Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Sun-Times | U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski could be called to testify in Madigan corruption trial: Prosecutors have previously said they plan to call members of Pritzker’s staff to show that Madigan “routinely sought to make recommendations to the governor and his administration concerning appointments” to state boards. One staffer is expected to testify that, after Pritzker took office, he had weekly meetings with Madigan, in which Madigan would take out a list of recommended board appointments and “methodically” work his way through the list. “Certain individuals were not hired despite Madigan’s recommendation for a variety of reasons, including … their dubious backgrounds; others who were recommended by Madigan were hired, but at times someone else had also recommended such individuals,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing.
* ABC Chicago | Former chief of staff takes stand in ex-Speaker Mike Madigan trial: Jessica Basham worked for the speaker from January 2003 - August 2021. As an analyst for the research and appropriations unit, Basham prepared memos and other documents detailing personnel recommendations, appointments to boards and commissions to Gov. JB Pritzker’s administrations and others. * Daily Herald | McLaughlin retains 52nd District House seat by 47 votes over challenger Peterson: Republican state Rep. Martin McLaughlin of Barrington Hills has retained his 52nd District seat by a 47-vote margin, according to results certified Monday by the Illinois State Board of Elections. While Democratic challenger Maria Peterson of North Barrington has until Dec. 9 to file for a discovery recount, McLaughlin said he’s received a congratulatory voicemail from her. * Capitol News Illinois | How RFK Jr.’s health proposals could affect Illinois: Another of Kennedy’s priorities is establishing healthy diets to combat obesity and chronic diseases. He has called for more regulation of food ingredients in a pledge to crack down on ultra-processed foods and ingredients linked to health problems. “Given the current nominee’s interest, it’s likely something like this could be on the docket on the federal level,” University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health Senior Associate Dean and Professor Jamie Chriqui told Capitol News Illinois. “Usually what we see is it gets tested first at the state and local level before it becomes a federal push, unless there is a champion at the federal level who is interested in making changes.” * Tribune | Embattled CPS CEO Pedro Martinez gets buyout offer from law firm tied to Board of Education amid union and mayoral tensions: An attorney representing the Chicago Board of Education offered to buy out Pedro Martinez, the embattled chief of Chicago Public Schools, according to sources close to the conversations. The offer, made over the phone earlier this week, came after Martinez retained attorney William J. Quinlan to represent him in an ongoing power struggle with Mayor Brandon Johnson, the Chicago Teachers Union and the district. * Hyde Park Herald | For Chicago therapists, offering mental health care services in-network doesn’t always pay: According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Illinois ranks 35th among U.S. states and territories at meeting its residents’ mental health care needs, with only about 21% of needs being met. Jason Best, a mental health professional who runs Best Therapies, which is one of the largest practices in Chicago with a Hyde Park branch at 5113 S. Harper Ave., told the Herald that’s not because of a shortage of practicing therapists in Illinois, a claim advanced by health insurance companies. * Sun-Times | McCormick Place manager took kickbacks from snowplow firm that racked up bogus charges, feds say: Charges unsealed Wednesday allege McCormick Place operations manager Dominick Gironda, 54, and contractor James Sansone, 38, arranged for other contractors to overcharge for snow removal, with Gironda signing off on the bogus invoices and Sansone serving as an intermediary for kickbacks from the plowing companies. * Sun-Times | Ex-prosecutor charged with mishandling high-profile murder case had son wipe phone after being fired: Joseph Trutenko recalled the exchange Tuesday during the last day of testimony in his father’s trial on charges tied to the troubled prosecution of Jackie Wilson, whose case was integral in revealing systemic torture within the Chicago Police Department. Jackie Wilson and his brother, Andrew Wilson, were convicted in the 1982 murder of Chicago police officers Richard O’Brien and William Fahey, but they had their convictions overturned based on allegations of torture by detectives working under the notorious Cmdr. Jon Burge. The pair were later convicted again, and Andrew Wilson died in prison in 2007. * Crain’s | Chicago cannabis giant shuts down Michigan grow operation as workers unionize, prices slump: Chicago-based PharmaCann told employees Monday it would shutter its 207,000-square-foot LivWell Michigan cultivation site in Warren, laying off at least 170. […] “They told us they just can’t be competitive in Michigan …” Lince said. “We knew they were having financial troubles. But this doesn’t have anything to do with us organizing; we didn’t even have a contract yet.” * WBEZ | Property taxes in Chicago’s south suburbs soar: The median increase in property bills was 20%, but in the majority Black southern suburbs, bills went up by 30% or more. This left some residents paying more than homeowners in northern suburbs whose homes are valued higher. Reset learns about the factors leading to the increase and what could be done to lower these bills * Daily Herald | Wheeling’s proposed budget includes funds to finish flood-prevention project: Wheeling’s proposed budget for the 2025 fiscal year includes cash for an already-underway flood-prevention project in the South Dunhurst neighborhood and erosion prevention in Buffalo Creek, among other efforts. The estimated $116.5 million spending plan is about $6 million greater than the $110.5 million budget for the current fiscal year, which ends Dec. 31. That’s a roughly 5% increase. * Tribune | Evanston’s Central Street added 18 businesses, preps for holiday shopping: Holiday shoppers will see many new facades in Evanston’s Central Street Business district, an eclectic mix of local businesses stocked with seasonal items. According to a nonprofit group that manages the area, the business corridor, which runs east and west of the intersection of Central Street and Green Bay Road, saw 18 storefronts open in 2024. According to Central Street Evanston’s Community Director Angela Shaffer, approximately 90% of businesses between the Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum, formerly the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian, and the Evanston Arts Center on Central Street are independently owned. Shaffer said many of those businesses’ owners live in Evanston. * Capitol CIty Now | Milhiser seeks Illinois Supreme Court review to keep Grayson detained: Milhiser has filed a petition for leave with the Illinois Supreme Court, asking it to review a November appellate court ruling that ordered a pretrial release hearing for Grayson. The appellate court found the circuit court’s decision to detain Grayson was improper. Grayson’s pretrial release hearing was originally scheduled for Friday, but the appellate court issued a 35-day delay Tuesday providing time for the state’s attorney to pursue a further stay of the mandate directly from the Supreme Court. The hearing is now set for Jan. 2. * NPR Illinois | Illinois Product Holiday Market returns to downtown Springfield: The Illinois Department of Agriculture has announced the Illinois Product Holiday Market will be held on December 6, 7 and 8 at the “Y Block,” located north of the Governor’s Mansion in Springfield. The market features a wide array of Illinois products. “The Illinois Product Holiday Market gives local entrepreneurs a platform to showcase their goods and helps them grow their business” said IDOA Director Jerry Costello. “This initiative not only helps small businesses thrive but also allows shoppers a way to support local agri-businesses, fostering a stronger, more sustainable community.” * WCIA | Former DACC president’s wife asks city council to investigate mayor amid ongoing dispute: The controversy between Danville Community College President Stephen Nacco and Mayor Ricky Williams continues. Williams previously accused Nacco of using abusive language toward him, and now Nacco is sharing his side of the story. “I’m tired of being harassed and bullied by the mayor. I’m tired of watching him do it to other people as well. And I needed to speak out,” said Stephen Nacco’s wife, Cindy Nacco. * News-Gazette | Danville Council approves grocery tax, postpones gas tax vote; bickering continues between Naccos, mayor: One tax won’t start until Jan. 1, 2026, and a vote on a proposed incremental gas tax increase in the city starting next year was postponed by the Danville City Council Tuesday night. The council voted 10-4 to approve a Municipal Grocery Retailers’ Occupation Tax and a Municipal Grocery Service Occupation Tax to replace a 1 percent sales tax on groceries the state will no longer collect on municipalities’ behalf as of Jan. 1, 2026. Those voting against it were aldermen Tricia Teague, Jon Cooper, Ed Butler and Bob Iverson. * WSIL | SIU launches partnership with Aisin: In the new partnership, AISIN will pay SIUC students to work at the facility while they’re also working on their degree. The students will have the opportunity to train in a variety of fields while there, including industrial management and engineering. The program allows students to get paid for their 5-day work week, while also covering tuition, books, fees, transportation and parking. The students get to work part-time, while getting hands-on experience in their field, and work on their degree. The students are expected to maintain good academic standing while in the program. They’re also asked to commit to work for the company 2 years following graduation. * WAND | Land Bank working with Macon County to demolish blighted properties: The process is starting with a $337,000 Strong Communities Program grant from the Illinois Housing Development Authority. The land bank wrote the grant application and is working with Macon County to administer the grant for Macon County. This is one of three Strong Communities Round 2 IHDA grants, totaling over $1 million, that the land bank is administering. * WQAD | Local farmers banding together to help victims of Hurricane Helene: Northwestern Illinois farmers and community members sent feed to livestock owners impacted by Hurricane Helen. On Saturday, Nov. 30, 20 producers from six counties dropped of hay bales at the Ogle and Stephenson County Fairgrounds. The six semi-loads of hay arrived at two locations in western North Carolina on Monday, Dec. 3. * The Daily Egyptian | Southern Illinois charities fight food insecurity: In southern Illinois, Feeding America estimates that 16%, or around 8,520 people, experience food insecurity in Jackson County, and 14%, or around 9,400 in Williamson County. With more than one out of ten people in these two counties experiencing food insecurity, the need for access to food for everyone grows. But for the people in the front lines of this work, things aren’t always easy. Amy Simpson has been working in the field for over 15 years. * WCIA | WATCH: Mastodon dig in Illinois: Long before there was a Great River Road, about 27,000-and-a-half years ago, a mastodon once stood atop the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River. Faculty and students at Principia College have discovered the specimen. “It was also smaller than the skull would be,” says Andrew Martin, chair of the Sociology and Anthropology Department at Principia College, pointing to parts of a mastodon skull. “What you have is here one set and another tooth on this side and two teeth on this side. And each tooth weighs about a pound.” * Smile Politely | Krannert Art Museum promotes the art of slowing down: On a damp, windy day in early November, I stopped by Krannert Art Museum (KAM) on the University of Illinois campus to visit the Rest Lab. This innovative space is designed to provide a respite for students and community members. It is a “pop-up experience” that occupies the spaces between exhibitions, promoting intentional rest — something often overlooked or undervalued in our culture. Rest Lab is the creation of Ishita Dharap and Kamila Glowacki, KAM education coordinators. * The Atlantic | The Coming Democratic Revolution: Over the past several months, a small coterie of wonks and lawyers—and a few farsighted Democratic governors—have been working in anticipation of this moment. They have prepared measures to insulate states from the Trump administration’s most aggressive impositions. They have constructed plans to preserve abortion protections within blue-state borders and to protect environmental regulations enshrined in their books; they have formulated legal strategies for at least slowing Trump’s intended mass deportations. * Tribune | ‘Yacht Rock: A Dockumentary’ review: More than an ironic musical pleasure: HBO’s “Yacht Rock: The Dockumentary” isn’t about that low-rent, intentionally amateur-looking web series (with its absurdly funny origin story for the 1978 single “What a Fool Believes”), but its creators are featured prominently, thanks to their thoroughly unironic and thoughtful appreciation for the music itself. The taxonomy of yacht rock, which spans 1976-1984, includes McDonald (with and without The Doobie Brothers), Steely Dan, Kenny Loggins, Christopher Cross and Toto. * Reuters | Internal transactions at food giant ADM spark a sprawling criminal probe: Late on Nov 4, American agribusiness giant Archer-Daniels-Midland cut its profit forecast for 2024, delayed a quarterly earnings report and said it would restate other recent financial results, too. The announcement, the second time this year ADM said accounting “issues” were forcing it to restate past earnings, sent shares tumbling. The company’s stock lost $1.6 billion in market value the next day. ADM’s rattled shareholders are asking questions about the mounting accounting troubles – and they aren’t the only ones.
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Madigan trial roundup: Solis leaves the witness stand
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* WGN…
* …Adding… Capitol News Illinois…
* ABC Chicago…
* Jon Seidel is in the courtroom this morning…
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * We mark the passage of time in several ways on this ol’ blog: Session starts, budget addresses, session endings, the Illinois State Fair, elections, veto sessions, Alice’s Restaurant, fundraising to buy Christmas presents for foster kids and the Golden Horseshoe Awards. Our first categories…
* Best place to gather for drinks, etc. during session weeks Please nominate in both categories, and make sure to explain your nominations or your votes will not count. This ain’t a poll. It’s all about intensity. Single, well-written nominations have often beaten out organized spam. So, get in there and fight for your preferred winner. * Also, just another reminder that we’re still raising money to buy Christmas presents for foster kids who are in the Lutheran Social Services of Illinois system. Unlike the last couple of years, we haven’t yet had any anonymous matching donations, so I suggest we proceed on the assumption that past unknown wealthy benefactors might not come through this year. But that means your contribution is far more important in 2024, so, please, click here and dig deep. Thanks!
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Appellate court grants 35-day stay in Grayson release hearing
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Some background is here if you need it. Click here for the appellate order. Springfield Leaks had the scoop. Here’s the SJ-R…
* WCIA…
* Springfield Leaks…
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Open thread
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?… After you comment, consider clicking here to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for children in foster care.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! We’re just shy of raising $9,000. Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able. * ICYMI: In rare caucus, Tiffany Henyard loses Thornton Township nomination. WGN…
- Thornton Township’s Democratic Party held a caucus instead of a primary election for the first time in decades. - As Democratic Party committeeman, Sen. Napoleon Harris alone holds the right to decide whether to have a primary election or a caucus. - As of now, Sen. Harris will be among five supervisor candidates on the ballot April 1. * Related stories…
∙ ABC Chicago: Tiffany Henyard denied place on ballot to stay on as Thornton Township supervisor ∙ WGN: “A raucous caucus” seeks to determine if Tiffany Henyard can seek re-election in Thornton Township ∙ CBS Chicago: Tiffany Henyard denied place on ballot to stay on as Thornton Township, Illinois supervisor ∙ Lansing Journal: Dems oust Henyard at rare, thunderous caucus ∙ WGN: ‘They can’t beat me’: In rare caucus, Tiffany Henyard loses Thornton Township nomination ∙ Fox Chicago: ‘You can’t do stuff like this’: Tiffany Henyard, her supporters claim they were cheated in caucus * STL Today | Illinois among 9 states poised to immediately cut Medicaid rolls if federal funding drops: With Donald Trump’s return to the White House and Republicans taking full control of Congress in 2025, the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion is back on the chopping block. More than 3 million adults in nine states would be at immediate risk of losing their health coverage should the GOP reduce the extra federal Medicaid funding that’s enabled states to widen eligibility, according to KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News, and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families. That’s because the states have trigger laws that would swiftly end their Medicaid expansions if federal funding falls. * A City That Works | Chicago’s state capacity crisis: City government is being slowly strangled by layers of process that have accumulated over decades. Many of these constraints are well intentioned correctives to past misdeeds. Anti-corruption checks are important, affordable housing should be high-quality, and accountable policing is fundamental to long-term public safety. But without any effort to rationalize the constraints we continue to add, we have a crisis of state capacity: a government unable to get things done. * WBEZ | Chicago is closing its biggest tent city, but comes up short on promised apartments: Homeless advocates are praising Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration and the local City Council member for coming up with the apartments; they’re also urging them to scrap the plan to remove any tent dwellers who remain. Meanwhile, the people who aren’t getting an apartment are wondering why. […] City officials say they found 63 units for people in Humboldt Park’s encampment. They say that’s the most ever for a Chicago tent city. […] Patricia Nix-Hodes, who heads the law project of the Chicago Coalition to End Homelessness, said there is an issue more basic than who gets offered an apartment. * WGEM | New Illinois law will require employers include salary range on job postings: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) signed the legislation in 2023 amending the state’s Equal Pay Act of 2003. It will require employers with 15 or more employees to include the job’s pay scale and expected benefits in all postings. “This is kind of making it clear that there is transparency around those things. People are going to work to provide for their families. They have a right to know how they’re going to be making if they get chosen for that position,” said Frances Orenic with the Illinois AFL-CIO. * STLPR | Illinois warehouses should be built with storm shelters, state task force recommends: The recommendation for storm shelters would require that they be built specifically for tornadoes based on the size and occupancy of a warehouse. It would amend a section of the state’s International Building Code requirements. “I don’t like the idea of encouraging safety. I like the idea of requiring safety,” said state Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, who made the storm shelter recommendation. “We’re talking about deaths that happened in my district, and I take that very seriously. So, I think to require safety is something that we should all want to do as a body.” * Tribune | EPA watchdog: Undeserving Florida getting millions for lead pipe replacement while Illinois, other states have bigger needs: During the past two years the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency gave Florida the largest share of funding set aside by Congress to replace lead service lines. The Sunshine State got $483 million, compared with $471 million sent to Illinois, even though several of Florida’s big water utilities told the agency’s inspector general the toxic pipes don’t exist in their service areas. Florida will double its take during the next two years if the EPA fails to fix the problem, the inspector general concluded.
* Crain’s | City Council puts do-not-hire policy under a microscope in wake of mayor’s press office shakeup: Standing before four former employees of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s communications team who were placed on the do-not-hire list after being fired by their former boss, Ronnie Reese, Ald. Scott Waguespack, 32nd, and Ald. Gilbert Villegas, 36th, said during a news conference outside City Hall today that they plan to push for an easier appeal process for those who believe they were unfairly placed on the list. * Crain’s | CPS needs to plug a huge financial hole — but where will it find the funds?: Chicago Public Schools invested its federal dollars largely in hiring. But while students’ test scores rose, those federal funds are running out. Here’s how the school district got into a financial hole, what its options are and how this impacts an already messy budget.
* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson tells City Club he wants Chicago under 500 homicides in 2025: Johnson floated the benchmark — which has not been achieved since 2015 — during a City Club of Chicago speech, after noting this year’s drop in homicides and shootings. The mayor’s remarks to the lunch crowd of business types and politicos also leaned heavily on his racial identity and faith as he sought to recast the narrative on his rocky year-and-a-half leading the nation’s third-largest city. * WBEZ | Chicago election officials want more voting sites, as alderpersons float agency consolidation: During the board’s annual budget hearing Tuesday, several alderpersons raised the need to consolidate the Chicago Board of Elections with the Cook County Clerk’s Office. The budget watchdog The Civic Federation and a collaborative of county and city officials had previously recommended the move more than a decade ago, with officials estimating annual savings between $5 million and $10 million. * Tribune | Pennsylvania-based Yuengling, the oldest brewery in America, is bringing its beer to Chicago: Beginning late next month, beer drinkers can be on the lookout for Yuengling at Chicago-area bars, as the historic family-owned East Coast brewery continues its slow expansion westward into the land of Old Style. Yuengling beers will also make their way onto store shelves in the weeks that follow, ending years of waiting for Illinois fans, some of whom take regular interstate journeys to fill their trunks with cases of the stuff. * Crain’s | Here’s how one of Chicago’s restaurant meat suppliers is using AI: The orders would come in from dining spots throughout the city: Lonesome Rose in Logan Square and The Bellevue in the Gold Coast, as well as catering companies, pizza joints and taverns. An employee at one of those restaurants would place an order with Northwest Meat for their chicken breast or sirloin steak for the next day. Then someone — usually co-owner Andrew Neva, his father or one of their office employees — would plug those orders into their own system, one by one, to be filled by their West Loop warehouse workers. It was tedious. It took hours. It required intimate knowledge of the meat company’s 1,300 different products. And it usually happened in the evening — a time when few employees are keen to sit back down at their computer. * WBEZ | Cook County is launching a free doula program for pregnant patients: Nearly 1,000 mostly Black or Latina patients at Cook County Health are currently pregnant, and they will be offered a choice to have a doula support and advocate for them before, during and after labor. “This program is a direct response to the stark and unacceptable disparities in maternal health that have plagued Black women for far too long,” said County Commissioner Donna Miller, who spearheaded the initiative. * PJ Star | Illinois is home to the most expensive home in all of Christmas movies: Cinch Home Services used home value data from Zillow to explore the average home prices in neighborhoods that star in some of the top Christmas movies. The McCallister house, located on Lincoln Avenue in Winnetka, Illinois, and featured in the “Home Alone” franchise, is in a neighborhood where the average home price is $1,565,804. The McCallister house is a spacious residence that often sparks curiosity due to its impressive size. At approximately 4,250 square feet, it is a large Georgian-style home with three floors, a spacious attic, five bedrooms, and four bathrooms. Earlier in 2024, the home actually went on the market for $5.25 million — well above the amount of the average home in the neighborhood. * Daily Herald | Gould resigns as Rolling Meadows football coach: Gould, who was the Bears’ kicker from 2005 through 2015 while becoming the team’s all-time leading scorer, was named the ninth head football coach in Rolling Meadows history when he was hired in February. Gould inherited a program that failed to reach the playoffs the previous two seasons after going 2-7 in 2023 and 4-5 the year before. The Mustangs had qualified in 17 of the 18 previous seasons. * PJ Star | More than 500 workers furloughed at Liberty Steel in Peoria, union says: Liberty Steel is temporarily shuttering its Peoria wire mill as the company continues to struggle financially, facing deep debts around the globe amid a challenging steel market. The company has furloughed over 500 employees at its Peoria facility, according to the union representing workers. * SJ-R | Springfield alderman: Clerk ‘hindering’ city business by not resigning: Gregory, who went through his own close election with Gail Simpson to gain his seat in 2019, told Lesko “the people, county and city, they need 100% of you. They don’t need 50% (on the city side) and 50% on the county side. This is about the city of Springfield continuing on our business and you having to do two jobs at one time.” Frank Lesko is sworn in as Sangamon County Recorder by Circuit Court Presiding Judge Ryan Cadagin at a ceremony at the county complex on Dec. 2, 2024. “We’re about to come up on budget season. We have to do interviews (for your vacancy), figure out that process and you’re hindering us, bro.” * Nieman Lab | There’s now a way for journalists to verify their Bluesky accounts through their employers (while still keeping control of them): On Bluesky, an account gets verified by connecting it to a web domain under the user’s control. For example, my account there is @joshuabenton.com, because I put a little piece of code on that domain name, which I own. Bluesky checked that little snippet of code and determined that I am me. For news organizations — or any other online publisher or brand — this means it’s easy to skip past the spoofable @mynewsorgname.bsky.social and become @nytimes.com, @cnn.com, @propublica.org, @time.com, or @npr.org. And if you’re a reporter who owns your own domain name — something I’d highly recommend! — the process is fiddly but doable in minutes. * Fox Chicago | Indiana residents could see sharp increase in electric bills: Residents in Indiana may soon see a sharp increase in their electric bills, with monthly costs expected to rise by an estimated $32 to $45. NIPSCO is seeking approval for a 22% electric rate hike, which would further increase the already highest power costs in the state. * Sun-Times | Rahm Emanuel ‘not interested’ in DNC chair, but far from done with politics: The former mayor, now U.S. ambassador to Japan, would not rule out another run for elective office — governor, U.S. senator or mayor of Chicago — even though he fully expects Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker to seek a third term. Emanuel plans to support Pritzker “100%” if he runs again.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/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)
Wednesday, Dec 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised almost $9,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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