 2014 with 15,204 tickets sold. Reba McEntire sold 14,823 in 2019 and Hootie and the Blowfish round out the top five record holders with 13,956 tickets sold in 1995.

“The Illinois State Fair brings people together,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Yesterday, our naturalization ceremony welcomed nearly 200 new citizens from 49 countries. That night, Lil Wayne smashed concert attendance records. Both events provided opportunities for people of all backgrounds, faiths and musical tastes to come together and celebrate our differences as well as our similarities.”

“Our team worked hard to ensure something for everyone at the Grandstand, and Lil Wayne is a rap legend,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “To break the previous attendance records underscores the importance of a diverse lineup at the Illinois State Fair.”

Grandstand shows continue through Sunday with the Jonas Brothers tonight, Smashing Pumpkins Friday night, Miranda Lambert Saturday night and Shaboozey closes out the fair Sunday night. Concert tickets are still available online at ticketmaster.com or at the Grandstand box office.

Jerry’s really hitting his stride over there.

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Trade groups representing banks and credit unions are suing the state of Illinois over a new law that would exempt state taxes and tips from the interchange fees charged by credit-card processors.

Bankers were surprised by the law, which emerged at the 11th hour of this year’s budget session in Springfield. Lawmakers decided to reduce the interchange fees, largely paid by merchants, on credit- and debit-card transactions as a way to soften the blow of a new law that would reduce the amount of money that merchants are paid for collecting state sales taxes.

Bankers, credit-card companies and airlines such as United (who rely heavily on the profits they make from credit-card partnerships) opposed the law from the outset.

Now, they’ve gone to federal court to stop the law, which is the first of its kind in the nation. Among the plaintiffs are the American Bankers Association, the Illinois Bankers Association, America’s Credit Unions and the Illinois Credit Union League. They are bringing the case on behalf of some of the largest credit-card processors and issuers, such as JP Morgan Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo, Mastercard and Visa.

…Adding… The Illinois Retail Merchants Association…

The Illinois Retail Merchants Association (IRMA) released the following statement regarding a lawsuit filed today challenging the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, which was enacted as part of the FY2025 state budget:

“This lawsuit was expected, and it’s no surprise credit card companies would do all they can to undermine this law and maintain their ability to unilaterally impose exorbitant processing fees on workers’ tips and taxes on consumer purchases,” said Rob Karr, president and CEO, Illinois Retail Merchants Association. “We once again applaud Gov. JB Pritzker and legislators for their support of the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, which would provide tangible relief to Illinois workers, families, and retailers of all sizes and types by limiting the fees financial institutions can charge on the sales and excise tax and tips portion of transactions.”

* Scenes from Republican Day…

*** DNC ***

* Sun-Times | Watch party for Kamala Harris’ Democratic convention acceptance speech planned at Soldier Field: GoChiLife, a nonprofit that aims to build partnerships to “showcase the best of Chicago,” is planning a watch party at Soldier Field for community members, a spokesperson said. The event will be Aug. 22 starting at 7 p.m., and include a live viewing of Harris’ acceptance speech. Hip-hop artist Tobe Nwigwe will take the stage at 10 p.m. as the night’s headlining entertainment act.

* Tribune | The DNC starts next week in Chicago. Here’s what to know.: Harris, Biden’s vice president, has already been nominated in an online roll-call of delegates to be the Democratic nominee, so there won’t be a formal, official vote to nominate her at the convention. Instead there will be a ceremonial roll call, speeches from party leaders and up-and-comers, and an introduction of Harris’ recently announced running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. It’ll be a televised rally of support to build on Harris’ fundraising and polling momentum from the past month.



* Sun-Times | ‘Midwest nice’ cartoonist for The New Yorker is ready for Chicago and the DNC: Four a.m. is a productive hour for cartoonist Paul Noth. Whether he’s awake and wired or asleep and lost in dreams, some ineffable magic unfolds for him in the blurry hours that straddle late night and early morning. Noth, 51, found himself wrestling with an idea after watching Donald Trump’s speech at the Republican National Convention in July. After tuning in for the better part of an hour, Noth “stopped because that speech was just endless,” says Noth, who lives in South Milwaukee. “Then, I found myself waking up at 4 in the morning, and I was, like, ‘I gotta draw that.’ ”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Ex-assistant state’s attorney charged with $100k bogus overtime scheme now works as prosecutor in Idaho: Ex-assistant state’s attorney Ashley Moore appeared on Zoom as the three faced their first court hearing on charges stemming from the alleged two-year scheme. Officer Jason Arroyo, 40, and Detective Edis Skrgic, 35, each face two counts of theft from a government entity and two counts of official misconduct for overtime collected between May 2019 and August 2021.

* Block Club | Rogers Park Tenants Forced Out By Big Rent Hike As Area Faces ‘Heartbreaking’ Housing Crisis: After a classic Rogers Park courtyard building was sold this year, tenants were given rent hikes that even the new landlord admitted were “steep.” It’s a textbook example of how Chicago has landed in a housing affordability crisis, experts say.

* Block Club | South Shore Line Exploring Safety Improvements In Hegewisch After Young Journalist Killed By Train: The station’s pedestrian crossings do not feature signals, sounds, automatic gates or other forms of “active warnings.” That kind of protection would have better protected Grace Bentkowski as she attempted to leave the station, her father said. “I don’t understand why, at these at-grade crossings, there’s no type of warning system,” he said. “People could say it’s government red tape, it’s this and that — whatever. We’re looking for safety at these types of crossings, so no one else has to go through this.”

* Sun-Times | Barnes & Noble delays Wicker Park store opening to October: Barnes & Noble has pushed back the launch of its new Wicker Park bookstore inside the historic Noel State Bank building to Oct. 30. It’s at least the second time the opening has been pushed back. The store was expected to open Sept. 4. “The delays have been caused by unforeseen site conditions and some permitting issues,” Janine Flanagan, Barnes & Noble’s vice president of store planning and design, said in an emailed statement. “We believe we are on track now for a 10/30 opening.”

* Block Club | Riot Fest Announces New Chicago Schedule For Douglass Park: In the updated schedule, the days of the performers were not expected to change, just some of the show times, Riot Fest said on social media yesterday. While headliners haven’t changed, post-hardcore band Drug Church did move from Friday to Saturday. Riot Fest said it had “literally just found out” about the move on X. Fall Out Boy takes the stage 8:15 p.m. Friday, Pavement and Beck are on at 7:40 and 8:45 p.m. respectively on Saturday, and Slayer performs 8:15 p.m. Sunday. Fall Out Boy, Beck and Slayer will all be on the Cabaret Metro stage, and Pavement will be on the AAA stage.

* NBC Chicago | Bug bites in Chicago area might actually be from mites thanks to 2024 cicada invasion: An uptick in reports of itchy bites and rashes in the Chicago area could be related to a surge in mite populations in cicada egg nests laid during the historic 2024 emergence that saw billions of cicadas emerge at one time, experts said.

* Sun-Times | White Sox’ Luis Robert says he was so frustrated he thought, ‘I’m quitting’: Luis Robert Jr. says the trade-deadline chatter didn’t bother him. And grinding back from his strained hip flexor didn’t affect his hitting. For him, the 2024 season is the year of the fall and the flop. With Robert felled by the injury seven games into the season when a weak lineup desperately needed him, the White Sox got off to a 3-22 start. And flopped when he returned. The 2023 All-Star center fielder and Home Run Derby participant wasn’t hitting his weight entering the Sox’ game against the Yankees on Wednesday at Guaranteed Rate Field.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Fentanyl test strip bill proposed by Naperville college student signed into law: A year ago, Lizzie Patterson was developing a bill that would help tackle the opioid crisis. Last week, the product of the Naperville North High School graduate’s work was officially made a law. Gov. J.B. Pritzker Friday signed Senate Bill 3350 into law, which aims to expand access to fentanyl test strips. It goes into effect Jan. 1, 2025. Patterson, speaking by phone Monday as she prepared to start her second year at the University of South Carolina, said seeing the legislation receive a signature from the governor is “surreal.”

* Daily Herald | ‘It’s very unique’: Lake County forest preserves to buy and protect sensitive rookery property near Antioch: The largest heron and egret rookery in Lake County will become a conservation preserve under forest preserve control. Lake County Forest Preserve District commissioners on Wednesday agreed to buy about 41 acres on the east side of Grass Lake Road near Antioch for $361,000. The site will not be developed because of nesting birds and other sensitive ecological features.

* Naperville Sun | What’s Naperville good for? New rankings cite everything from active retirees to remote working to house buying: Naperville has once again found itself on a handful of 2024 best-of lists lauding destinations across the country for attributes big and small. Namely, Naperville has been named among the best cities for remote workers by online platform LawnStarter; one of the top locations nationwide for active retirees according to online media company MarketBeat; one of the best cities to buy a house in America in 2024 by Niche; and among the nation’s 15 safest suburbs by SmartAsset, a personal finance website.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Big events at Illinois State Fair emphasize state’s own products: There are still plenty of big events taking place at the Illinois State Fair, and many of them are looking to highlight Illinois products.

* WCIA | Former assistant principal files suit against Champaign school district: Rebecca Ramey, former Assistant Principal for Booker T. Washington STEM Academy, filed the lawsuit against the Unit 4 School District on Aug. 13 with the U.S. District Court in Urbana, according to documents obtained by WCIA. In the documents, Ramey claimed she was discriminated and retaliated against due to her sexual orientation and marital status. Ramey’s wife — Diana Kistler, a teacher at BTW — was among the teachers vocal about the need for safety after two groups of children exchanged gunfire near the school in September 2023. Kistler publicly criticized how district leadership handled the situation.

  21 Comments      


Comptroller will stop sending “offset” payments to Dolton

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Comptroller Susana Mendoza…

Illinois State Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza is immediately suspending all “offset” funds to the Village of Dolton. “Offsets” refers to money collected from state payments our office withholds from people who owe traffic tickets or other money to municipalities such as Dolton.

This is because for about two years now, the administration of Mayor Tiffany Henyard has willfully refused to turn over the annual reports all municipalities are required to file with the Illinois Office of Comptroller, including an annual financial report, a financial audit, and three Tax Increment Financing District (TIF) reports.

“When municipalities around Illinois are having legitimate problems filing their annual reports with us, based on staffing or other issues, we earnestly work with them to get them into compliance,” Comptroller Mendoza said. “Dolton is different. The Mayor’s office has refused to communicate with us or address the problem. If Mayor Henyard refuses to follow state law, my office will use the tools at our disposal to safeguard the interests of Dolton’s citizens.”

Our office has been notifying the village of this delinquency over the past two years.

Village Clerk Allison Key emailed our office: “As Village Clerk, I have been unable to reply to FOIAs because the Village Administrator, Keith Freeman, has instructed department heads not to reply to any FOIA request coming from me. Therefore, I am unable to get information requested. My office doesn’t maintain all files for the village. He has illegally removed me as FOIA officer without board of trustees’ knowledge or vote of approval. He has continued to interfere with the FOIA process for the past 2 years.”

Our office advised Clerk Key that she should contact the Attorney General Public Access Counselor who is responsible for FOIA violation investigations. https://www.illinoisattorneygeneral.gov/File-A-Complaint/.

According to published reports, Mayor Henyard cannot be located following a series of controversies, allegations of corruption and multiple investigations by local and federal agencies.

Our office’s preference would be to help the remaining members of Dolton’s government to come back into compliance with state statute about annual filing of reports with our office. We would be happy to resume disbursements of fine collections referred to our office but will not do so until they file the overdue reports.

In 2023, our office sent the Village of Dolton $120,000 offset from state payments to residents such as income tax refunds and lottery winnings. These represented unpaid fines owed to the Village of Dolton from these residents such as traffic and parking fines and other judgments. This year the village is on track to receive about $135,000.

State statute requires our office to initiate forced audits of towns that stop complying with laws to file annual reports with our office. We also have the authority to level fines. If Dolton continues failing to file reports, we will initiate forced audits and fines.

Our office can assess fines of approximately $7,000 per year per unfiled report, totaling $78,600 for Dolton as of today. That would be in addition to the roughly $135,000 the Village of Dolton could lose in offset fines our office sends the village on an annual basis if its administration does not resume filing reports.

The village last filed its 2021 reports in 2022. But the 2022 and 2023 reports are unfiled and delinquent.

Our office notified the village today of the immediate suspension of offset funds and that a forced audit and fines will begin soon if the village does not come into compliance with the law.

  24 Comments      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In less than one year, a new law will create credit card chaos for millions of Illinois consumers, small business owners and workers who rely on tips. The law changes how your credit card is processed and has never been done anywhere in the world. The end result is windfall for corporate mega-stores paid for through costly operational hurdles for small businesses and a loss of convenience and privacy for consumers who could have to pay tax and gratuity with cash. There’s still time to protect Illinois small business owners, consumers and workers by repealing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act now! For more information, visit guardyourcard.com/Illinois.

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House GOP Leader McCombie talks November, Trump, Harris, suburbs, Pritzker, money, Massey

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From today’s gaggle…

Q: The Speaker pointed out a few of the Biden-won districts that you’re defending in November that he sees as pick-up opportunities for Democrats. You previously said you think you can pick up five. Who’s right, who’s wrong?

House Republican Leader Tony McCombie: I guess we’re going to see in November. I’ll argue that 78 is not great, and I think a lot of folks around the state would agree with me. So we’ll see what happens. I mean, last cycle was certainly interesting. The map didn’t help. So we also have numbers and overlays. This will be an interesting cycle, and I think we will discover that House Republicans will make a bite into that apple, and we’re going to bring some balance to Illinois.

Q: Donald Trump has lost Illinois by 17 percent in the last two elections. Clearly, in the last eight years, it’s had a big impact for Republicans negatively down-ballot. I mean, that’s why there are 78 for example, in the House of Representatives. How do Republicans overcome the Trump factor going into this election, especially down ballot?

McCombie: Well, I would argue Trump is not the reason for 78, I would argue that that is because of Speaker Welch’s mismanagement of the crafting of a map. That is certainly nothing to do with President Trump. But we have a top of the ticket, whether, no matter what state it is, that they say always drags down bottom of the ticket. You know, locals want to get to their polls, we have whether it’s a exciting school board race, a sheriff’s race, a state Reps.’ race, a mayor’s race. I mean, this is a presidential, you’re going to see great turnout, just like you did in 2016 when I flipped a D+16 and you’re going to see that again this cycle.

Q: But the thing is, it’s not just the Illinois House. Democrats control every constitutional office. They control five of the seven seats on the state Supreme Court, and yeah, so it’s not just the legacy…

McCombie: No, absolutely not. And I think that’s when you see when we run, and this is why this election is so important here, because we have to start looking forward already. This is about the Republican turnout. Because for us, it’s about the next governor’s race, and if we can show that we have a great turnout, we are going to get a great Republican candidate. Because you’re right, that map doesn’t matter. We will turn the state around. I promise you that. It might not happen next this year, but it is going to start happening because people are tired of what is going on here.

Q: How does Kamala Harris on the top of the ticket change things as compared to Joe Biden?

McCombie: Well, I think you want to ask Cori Bush how it affected her. Certainly didn’t help her right after the honeymoon stage. We’ve been polling, and I would say Kamala’s faves and unfaves have been pretty equal, and you’re already starting to see that drop a little bit. I think after the DNC, you’ll see her perk up a little a little bit more. But once you actually get her in front of this, actually have the courage to do something like this, she won’t be able to handle it, and everybody else will see who she really is.

Q: What do Republicans need to do to sort of bite into the bump that they’ve gotten right now? This gives you a lot of enthusiasm among Democrats, with Harris leading the ticket. How do you overcome that after the DNC going forward to November?

McCombie: Yeah, I’m actually kind of surprised, because if I was a Democrat, I certainly feel pretty disenfranchised about not being able to have an opportunity to vote for who I voted for in a primary. So that surprises me. But, you know, they are the party of democracy they say, which, obviously that’s not true. I think they are excited because it’s not Biden. They didn’t plan properly, and now they’re cleaning up their mess. So here we are, and it this will be no different campaign than we will run, whether it was Joe Biden or whether it was Kamala or any Democrats top of the ticket, we would run a race to win, and that’s what we’re going to do.

Q: What are the issues you think that are helping Republicans this election cycle?

McCombie: Our issues are your issues, and they are the top of top of mind for everybody, and that’s inflation. Every time you go to the grocery store, every time you pay an energy bill, every time you go to the gas station and there’s already conversations about what they’re going to do to our income tax here in January to try to cover up what we’re going to do for pensions. Tthey’re not talking about pension reform. They’re talking about raising taxes. And that’s another thing that they’re going to do about getting people out of our state. And we’ve got to start looking at true structural reform if we’re going to grow our state, we can’t keep taxing our way, and that’s a real problem.

Q: What do Republicans have to do to turn around your fortunes in the suburbs… because your performance in the suburbs has declined in lockstep with Donald Trump being on ballot.

McCombie: Well, we’re out and about. We’ve got really great candidates this cycle. We were very measured on our candidate recruitment, and we have candidates that have been working harder than they’ve ever worked before. They’re getting their messages out. And the bottom line is this, whether you’re a Republican, a Democrat or an Independent, people are fed up with the mismanagement of the state from the top to the bottom.

Q: You’ve been doing this a while now. And the Republican Party in Illinois used to be fueled, you know, funding wise, by wealthy donors. Obviously, it’s very hard to compete with a billionaire like Pritzker, but it seems like a lot of those donors have, you know, abandoned or eroded, that that funding has been eroded right now. That’s key to any election when you’re a Democrat or a Republican. So how do Illinois Republicans get that kind of funding to overtake some of the blue areas, overtake blue Illinois?

McCombie: Well, unfortunately this cycle, we’re probably not going to get a million-dollar donor. You know, every day I sell hope for Illinois, and we’re gonna do it five bucks, 20 bucks, a hundred bucks, a thousand bucks at a time, and we’re gonna do it at the door ourselves. We’re gonna knock the doors, and we’re gonna do the work. Unfortunately, we have to do this the hard way. We’re gonna have some wins this cycle, and we’re gonna bring back some of those donors.

Q: Are your odds better or worse with Harris atop the ticket?

McCombie: No different.

Q: We’re a little over a month since the Sonya Massey [garbled]. Have there been some discussions of needed police reform? Is there any [garbled] that Republicans maybe support Democrats in that effort? Or are there any changes [that you could support]?

McCombie: Well, there was quite a bit of what was called police reform in the SAFE-T Act and I think a lot of those things probably haven’t been put into place. You have to talk to the governor and his administration and see what was in that act for reform. I think there’s definitely some bad actors, and that was a terrible situation, but there’s also a lot of things going on right here in Illinois that the governor and his administration also needs to be accountable for. Look at DCFS.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  29 Comments      


DNC Chicago coverage roundup

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Chicago’s top migrant official is walking back a prediction from city leaders last month that tens of thousands of migrants would arrive by bus ahead of next week’s Democratic National Convention, saying that there is no “credible intel” that the feared surge will occur.

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s deputy mayor for immigration, Beatriz Ponce de León, told reporters in July the city was preparing for as many as 25,000 migrant arrivals tied to the DNC. But President Joe Biden’s June executive order limiting asylum-seekers’ arrivals at the U.S. border has sharply changed the city’s expectations, she said.

No migrant buses have come to Chicago since June 17, according to Brian Berg, spokesman for the city’s Department of Family and Support Services.

“We at this point do not have any credible intel that there will be a large surge in terms of buses coming from Texas,” Ponce de León told the Tribune Tuesday.

* NBC

Republican National Convention delegates erupted in applause last month when Texas Gov. Greg Abbott doubled down on his commitment to send buses full of migrants to blue cities. […]

But the buses have not been rolling on a consistent basis for months because of a steep drop in the number of migrants apprehended at the southern border, according to officials and migrant shelter operators in Texas and in a half-dozen big cities across the U.S.

Roughly 117,000 migrants were stopped in May, down from a record 300,000 in December. In June, the number dropped even further — to about 84,000, the lowest monthly total since President Joe Biden took office in 2021.

“They now come much less frequently,” said Josh Goldfein, a staff attorney for the Legal Aid Society of New York, “because they don’t have enough people to cross the border to fill up a bus.”

* Sun-Times

Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson are among a slew of Illinois Democrats scheduled to speak at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week.

Pritzker will speak in a prime time address Tuesday night, the same night former President Barack Obama will address the convention, according to two sources familiar with the plans. Johnson, Sen. Dick Durbin, Sen. Tammy Duckworth and U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood have also been confirmed as speakers.

President Joe Biden will address the convention Monday, along with former Secretary of State and presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. On Wednesday, former President Bill Clinton will address the convention before vice presidential nominee Tim Walz speaks and formally accepts the nomination. Democratic nominee Kamala Harris will close out the convention with a Thursday night address.

Pritzker, Duckworth and former Mayor Lori Lightfoot were instrumental in landing the convention in Chicago. But Johnson has also played an active role since taking office. Pritzker, who was a contender to be Harris’ running mate, told reporters last week that he planned to travel the country to help boost the Harris-Walz ticket ahead of the November election. And Johnson last week headlined an event in Detroit called “Black Men for Harris.”

* Click here for more information…


* WGN

Members of the Coalition to March on the DNC said they are outraged over the City of Chicago’s approval for two days of marches during next week’s Democratic National Convention. […]

And organizers plan to speak out again Thursday after a letter from the city granted use of two parks for rallies with restrictions in place.

It reads in part quote “no stages, or platforms, portable restrooms or toilets, tents or canopies, or sound equipment may be installed by your organization.” […]

Coalition organizers feel the rules put in place make it impossible to share their messages.

* The Coalition’s emergency motion will be heard in federal court at 1:30 pm


* More…

    * Tribune | Mayor Johnson ally raising money from Chicago business leaders for DNC events: A top ally of Mayor Brandon Johnson has been hitting up Chicago businesses to contribute to a dark money political organization that is hosting several events next week during the Democratic National Convention, including a luncheon and a showcase Soldier Field event. […] [Charles Smith, Johnson’s liaison to the business community,] wears multiple hats. Along with being Johnson’s point man with business leaders as vice chair of the city’s public-private economic development organization World Business Chicago, he is CEO of CS Insurance Strategies and chair of Business Leadership Council, an advocacy group designed to bolster Black business partnerships.

    * Crain’s | The DNC party invite giving some Chicago C-suites heartburn: Insurance executive Charles Smith, whom Johnson tapped as vice chair of World Business Chicago, has been asking individuals and companies in recent weeks to contribute between $5,000 to $500,000 to GoChiLife, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit, in an effort to host five events during the convention, kicking off with a welcome party at the Adler Planetarium featuring a performance by rapper and actor Common. The mayor’s potential presence was touted on invitations for some of the GoChiLife events. The size of the contributions Smith was seeking, his relationship with Johnson and the nature of the nonprofit’s tax status gave pause to some of those asked for donations. Their concerns: How the money would be spent — and if they were really being asked to support Johnson’s political work instead.

    * Tribune | Kamala Harris’ move to the top of the ticket gave DNC hotel bookings in Chicago a boost, but don’t expect Taylor Swift-level crowds: The Democratic National Committee signed contracts with more than 40 Chicago hotels, including the InterContinental Chicago Magnificent Mile, Palmer House Hilton and Sheraton Grand Chicago, according to party officials. The hotels agreed to hold thousands of rooms at contracted rates until Aug. 7, but interest in the new nominee attracted a burst of late bookings, and party officials say some hotels have decided to extend that deadline. […] So far, hotel operators say the convention hasn’t been a blockbuster event like Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour, which packed downtown hotels with big-spending concertgoers for three nights last summer.

    * Tribune | Illinois Democrats provide DNC preview with energetic support of Kamala Harris at Illinois State Fair: “Can you feel the electricity across the nation for our next president, Kamala Harris?!” Pritzker shouted to applause from hundreds of people at the annual Democratic County Chairs’ Brunch in the Bank of Springfield Center. “We are just days away from hosting delegates and party leaders from across this nation for the 2024 Democratic National Convention, and we are 83 days away from hearing the two words this country’s waited 248 years to hear: Madame President.” The celebratory gathering of the state’s Democrats, both at the brunch and the state fairgrounds, was an occasion to keep the focus on issues including reproductive and workers’ rights three months ahead of the election, while also warning of the danger they say Republican Donald Trump poses to some of those rights as well as to democracy itself.

    * Tribune | Kamala Harris’ husband Doug Emhoff in Chicago for fundraisers: Vice President Kamala Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, headlined three Chicago-area fundraisers Wednesday, including one hosted by the former president of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and his wife. “Just today, she was in the situation room dealing with the security of Israel,” Emhoff said of Harris as he spoke in the West Loop home of former AIPAC President Lee “Rosy” Rosenberg. “So this is something that is personal. It’s something that is meaningful, and it’s something that she will continue to do as president of the United States.”

    * Sun-Times | Second gentleman Doug Emhoff addresses antisemitism at Chicago fundraiser for Kamala Harris campaign: Emhoff spoke about how unfortunate it was for the Biden and Harris administration to inherit the issues they did from Donald Trump’s administration and assured attendees that Harris would continue to combat antisemitism. “When they got to office, post-Trump, there’s so many things that Biden and Harris inherited. … One of those things was hate,” he said.

    * Hollywood Reporter | Hollywood Hits the Windy City: Roundup of Stars Traveling to Chicago’s DNC for Concerts, Events: The Creative Coalition, led by Robin Bronk, has also confirmed details for a series of events being hosted by the nonprofit, nonpartisan social and public advocacy organization of the arts and entertainment community. Led by president Tim Daly and CEO Bronk, the org confirmed that it had booked a delegation that includes Uma Thurman, Uzo Aduba, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Yvette Nicole Brown, Anthony Anderson, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Busy Philipps, Jon Cryer, David Cross, Yolonda Ross, Iain Armitage, Chris Witaske and Danai Gurira.

  23 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  14 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Aug 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: In largest annual Illinois rally, Democrats reflect on surge of enthusiasm with Harris atop ticket. Capitol News Illinois

    - Democrats gathered in Springfield Wednesday for their annual rally at the Illinois State Fair amid a surge of enthusiasm and a renewed sense of optimism about their chances of retaining the White House in November.

    - Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said he has seen the change in enthusiasm as well, and expressed hope that it will reach into down-ballot races, enabling Democrats to expand their already-existing super majority in the General Assembly.

    - Pam Davidson, Democratic State Central Committee member and chair of the local Democratic Party in western Illinois’ Knox County, told the hundreds gathered at Wednesday’s breakfast that Democrats can turn even one of the party’s most vulnerable issues into an opportunity for a more appealing message.

* Related stories…

* The steer will be donated to Feeding Illinois and dispersed to food banks across the state

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Block Club | CTA Approves Massive Contract To Build Red Line Extension As Costs Top $5 Billion: CTA board members on Wednesday unanimously approved a $2.9 billion contract to the entity known as Walsh-VINCI Transit Community Partners to design and build four Red Line stops south of 95th Street. […] The mammoth construction contract awarded by the CTA comes after the Federal Transit Authority pledged “accelerated funding” for the Red Line Extension earlier this month. That puts the project’s ballooning budget now at $5.3 billion — up from $4.1 billion — which CTA officials said Wednesday accounts for steep rises nationally in construction and labor costs.

* Sun-Times | ‘One-stop-shop’ DMV opens in Melrose Park with expanded business services: The Melrose Park site will also process and certify foreign use documents, provide assistance to notaries public, and hold employment testing for current and prospective DMV employees. Since April, four other DMVs downstate have been upgraded to one-stop shops for driver and vehicle services. The Melrose Park location is the first near Chicago.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Inside Higher Ed | Illinois Becomes Fourth State to Pass Legacy Ban: It’s the third successful ban passed since the Supreme Court banned affirmative action last year, resuscitating legislative efforts to end the practice, and marks a symbolic win for the anti-legacy movement after a disappointing setback in Connecticut in May. The law will have little practical impact, however; none of Illinois’s public universities currently give admissions preference to relatives of alumni. Proposals to ban legacy preferences are also up for consideration in New York, Massachusetts, California and Minnesota.

* WAND | New Illinois law could curb underage purchase, drinking of alcopop: The law requires retailers to separate soda and juice from liquor that looks like soda. It also prohibits retailers from displaying alcopop drinks next to soft drinks, bottled water or snacks catered to young customers.

*** Statewide ***

* WTVO | Illinois Sheriffs’ Association condemns violence over elections, political motives: The Illinois Sheriffs’ Association shared the letter to Facebook on Tuesday, stressing the importance of sharing and listening to different perspectives while also respecting constitutional process without resorting to violence, even amid “We know that our citizens and communities do not support violence as a way of ‘resolving’ conflict because it does not resolve anything, instead, it is perpetuated and replicated,” reads the last paragraph of the letter. “As Chief Law Enforcement Officers of our counties, we believe that no matter what your personal political leanings and beliefs are, violence is never tolerable and can never be accepted.” disagreements.

*** Chicago ***

* Fox Chicago | Aldermen react to reports of Chicago mayor pushing CPS CEO out: ‘Not a good idea’: When asked about the rumors, CTU President Stacy Davis Gates responded with a text saying, “That’s news to me.” Alderman Matt O’Shea (19th Ward) expressed shock at the news, recalling that he was at a fundraiser with both Johnson and Martinez the night before. “He’s brought stability to the Chicago Public Schools, particularly to neighborhoods that need stability,” O’Shea said. “I think this would be a tremendous setback. I hope it’s just a rumor.”

* Sun-Times | Homeless hotline won’t restart for a few more weeks: A taxpayer-funded nonprofit overseeing a hotline that puts unhoused people on a waiting list for housing said Wednesday it has a signed agreement with the organization 211 Metro Chicago to restart the service, possibly in the next few weeks. The Sun-Times reported recently that the call center was abruptly shut down at the end of June because Catholic Charities was no longer willing to provide the service. That left potentially hundreds of unhoused people unable to take an important first step in finding a place to live.

* Sun-Times | Amtrak to Mayor Brandon Johnson: ‘We have significant concerns’ about Greyhound stop at Union Station: Amtrak President Roger Harris tells Mayor Brandon Johnson that Union Station, which Amtrak owns, does not have the capacity or money to handle any additional bus riders. He suggested the city move the bus stop to Ogilvie or La Salle Street stations.

* Sun-Times | Former Cook County prosecutor, two Chicago police officers charged with overtime theft: Officer Jason Arroyo, 40, and Detective Edis Skrgic, 35, each face two counts of theft of more than $100,000 from a government entity and two counts of official misconduct for overtime collected between May 2019 and August 2021. Former assistant state’s attorney Ashley Moore, who now lives in Idaho, faces counts of theft, official misconduct and obstruction of justice for allegedly providing false information in August 2021 to a Chicago police sergeant regarding notifications for the officers to appear in court in a murder case, according to the indictments.

* WTTW | COVID-19 Cases Are on the Rise. Here’s What Chicago Health Officials Say You Should Know: Chicago has seen an increased number of cases in previous years following a similar pattern emerging around the end of summer and beginning of fall. However, experts claim there is not enough evidence to classify COVID-19 as a seasonal virus.[…] According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, cases started to rise the week ending May 18 and have seen a steady incline since. The CDC no longer recommends universal case investigation and contact tracing but suggests health departments turn to alternative methods to keep track of the virus.

* Sun-Times | Riot Fest staying at Douglass Park, scrapping plans to move to Bridgeview’s SeatGeek Stadium: According to Wednesday’s announcement from the Chicago Park District, Ald. Monique Scott (24th) and fest organizers, “strong support from the North Lawndale leadership and community” was among the key reasons for the location about-face. The festival is slated to run Sept. 20-22. The announcement noted Park District Board approval is still needed, but Park District CEO Rosa Escareno didn’t expect any complications.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Elk Grove sends $200 gift cards to households, thanks to better-than-expected revenues: The prepaid plastic — going to all 14,000 residential addresses including apartments, condominiums, townhouses and single-family homes — comes from better-than-expected general fund revenues bolstered by new data center construction permit fees. Three months into the new fiscal year, village coffers already have reaped $5 million in permit fees villagewide — most from data centers. That’s the amount officials estimated they would collect for the whole year.

* Crain’s | HR company eyes move to Zurich’s Schaumburg HQ: Human resources services provider ADP is in advanced discussions to sublease around 150,000 square feet from the insurance giant at 1299 Zurich Way in the northwest suburb, according to people familiar with the talks. If the deal is completed, ADP would relocate its suburban Chicago workforce to the property from Elk Grove Village, sources said. The company last year sold its 242,000-square-foot longtime office building at 100 Northwest Point Blvd. to a data center operator that plans to raze it as part of a broader redevelopment project.

* Daily Herald | Demolition begins on mammoth Sears complex in Hoffman Estates: At its peak, the campus was home to about 9,000 employees. But after the last of them were sent home due to the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, none ever returned. One of the 30 largest structures in the world in terms of square footage, the Sears headquarters is significantly ahead of even the John Hancock and Empire State buildings, according to Jeff Olson, project executive for Carol Stream-based American Demolition.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Attorney: SAFE-T Act ‘failed to stop’ former sheriff’s deputy accused of Massey’s murder: While calling Illinois’ SAFE-T Act “one of the most comprehensive police reform bills” passed, Antonio Romanucci, an attorney who has worked with the Massey family’s attorney, Ben Crump, said the act “needs a little bit of help.”Romanucci said a more comprehensive national database would include infractions such as DUIs, driving excessive speeds during a police chase and incidents of excessive force or unnecessary profane language on a citizen.

* WCIA | Monticello police officer accused of child pornography offenses resigns: Rob Bross, the Chief of the Monticello Police Department, said William Griswold submitted a letter to the department in which he resigned from his position. The resignation is effective immediately. Bross elaborated that after learning of his arrest by the Illinois State Police on Tuesday, the Monticello Police Department launched an administrative investigation into Griswold’s actions and scheduled a disciplinary hearing with the Monticello Fire and Police Commission. With Griswold’s resignation, that hearing has been cancelled.

* Illinois Times | Battling blight: Two of the major solutions pushed for years by the Springfield Independent Coalition for Our Neighborhoods (ICON) were a comprehensive landlord registration and inspection program for rental properties and reforms to the city’s garbage collection system so all residents are billed for garbage service through their City Water, Light and Power bills instead of by individual waste haulers. The lack of movement in the direction of these options in the city under former mayor Jim Langfelder and now current Mayor Misty Buscher, who took office in May 2023, is disappointing, according to the leader of ICON, a nonprofit that advocates for all neighborhoods and especially older sections of Springfield.

* SJ-R | Pritzker calls Trump a ‘loser’ as Dems champion Harris, Walz during Governor’s Day: At both the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association brunch and Governor’s Day events, elected officials and party leaders drummed up support for Vice President Kamala Harris and running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and levied attacks against Republicans up and down the ballot. In Harris, Democrats accounted for the historical significance in having the first woman in the Oval Office. Still, they say it’s the platform, advocating for nationwide abortion protections and promoting gun control, that she would strive for as president in addition to her identity that make her the best candidate.

*** National ***

* AP | Ruling: Fetus can be referred to as ‘unborn human being’ in Arizona abortion measure voter pamphlet: The Arizona Supreme Court justices sided with Republican lawmakers, who drafted the language sent to all voters in the state, over proponents of the ballot measure on abortion rights. The ruling comes as abortion foes have long worked to give embryos and fetuses the same legal and constitutional protections on par with those of the women carrying them. The issue was highlighted recently when the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are legally protected children, forcing lawmakers to scramble to enact protections for in vitro fertilization.

* MIT Technology | DHS plans to collect biometric data from migrant children “down to the infant”: The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) plans to collect and analyze photos of the faces of migrant children at the border in a bid to improve facial recognition technology, MIT Technology Review can reveal. This includes children “down to the infant,” according to John Boyd, assistant director of the department’s Office of Biometric Identity Management (OBIM), where a key part of his role is to research and develop future biometric identity services for the government. […] Facial recognition technology (FRT) has traditionally not been applied to children, largely because training data sets of real children’s faces are few and far between, and consist of either low-quality images drawn from the internet or small sample sizes with little diversity. Such limitations reflect the significant sensitivities regarding privacy and consent when it comes to minors.

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