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Grayson’s ludicrous defense

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* SJ-R

A former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with murder said he thought Sonya Massey was going throw boiling liquid on him and his partner on July 6 when they responded to Massey’s home for a possible prowler.

In his report, released by Sangamon County on Monday, Sean P. Grayson admitted that when Massey twice says “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” that “I interpreted this to mean she was going to kill me.” […]

The report was written on July 9, three days after the shooting.

Grayson had requested, and was given permission to review bodycam footage of the call.

Ugh.

* Here’s a video clip that covers the half minute before the shooting. Massey says what she says in an almost humorous manner. Even though I stop the video before the shooting, it’s still very difficult and traumatic to watch. There’s also profanity, so keep that in mind if you’re at work

When she says “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” Grayson says “You better f-ing not or I swear to God I’ll f-ing shoot you right in your f-ing face.” And then he pulled his gun, she apologized, went to the floor and he shot her right in the face.

Evil.

  35 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Press release…

Today Governor JB Pritzker signed into law HB3144, the local government tax omnibus bill that eliminates the state tax on grocery items. The 1% state tax is repealed across all of Illinois, although local governments have the option of imposing the tax on a local basis by ordinance.

“Even with inflation cooling off every dollar counts, so I’m proud we’re doing what we can to make trips to the grocery store a little easier,” said Governor Pritzker. “It’s one more important part of lifting the burden on Illinois families. Establishing a child tax credit, eliminating medical debt, lowering the cost of healthcare, making college more affordable, bringing quality childcare closer to home so moms and dads can go to work — these are not esoteric policy proposals but actually do lift burdens everyday Illinoisans face.”

Governor Pritzker has made tax relief for working families a major priority for his administration. In 2022, the highest inflationary year since the 1980’s, the Governor worked with the General Assembly to suspend the state grocery tax for the fiscal year. The Governor also supported property tax rebates and direct payments for Illinois filers.

The local business omnibus bill also legislates several other municipal tax code rules and regulations, including prepaid wireless surcharges and a Hotel Operators’ Occupation Tax. The 1% tax applies to grocery items intended to be consumed off-premises. Illinois was previously one of only 11 other states to tax groceries. The tax cut will take effect January 1st, 2026.

* WTTW reporter Heather Cherone

*** Statewide ***

* WTHI | New data shows change in how Illinois funds its schools is reaching under-resourced districts: The Illinois State Board of Education released new data on Monday showing the impact of a change in funding for the state’s “highest-need” schools. […] According to the ISBE, the number of districts with funding below 70 percent adequacy has hit its lowest point since switching funding formulas. In FY 2018, there were 430 districts below 70 percent adequacy; in FY 2025, it’s now 49 districts.

* Center Square | Narcan vending machines popping up throughout Illinois in effort to combat overdoses: Chestnut Health Systems have been installing the vending machines in several areas, including in Metro East. Officials said in Madison and St. Clair counties alone, there were 96 overdoses last year with 70% involving opioids. The project is funded with tax dollars from the Illinois Department of Human Services, Division of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat | Chicago touts after-school program growth but cuts funding: After pouring federal COVID relief dollars into a once barebones budget for such programs, Chicago Public Schools is now cutting funding for academic, arts, sports and mentoring before- and after-school programs, labeled as Out of School Time. This summer, the district touted a 2024-25 budget that “doubles down” on a COVID-era spending boost for extracurricular programs, which officials said has sped up students’ recovery. But in fact, funding for these programs is down by roughly a third, to about $31 million.

* WTTW | CPD Has Yet to Launch Study on How Officers Are Deployed, Missing Deadline Set by Chicago City Council: Ald. Matt Martin (47th Ward), who authored the ordinance passed by the City Council on Feb. 21 that gave CPD officials 90 days to hire an outside organization to study how officers are deployed, where they are assigned to work and whether that makes sense, said he was frustrated the work had not yet begun. […] A spokesperson for the Chicago Police Department said Wednesday the contract to conduct the study has yet to be finalized. A CPD spokesperson told WTTW News June 4 that an agreement had been reached in May to set the scope of the study and efforts were underway to “finalize the contract.”

* Sun-Times | Long-awaited Damen Green Line station opens: A new Green Line station opened Monday at Damen Avenue on the Near West Side, offering a rail connection to the United Center in time for the Democratic National Convention that kicks off in two weeks. Mayor Brandon Johnson helped cut the ribbon on what officials celebrated as a “visually compelling” station that closes a 1.5-mile gap on the Green Line, the only L line that serves both the South and West sides.

* Block Club | Historical State Street Skyscrapers To Be Preserved After Feds Opt Against Demolition: Three historical State Street buildings previously set for demolition will likely now be preserved, according to a report by the federal agency that owns the buildings. The U.S. General Services Administration had previously sought to demolish the Century and Consumers buildings, 202-220 S. State St., in an effort to boost security at the adjacent Dirksen Federal Building on Dearborn Street.

* Sun-Times | Are tornadoes surging in Chicago area? Not quite, but reporting of them is, experts say: Illinois surpassed 100 tornadoes in a year two other times this century, in 2003 and 2006. The state has averaged about 40 tornadoes a year since record keeping began in 1950. Some may want to blame climate change, but the recent rise has largely been rooted in better technology to track and categorize storms, says Walker Ashley, a meteorology professor at Northern Illinois University.

* Block Club | Metropolis Coffee’s Second Cafe Takes Flight At O’Hare: The cafe opened in O’Hare’s newly expanded Terminal 5 this spring, and Metropolis is hosting a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the location Aug. 13. […] Metropolis operated a temporary cafe with a stripped-down menu at O’Hare for over a year. The permanent cafe, located by gate M30, has a full menu offering a range of coffees, pastries, samosas, sandwiches, salads, smoothies, juices, beers and wines, Farhana Rahim said.

* Block Club | River Otters Were Once Nearly Extinct In Illinois — But Now They Roam Chicago Waterways: The Forest Preserve District of Cook County and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources have done extensive habitat restoration projects and reintroductions to help otters and other animals. […] These efforts have proven highly successful: River otters were removed from the state endangered species list in 2004. By 2009, Illinois had over 11,000 otters, and today they are found in every county in the state, according to the Outdoor Illinois Journal.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Islamic school proposed for shuttered Elgin Academy: Elgin Academy, the private school which closed in June after 185 years, is being sold to an organization that intends to establish an Islamic school for preschool through 12th grade students, according to an Elgin Academy official and a YouTube video produced by organizers behind the proposed Burhan Academy. Paul Druzinsky, the interim head of the nonsectarian Elgin Academy, confirmed the asking price of the 350 Park St. property is $3.7 million and the sale is set to close later this month.

* Daily Herald | Hunger Resource Network board member shares food insecurity challenges: “Eleven years ago, I went through a divorce while living in Highland Park,” [Amy Levin Schneider] said. “I will bet you are having a hard time believing that someone like me, with a good education, has experienced food insecurity, right? But the truth is, I have. Hunger has many faces.” Suddenly, Amy found herself a single mother trying to support two children. She and her ex-husband worked in the same business, but when the marriage ended, it was no longer an option for her to work there.

* Naperville Sun | New North Central College president says his job is to bring stability as the Naperville school deals with priorities ahead: Abiódún Gòkè-Pariolá, who last month was tapped as the 12th president of North Central College, says a need for stability, prudency and leadership during a period of flux for the Naperville institution is the impetus behind his appointment. […] With Gòkè-Pariolá named president, his previous role as provost and vice president for academic affairs will be filled for the interim by Kristin Geraty, who had previously held the role of North Central’s associate provost and dean of engaged learning, the college announced Wednesday. Geraty is the first woman to serve as the college’s chief academic officer.

* Patch | $14.7 Million Referendum Heads To Ballot In Glencoe Park District: The Glencoe Park District board last month voted unanimously to ask residents to authorize a 25-year, $14.7 million bond sale. Executive Director Lisa Sheppard said the board is looking to maintain the quality of its assets and enhance property values through the preservation of the village’s beach, parks and athletic facilities while limiting the burden on taxpayers.

*** Downstate ***

* The Telegraph | Groundbreaking transgender candidate runs for Granite City mayor: Colton Baumgartner is running for mayor of Granite City. Baumgartner is believed to be the first openly transgender person to run for mayor in Madison County. If elected, she would be the first openly transgender mayor in Illinois, according to Equality Illinois. “I believe it is in my benefit to help the city, because I’ve lived in many states, and I truly feel like I am an American and I chose Granite City to be my forever home,” she said.

* KHQA | WIU community to hold press conference ahead of expected layoff vote: Faculty members, staff, and students will gather on Monday with community members for a press conference in advance of the expected board vote to lay off an undetermined number of Western Illinois University (WIU) employees. Officials say reducing the faculty and staff who instruct and support students will not only diminish the opportunities available to students but will also have dire consequences on the WIU community in Macomb and Moline.

* PJ Star | Infamous killer who was part of Chicago’s ‘Ripper Crew’ is now living in Peoria: Thomas Kokoraleis, 64, informed the Peoria Police Department in May that he would be living in Peoria at the Peoria Pathway Ministries, formerly Peoria Rescue Ministries, at 601 Adams Street in Downtown Peoria. Kokoraleis is not on parole, which means he is not subject to 24-hour monitoring by an ankle monitor, but Peoria Police Chief Eric Echevarria told the Journal Star he is required to check in with the police department quarterly. […] “I can tell you that when he came here, I did speak with the previous agency that he came from and they never, in the time he was there, had any issues with him,” Echevarria said.

* SJ-R | Petition claims school’s diversity officer was placed on leave after off-campus fight: More than 900 people want the University of Illinois Springfield to reinstate its now-former Director of Diversity and Inclusion. According to a document obtained by The State-Journal Register, the university placed Justin Rose on paid administrative leave May 6 because of a potential violation of the school’s code of conduct and has since been informed that his $78,392 annual contract set to expire Aug. 15 would not be renewed. The move came 10 days after a fight at an off-campus party where Rose was present.

* SJ-R | Springfield area softball team repeats as Senior League World Series champions: Chatham Glenwood’s Taryn Griffith dished out a pair of RBI hits in the first two innings and the Tri-County Senior League softball team captured its second straight Senior League World Series title 11-0 over Irmo, South Carolina on Sunday. Griffith scored Pawnee’s Ava Rodriguez with an RBI-single in the first inning before expanding the lead 6-0 in the second with a 2-RBI double to left field.

*** National ***

* NYT | Justice Thomas Failed to Reveal More Private Flights, Senator Says: Senator Ron Wyden sent a letter to the wealthy conservative donor Harlan Crow’s lawyer after records showed undisclosed flights between Hawaii and New Zealand with the Supreme Court justice in 2010.

* AP | Prosecutors plan to charge former Kansas police chief over his conduct following newspaper raid: The raid sparked a national debate about press freedoms focused on Marion, a town of about of about 1,900 people set among rolling prairie hills about 150 miles (241 kilometers) southwest of Kansas City, Missouri. Cody resigned as chief in early October, weeks after officers were forced to return materials seized in the raid. Meyer’s 98-year-old mother Joan Meyer, who co-owned the paper and lived with him, died the day after the raid from a heart attack. Meyer attributed her death to the stress of the raid.

  6 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’ve asked before whether y’all thought Sen. Durbin will run for reelection or not. Today’s question is whether he should run for another six-year term or not. Make sure to explain your answer…


  54 Comments      


UIC research could lead to major antibiotic breakthrough

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* University of Oxford

More than 1.2 million people – and potentially millions more – died in 2019 as a direct result of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, according to the most comprehensive estimate to date of the global impact of antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

The analysis of 204 countries and territories, published in The Lancet, reveals that AMR is now a leading cause of death worldwide, higher than HIV/AIDS or malaria. It shows that many hundreds of thousands of deaths now occur due to common, previously treatable infections – such as lower respiratory and bloodstream infections – because the bacteria that cause them have become resistant to treatment. […]

The analysis shows AMR was directly responsible for an estimated 1.27 million deaths worldwide, and associated with an estimated 4.95 million deaths, in 2019. HIV/AIDS and malaria have been estimated to have caused 860,000 and 640,000 deaths, respectively, in 2019.

* This morning, a commenter pointed out a story from last month. Sun-Times

Bacterial resistance may be nearly impossible thanks to a new antibiotic researched by scientists at the University of Illinois Chicago.

The antibiotic attacks bacteria in two different ways, making it 100 million times more difficult for that bacteria to develop resistance, researchers found in a new study published Monday.

Bacterial resistance, also called antibiotic resistance, happens when bacteria change so that antibiotics can’t kill them or stop their growth. That can make it difficult, if not impossible, to treat a bacterial infection. The World Health Organization considers bacterial resistance a global public health threat.

UIC scientists examined how a class of synthetic antibiotic drugs called macrolones disrupt how bacteria function to fight infectious diseases. Their findings, published in Nature Chemical Biology, determined that macrolones can both interfere with protein production within the cells of the bacteria and corrupt its DNA structure.

Since the bacteria would have to fight both attacks at the same time, drug resistance would be nearly impossible, researchers found.

* UIC Today

“The beauty of this antibiotic is that it kills through two different targets in bacteria,” said Alexander Mankin, distinguished professor of pharmaceutical sciences at UIC. “If the antibiotic hits both targets at the same concentration, then the bacteria lose their ability to become resistant via acquisition of random mutations in any of the two targets.”

Macrolones are synthetic antibiotics that combine the structures of two widely used antibiotics with different mechanisms. Macrolides, such as erythromycin, block the ribosome, the protein-manufacturing factories of the cell. Fluoroquinolones, such as ciprofloxacin, target a bacteria-specific enzyme called DNA gyrase. […]

Other experiments tested whether the macrolone drugs preferentially inhibited the ribosome or the DNA gyrase enzymes at various doses. While many designs were better at blocking one target or another, one that interfered with both at its lowest effective dose stood out as the most promising candidate. […]

The study also reflects the interdisciplinary collaboration at the UIC Molecular Biology Research Building, where researchers from the colleges of medicine, pharmacy and liberal arts and sciences share neighboring laboratories and drive basic science discoveries like this one, the authors said.

The study is here.

  9 Comments      


It’s a law

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lee Enterprises’ Brenden Moore

Click here for the full list.

* Center Square

A much anticipated measure bringing changes to Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act is now law. Effective immediately, Senate Bill 2979 expands the definition of written release to include electronic signatures and would make multiple violations of BIPA a single violation if committed against one individual. Business groups sought such changes following several high-profile lawsuits against employers.

State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid, D-Bridgeview, said Illinoisans biometric data will still be protected.

“But it adds much needed clarity that helps small businesses operate in a more predictable regulatory environment,” said Rashid when the measure passed. “I know that many small business owners will be relieved to see this measure pass.”

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a plan into law Friday to make major changes for the state’s name, image and likeness law for college athletes.

The new law will allow athletes to earn NIL compensation directly from their universities. Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) told WAND News in April that this will give universities a significant advantage for recruiting and retaining players.

This plan also blocks media and the public from requesting how much athletes make from their private NIL deals. […]

The legislation will also allow universities to create athletic department incentives for fans to support student athlete NIL activities. For example, fans could potentially get better parking or seats at an arena if they donate to NIL funds. […]

House Bill 307 will take effect on January 1.

* Sen. Cristina Castro…

Standing strong on the issue of safeguarding women’s health, State Senator Cristina Castro championed the effort to expand access to fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization through a measure signed into law Friday.

“Infertility affects millions of Americans, leaving thousands of hopeful parents in Illinois and across the United States unable to have a child on their own,” said Castro (D-Elgin). “The possibility of starting a family through advanced treatments like IVF represents hope for so many of these individuals – and this law takes steps to protect and expand access for the thousands who rely on it.”

To address cost barriers that limit access to treatments like IVF for families across the state, the new law requires every group health insurance policy to cover the diagnosis and treatment of infertility starting Jan. 1, 2026. It also adds coverage for an annual menopause health visit for those age 45 and older. […]

Senate Bill 773 takes effect immediately.

* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…

To unify the policies and procedures in jails and prisons in Illinois keeping new and expectant mothers safe. State Senator Mary Edly-Allen worked alongside the Women’s Justice Institute (WJII) to introduce a new law, HB5431, providing comprehensive protections for committed pregnant people, including banning the use of restraints. As the number of incarcerated pregnant women has increased over the years, many of these pregnancies have been left without adequate support. […]

According to the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, the negative impacts of restraints used during pregnancy are wide-ranging and detrimental. Restraints increase the risk of falls and injuries, can limit mobility, delay medical assessments during emergencies, increase the risk of blood clots, and interfere with labor, delivery and mother-infant bonding.

House Bill 5431 prohibits the use of restraints on pregnant and postpartum individuals in correctional facilities and requires supplemental nutrition for incarcerated individuals who are pregnant and breastfeeding. Further, to better understand the scope of pregnancy and care at jails and prisons, this legislation requires annual reporting on the number of pregnancies, births and miscarriages at each facility. […]

House Bill 5431 was signed into law Friday, Aug. 2, 2024 and goes into effect Jan. 1, 2025.

* SJ-R statehouse reporter Patrick Keck



SB3134 went into effect immediately.

* Sen. Laura Fine…

To protect residents from abuse and neglect at state-run mental health or developmental disability facilities, State Senator Laura Fine championed a law strengthening the ability of the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to investigate allegations.

“It is the state’s responsibility to protect our most vulnerable residents,” said Fine (D-Glenview). “Through on-site investigations, the OIG is able to confirm and respond to reports of abuse at these facilities, while removing the source of the issue before a pattern of neglect ensues.”

This law expands protections for patients by giving the OIG the ability to conduct targeted site visits to all community agencies in the state, which includes Community Living Arrangements and Community Mental Health Centers.

The law enhances patient safety by further preventing employees from covering up instances of abuse and neglect. If an employee knows another employee is obstructing an investigation into a complaint, that employee is required to report that to the OIG.

“By authorizing the OIG to step in to make unannounced site visits, we can deter both obstructions to the investigative process and increase employee accountability,” said Fine. “I look forward to seeing the state utilize these additional tools to respond to these cases effectively.”

Senate Bill 857 was signed into law Friday and is effective immediately.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a proposal into law Friday to help families put leftover college savings funds into retirement plans.

Treasurer Michael Frerichs and state lawmakers told reporters in March that families who don’t use all of the money in their college savings accounts could put them into a Roth IRA. Frerichs noted that Congress approved a bill in late 2022 to allow tax and penalty free rollovers from college savings plans to retirement plans.

“People are going to be saving their own money into these accounts,” Frerichs said. “But if we don’t make it easier for people to save, if we don’t give them more incentives to save and they’re unable to retire, for young people entering the workforce, those are positions that won’t be available.” […]

The 2022 federal law states rollovers must be made by the 529 college savings account beneficiary and not the owner. Congress also noted that rollovers can only be made from 529 accounts that have been active for 15 years.

Senate Bill 3133 took effect immediately.

* Sen. Rachel Ventura…

With anxiety and stress increasing in schools, State Senator Rachel Ventura championed a new law aimed at easing the growing stress that students face in classrooms, prioritizing their physical and emotional well-being to enhance focus and reduce anxiety during school hours.

“Just as adults have a multitude of stressors, students also have the pressure to constantly and consistently perform above average. Our children deserve just a few minutes for themselves. Purposeful relaxation time will empower students to develop effective stress and anxiety management strategies,” said Ventura (D-Joliet). “As both a parent and mental health advocate, I believe that allocating at least 20 minutes per week for students to unwind and prioritize their mental health will alleviate the constant pressure to engage in mental tasks, leading to improved academic performance.”

Senate Bill 2872 provides instruction for school districts on relaxation activities, such as mindful-based movements, yoga, stretching, meditation, breathing exercises, guided relaxation techniques, quiet time, walking, in-person conversation, and other stress-relieving activities, once a week for 20 minutes, in addition to recess, to enhance physical and emotional health.

The law allows a school district to partner with a local community-based organization to provide the activities. Additionally, if a school district wishes, the activities could take place in a physical education class, social-emotional learning class, student-support or advisory class, or as part of another class, including a new class, providing ample opportunities and flexibility for schools to adopt.

Statistics from the American Psychological Association show that 4.1 million children in the U.S. between the ages of 3 and 17 years old have been diagnosed with anxiety. In Illinois alone, 145,000 children between the ages of 12-17 have depression. […]

Senate Bill 2872 was signed into law Friday and is effective Jan. 1, 2025.

* Sen. Bill Cunningham…

State Senator Bill Cunningham’s measure to protect vehicle owners by updating towing regulations often abused by rogue towing companies was signed into law.

“We have residents getting a surprise $1,500 bill when all they’re trying to do is pick up a vehicle that was stolen from outside their residence,” said Cunningham, a Democrat who represents portions of Chicago and the Southwest Suburbs. “This measure will stop towing companies from charging any storage fees on stolen vehicles and makes sure that a proper notification process is set up.”

The legislation was brought to Cunningham from a constituent of the 18th District. The constituent’s vehicle was stolen from outside their residence in Chicago and was eventually located by law enforcement and towed in Alsip. The constituent did not find out where their vehicle was located until a week after it was recovered, receiving a letter in the mail from a suburban towing company that was holding the vehicle. When the constituent went to recover the vehicle, they were told they would have to pay a fee of $1,500 and were not allowed to recover a hearing aid from the vehicle until the fee was paid.

Cunningham’s law adds medical devices and other items to the list of property that can be recovered from a towed vehicle without payment. Cunningham also discovered that there was an issue with the notification process when a vehicle is stolen and later towed. To address that issue, the measure requires towing companies to provide written notice to the vehicle’s owner within two days of towing. Additionally, if the owner recovers the vehicle within seven days, the towing company is prohibited from charging any storage fees. To streamline the notification process, the measure also requires law enforcement to give towing companies the name and mailing address of the vehicle owner when a tow is authorized. […]

Senate Bill 2654 was signed into law on Friday and takes effect Jan. 1, 2025.

  12 Comments      


A good lesson for our crazy times

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

A Facebook post last week by state Sen. Willie Preston, D-Chicago, created a stir and caused one of his fellow Democratic senators to bow out of a planned joint fundraiser. Ultimately, the entire fundraiser was canceled.

It’s all a good illustration of the ill-informed, rapid-fire insanity of our social media-fueled era.

Preston posted an incendiary story by a notorious British tabloid about Olympic boxer Imane Khelif of Algeria. “Boxer ‘deemed male’ leaves Italian female fighter in tears at Olympics,” was the Daily Mail headline.

“This is wrong,” Preston wrote. “I respect all people however at a certain point we have to be insane to accept this. As a father of daughters, I cannot sit back and watch this anymore. We must save female sports. I plan on working on legislation that protects women sports. Women shouldn’t have to compete against anyone who is biologically a man.”

Preston wasn’t alone. People, mostly conservatives, took to their social media accounts with rage. Hard-right state Rep. Adam Niemerg, R-Dieterich, was one of them, reposting a tweet warning that allowing men to box with women was going to get somebody killed.

“Men don’t belong in women’s sports!” Rep. Niemerg himself wrote. “End of discussion.”

Some of his Republican colleagues also posted similar thoughts online.

But, as far as I could tell, Preston was the only Illinois Democratic state legislator to fall for the false outrage.

In reality, Khelif was born a female, and her Algerian passport lists her as a female. The International Olympic Committee uses athletes’ passports to determine gender. Algeria is a Muslim country where gender change is illegal and even simply possessing a rainbow flag can result in a two-year prison sentence.

Also, do you really think that Algeria, which banned the “Barbie” movie, would give a man a woman’s passport? C’mon.

Yes, Khelif was barred by the International Boxing Association last year, and the IBA’s executive director, who is a longtime Russian boxing official, recently claimed Khelif had both X and Y chromosomes, which some women do have (and which studies have found gives them no consistent sporting advantage).

The IBA director earlier claimed Khelif had “elevated levels of testosterone.” So, I guess it’s possible she was juicing, but the IBA is so notoriously and thoroughly corrupt that the International Olympic Committee refuses to work with it (and that’s saying something, considering the IOC’s sordid history).

Also of note, after the controversial Paris Olympics’ opening ceremonies, the IBA’s executive director called IOC President Thomas Bach “a chief sodomite.”

It took just a few minutes to find all that on Google.

Look, I truly do not care what you think about anything. This is a free country, and I love it that way. So, if you’re a legislator and you want to ban people legally born as males from participating in female sports, that’s your right as a state legislator to try. Go ahead and file your bill and work your colleagues and invite the debate, and let’s see how that all plays out.

However, if you, as a state legislator, publicly announce you’ll be introducing important state legislation to address an issue that makes you mad, I think we all have the right to expect that you first take at least a minute or two to double-check whether your outrage is actually valid before you pop off.

The members of the Senate Democratic caucus are more publicly close-knit than many nuclear families I know. Their public solidarity is really quite something to behold.

So, I wasn’t surprised when progressive state Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, refused to confirm that he’d bowed out of co-hosting a fundraiser with Preston. But I was told by very reliable sources that he did do so.

The other two Preston fundraiser co-hosts were Chicago state Sens. Michael Simmons and Lakesia Collins. Simmons is the Senate’s first openly gay member, and Collins is a fiery and unapologetic progressive. Simmons and Collins have not responded to repeated inquiries from me and my associate Isabel Miller about Preston’s post or about the event.

Preston also didn’t respond. But the Facebook post disappeared after we started making inquiries.

Maybe he learned.

And then the same day I told my newsletter subscribers about Preston and the fundraiser, the Senate Democrats told donors the Aug. 7 event had been canceled.

All this because somebody let their emotions control their brain.

It should be a lesson to everyone in these crazy times.

  19 Comments      


Edgar, LaHood, Kinzinger and Walsh join ‘Republicans for Harris’

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Aiming to woo GOP voters who reject Donald Trump, the Kamala Harris campaign on Sunday launched “Republicans for Harris,” including from Illinois: former Gov. Jim Edgar, former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and ex-Reps. Adam Kinzinger and Joe Walsh.

Vice President Harris’ campaign said the “campaign within a campaign” will send GOP endorsers on the road, kick off on-the-ground organizing efforts and use paid ads “to reach, persuade, and mobilize Republican voters.” […]

The Illinois four and the others can appeal to various persuadable Republicans who are not part of the Trump MAGA movement.

* Edgar has never supported Trump. LaHood was considered a moderate in DC, but his congressional voting record was likely too conservative for Illinois (and I told him as much years ago). Kinzinger has always been a conservative, and he stands on principle. For instance, from 2022…


* CBS 2

Chris Tye spoke with Walsh, who shared why he thinks more establishment Republicans are willing to take this leap now.

“Many of these Republicans were not enthused about Joe Biden, and so I think Kamala Harris, who’s had a hell of a 17 days now, has really, I think, garnered a lot of enthusiasm among some Republicans that she can win,” he said. “Donald Trump is the odds-on favorite to get elected. For Kamala Harris to win, she got to put together this coalition of far-left progressives to never Trumper Republicans.”

Walsh believes that being part of the movement means they will likely never be elected to Republican office again, which is why so many of those taking the leap are former and retired elected office holders.

Walsh didn’t invent Republican victimhood and phony outrage, but he took it to a whole new level when he was in office and for quite a while after he was booted by Democrat Tammy Duckworth.

* Anyway, AP

The Harris campaign shared the details of the program first with The Associated Press before the official announcement.

Biden’s team is trying to create “a permission structure” for GOP voters who would otherwise have a difficult time voting for Harris. The effort will rely heavily on Republican-to-Republican voter contact, with the belief that the best way to get a Republican to vote for Harris is to hear directly from another Republican making the same choice.

Trump’s “extremism is toxic to the millions of Republicans who no longer believe the party of Donald Trump represents their values” and will vote against him again in November, said Harris’ national director of Republican outreach, Austin Weatherford. He said the campaign would be “showing up and taking the time every single day to earn the vote of Republicans who believe in putting country over party and know that every American deserves a president who will protect their freedoms and a commander in chief who will put the best interests of the American people above their own.”

Weatherford is a onetime chief of staff to former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., who had endorsed the Biden-Harris ticket before President Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance against Trump. Kinzinger is backing Harris once more as part of the launch.

Thoughts?

  45 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  3 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Citing fear of job loss, union pressures Trib to drop AI policy. Crain’s

    - Chicago Tribune journalists hit back against their company’s proposed AI policy in a social media blitz.
    - The Chicago Tribune Guild, the union representing its newsroom, said Alden Global “proposed contract language that would give it unrestricted power to outsource newsroom work, including to artificial intelligence tools.”
    - The union has accused Alden Global of “slow-walking contract negotiations” and offering “non-starter proposals” that include the possibility of eliminating the company’s 401(k) match and refusing pay increases. The Guild won its union election in 2018 and has yet to reach a first contract.

At 9 am Governor Pritzker will give remarks at the American Bar Association’s annual meeting. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* SJ-R | Illinois Democrats pumping ’seven figure investments’ into 2 key congressional races: Budzinski and Sorensen are seen as the most sensitive to a potential flip, especially Sorensen where the National Republican Congressional Committee is putting resources to his challenger Joe McGraw. Both, however, have still significant fundraising advantages over their opponents. […] In this election, Virden Republican Josh Loyd and Green Party candidate Chibu Asonye of Champaign are challenging Budzinski. Budzinski’s campaign, as of the latest campaign finance data from the Federal Election Commission, holds more than $2 million in reserves compared to $2,883 for Loyd. There is no data available for Asonye and a challenge to her nomination papers filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections is still pending.

* Illinois Answers | Luxury Home or Vacant Lot? Cook County Assessor Misclassifies Hundreds of Properties, Missing $444M in One Year Alone: The Gilmores’ house isn’t being unfairly targeted. It’s being treated normally and reassessed every three years like hundreds of thousands of properties across Cook County. Rather, the inequality is due to the assessor’s office missing new construction and major improvements to homes and businesses all across Cook County. In one year alone, Kaegi’s office has missed hundreds of millions of dollars in market value, which is a foundational figure used in taxing properties in Cook County. The missteps came even though in hundreds of cases Kaegi’s office possessed the documents or data it needed indicating the homes and businesses had been renovated or that the vacant land had been developed, the Tribune and Illinois Answers found.

* CBS Chicago | In wake of Sonya Massey shooting, call issued for referendum on whether Illinois sheriff should resign: Sangamon County Board member Sam Cahnman (D-18th) said he will introduce a resolution to have a referendum added to the ballot in November—simply asking voters whether Sheriff Jack Campbell should resign. Campbell has defended his decision to hire Sean Grayson, the deputy who shot and killed Massey early on Saturday, July 6, at her house outside Springfield. He shot her when she checked on a pot of boiling water in her own kitchen while saying, “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus.” Grayson was fired from the Sangamon County Sheriff’s office and has been charged with Massey’s murder. Meanwhile, his past has raised new questions over the decision to hire him in the first place.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Deaths from domestic gun violence rose in 2023 in Illinois, report says: Shootings related to domestic violence in Illinois were significantly more lethal in 2023 even as their overall number remained mostly stable from previous years, a new report from The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence found. The report projected that 130 people in Illinois would die due to domestic gun violence in 2024. The report, released weeks after U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declared gun violence a public health crisis, documented 109 shootings related to domestic violence, which killed 93 people in Illinois throughout 2023.

* Tribune | Illinois trees and plants suffering widespread damage from renewed use of decades-old weedkillers on farms, studies show: At first glance it appears Hirsch’s property is an idyllic refuge on the edge of suburbia. But her training didn’t prepare her for an onslaught of weedkillers drifting from nearby farms and neighboring yards — a scourge spreading throughout Illinois as chemical companies revive volatile herbicides from generations past. Trees are slowly dying after being hit for years by weedkillers. Their once-robust canopy has thinned. Many of the leaves are cupped or deformed. So are the Hirsch family’s flowers and vegetables.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Controversial staffing firm to remain in Chicago migrant shelters: ‘Right now, Favorite is our solution’: The out-of-state emergency staffing firm was first tapped by Mayor Lori Lightfoot in fall 2022 to run Chicago’s nascent migrant shelter system as busloads of Venezuelans began arriving in the city from Texas. That contract has remained the city’s costliest by far of the ongoing migrant situation, with almost two-thirds of the $433.7 million in total expenditures spent on asylum-seekers so far going toward Favorite Staffing, per city records from July. The Johnson administration has touted rate negotiations that have driven down per-resident costs and have saved up to $3 million a week even as an earlier spike in the shelter population this winter contributed to a whopping $276.6 million bill from Favorite Staffing since the start of the migrant crisis.

* Block Club | Feds Pledge To Advance Nearly $400 Million More To Red Line Extension: Federal transit officials pledged $746 million next year to extend the Red Line south to 130th Street, up from $350 million. The total federal funding remains the same, but the move is expected to lower the city’s borrowing costs for the project.

* WTTW | Watchdog: Chicago’s Workers’ Comp System Has Been Reformed, 5 Years After Ed Burke Control: The first-of-its-kind audit by Inspector General Deborah Witzburg of the city’s workers compensation system found “major improvement” in the system that paid $73.5 million to resolve approximately 3,700 claims in 2022. “As the program is ushered into a new era and the city works to clear a cloud of historical corruption, we welcome the opportunity to shine some light into that room,” Witzburg said.

* Streetsblog | Amtrak’s convenient, timely Chicago-Twin Cities Borealis service saw strong ridership in its first month: According to preliminary figures released in early July, the Borealis saw around 18,500 passengers in June, or an average of 300 passengers a day in each direction. The May 2024 Amtrak monthly performance report showed that the service had 6,600 riders during its first 1.5 weeks of operation. The June 2024 report hadn’t been released by press time.

* Block Club | Former Edgewater Ald. Mary Ann Smith, City Hall Staple For 2 Decades, Dies at 77: As 48th Ward alderwoman from 1989 to 2011, Smith prioritized creating park spaces, improving local schools, introducing traffic calming measures and preserving the ward’s historic blocks, her family, friends and colleagues said. Smith “radiated authenticity, sweetness, compassion,” and was always followed around by her dogs and cats, Matthew Smith said.

* Tribune | A migrant family’s first year in Chicago: sadness, setbacks and ‘beautiful moments’: In 2023, the Tribune followed the Mendez family of five — Esperanza, her adult son, Fabian, his girlfriend, and Experanza’s two youngest children, Yuledy and Pedro — on a bus and train from El Paso, Texas, to Chicago last July. They had risked their lives to make it to the United States. A year later, they find themselves in deep isolation. […] “For months, my mind has been distracted. We’ve been in survival mode. It’s hard to keep up with everything,” said Esperanza in a recent interview. “All the while we’re worried about the people in our own country.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Why Aqua Illinois is building a second water treatment plant in Hawthorn Woods : Water system operator Aqua Illinois, which has had past issues involving customer outages, is building a second water treatment plant in Hawthorn Woods to ensure reliability of the system. […] “In systems like Hawthorn Woods, a significant leak, coupled with normal usage can strain the water supply beyond its capacity,” said Areca Van Mill, regional communication specialist.

* Daily Herald | Despite lakefront focus, Bears president leaves the door open to Arlington Heights stadium ‘opportunity’: Warren’s latest comments — which came during the national TV broadcast of the Bears’ first preseason game Thursday night and in a local radio interview Tuesday — followed Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s declaration Monday that it would be “near impossible” for legislation providing public money for a new lakefront stadium to pass the legislature this fall. “The focus is the Museum Campus downtown. I still think that’s the most beautiful piece of property in the country, where lake meets architecture downtown,” Warren said during the ABC/ESPN broadcast of the Bears’ Hall of Fame Game Thursday night. “We are the largest landowner in Arlington Heights. We own 326 acres. So that still is an opportunity cause we do own the land. But our focus right now is to do everything we can on the lakefront.”

* Daily Herald | ‘This is harming our students’: District looks to power down on cellphones in the classroom : The mantra at Evanston Township High School will be “bell to bell, no cell” as the school enacts a new policy requiring students to power down their phones and place them in a storage caddie at the beginning of each class. At Lake Zurich Community Unit District 95, middle and high school students also will turn in their phones at the beginning of each class. And Elk Grove Township Elementary District 59, junior high school students will be asked this year to store their cellphones in their lockers during the school day.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | East St. Louis nonprofit starts construction on $2 million workforce training center: R3 Development, started in 2015, has employed about 150 young adults through its program, which aims to connect underserved students of the area to good-paying jobs and build up the local economy. “For us, it’s about addressing generational poverty with generational solutions,” said Dave Kuntz, R3’s executive director. “It affects the entire family unit, family line. And this really bolsters the region, the city through jobs and economic development.”

* SJ-R | Who’s performing, how much is admission?: Your 2024 Illinois State Fair questions answered: Free music performances are available each day during the Grand Central Stage Concert Series at the Reisch Pavillion. Among them, include country music singers Kylie Morgan and Drew Baldridge and tribute bands Taylor Made (Taylor Swift tribute) and Feeling This (Blink 182).

* Pantagraph | ‘Love is love’ at annual Pridefest in downtown Bloomington: This year, Main Street from Washington to Monroe streets was closed off, as was the square around the McLean County Museum of History, for a fest featuring live performances, music, family-friendly activities, speeches from local politicians and a “Pride Idol” that Lancaster had been cultivating all year.

* WCIA | Motorcyclists honor Sonya Massey with memorial ride: It was the 47th National Bikers Roundup — the largest camping motorcycle rally in the country. It’s held in a different place every year and is organized by African-American motorcycle clubs. “I’ve been to a few of these. I was here, I think about 11 years ago, if that long ago, when they had it here,” said Lee Bellmay of Indianapolis. “Except for this right here is a little different. You know, this it’s something else, you know; something added to it. Something we don’t want to have to be doing.”

*** Sports ***

* Sun-Times | White Sox’ losing streak hits 20 after sweep by Twins: With the defeat, their 23rd in their last 24 games, the Sox are a three-game road sweep against the Athletics away from tying the 1961 Phillies’ modern-era record of 23 consecutive losses. … With the result Sunday, they joined the 1906 Boston Americans, the 1916 and 1943 A’s and the expansion 1969 Expos with the third-longest streaks in history. The 1988 Orioles have the second-longest at 21 in a row, which is the American League record.


* Pantagraph | : She and her Olympic partner, Sarah Bacon, became silver medalists in synchronized Olympic diving — the first medals won by the U.S. in Paris — and NBC had set up a Zoom feed in Normal, in the home of Kassidy’s sister, Kylie. “And speaking of family,” said NBC studio host Maria Taylor, at that moment, as she interviewed Kassidy and diving partner, Sarah Bacon (yes, Cook ‘n Bacon) … “Kassidy, here is your sister, Kylie, and the rest of the gang there in Normal, Illinois!”

* Daily Herald | ‘I have truly lived the dream’: Dan Schatzeder went from major-league pitcher to suburban teacher and coach: Each Friday during his nearly 20 years as a physical education teacher and athletic coach at Aurora’s Waubonsie Valley High School, Dan Schatzeder would don an extraordinary piece of jewelry before heading to work. To passersby, the bauble on Schatzeder’s right ring finger might’ve looked like a class ring. But this was no mere memento of matriculation. No, this ring — with 15 diamonds set in a stylized, gold M against a blue background — was a far rarer keepsake, a prize awarded only to members of the 1987 World Series-winning Minnesota Twins baseball club.

* Block Club | Chicagoan Shamier Little Smashes World Record On Mixed Relay Team At Paris Olympics: Shamier Little, a 2013 graduate of Lindblom Math and Science Academy, sprinted for Team USA’s 4×400-meter mixed relay team that smashed the event’s world record Friday at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games track and field prelims. The team — featuring Vernon Norwood, Little, Bryce Deadmon and Kaylyn Brown — finished the race in 3 minutes and 7.41 seconds, shaving more than a second off the previous record set at the World Championships in Budapest last year.

* Tribune | Itasca’s Zach Ziemek sets an American record with his 3rd Olympic decathlon: ‘That’s what drove me the entire time’: After running a painful, rain-soaked 1,500 meters to finish the Olympic decathlon, Zach Ziemek sat down on the track and let the exhaustion envelop him. The Itasca native had partially torn his left LCL the previous day during the long jump, instantly dashing his hopes for a medal and making the remaining eight events increasingly difficult. The final four laps around the track — never his favorite event — were a test of determination, done almost solely to secure his place in the U.S. record books.

* WBEZ | ‘Welcome home, Steve. You’re in football heaven.’: Misty talks to her husband, hand on his arm, and unveils the bust at his side. Dent, who played on the defensive line with McMichael and Hall of Famer Dan Hampton, says to his motionless teammate: ‘‘Welcome home, Steve. You’re in football heaven.’’ Misty has moved McMichael’s head so he can see the bust, and what he thinks of the epic, hair-flowing bronze sculpture is unknowable. But the likeness shows a young man in full glory, with a slight smile that can be read as great confidence or a cosmic chuckle, a laugh at the world of propriety, order and, yes, even awards.

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Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Monday, Aug 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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