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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

*** RNC ***

* Illinois GOP chair-elect Kathy Salvi, House Minority Leader Tony McCombie and Sen. Terri Bryant held a press availability this morning:

* Sun-Times | Illinois Republican goes viral after confronting ‘obnoxious’ Gaetz on convention floor: Illinois National Republican Committeeman Richard Porter’s Tuesday night interaction with Gaetz made the rounds in a social media video that showed him berate the scandal-plagued Gaetz for trying to embarrass former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy during a television interview. […] At the Illinois RNC delegation’s Wednesday breakfast, Porter said Gaetz’s display “was just for show. It was obnoxious, it was not consistent with what we’re here for.”

* WTTW | As Illinois RNC Delegation Celebrates Agriculture, Congresswoman Decries ‘Communist Environmental Movement’ and ‘Demonized’ Carbon Dioxide: Miller said excessive regulations are hurting agriculture, blaming the so-called “communist environmental movement, the ‘Green Bad Deal’ that Donald Trump has called out as a sham issue. And I want to tell you as a farmer, we love CO2 – and trees and plants love it too. They have demonized the miracle molecule that causes things to grow.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Fioretti makes his case: Bob Fioretti, the GOP candidate for Cook County State’s Attorney, addresses reporters with Black Chicago-area community activists who say they’ve grown frustrated with Democrats and are now willing to give Republicans a try. Fioretti faces an uphill battle to become state’s attorney in predominantly blue Cook County against Democrat Eileen O’Neill Burke.

* Sun-Times | New Illinois GOP chair Kathy Salvi heralds ‘fresh new day’ at Republican National Convention: Salvi struck a familiar refrain of unity among Illinois delegates this week at the Republican National Convention, pushing for “culture of collaboration” in a divided state party that is trying to claw its way back to statewide relevance in Illinois. “I love this party, because sometimes we air our dirty laundry with one another,” Salvi said during her first public address since her election last week as the next party chair. “We need to say, ‘You know, let’s give that person the benefit of a fresh new day.’ And that’s how we win elections here in Illinois.”

* Sun-Times | Police arrest armed man in ski mask approaching RNC perimeter in Milwaukee: About 1 p.m. Monday, U.S. Capitol police “observed the suspect looking suspicious, wearing a ski mask and a large tactical backpack” in the 1200 block of North 11th Street, according to a statement from Milwaukee police. That’s about four blocks away from the downtown arena hosting most RNC events. Officers stopped the 21-year-old man and found a gun in his backpack, police said. He didn’t have a concealed carry permit, according to police. Wisconsin is an open-carry state.

…Adding… ILGOP…

The Illinois Republican Delegation will begin their day with breakfast at 8:00 AM CT that is open to the media. Details for the breakfast and speakers can be found below.

Illinois Republican Party Delegation Breakfast:
WHEN: Thursday, July 17, 2024 - 8:00 - 9:30 AM CT
WHERE:
Comfort Suites Milwaukee Airport - Ballroom
6362 South 13th Street
Oak Creek, WI 53154
WHO: Congressman Darin LaHood and Ohio Senate Candidate Bernie Moreno

AGENDA:
8:00 AM CT - Doors Open for Guests and Media
8:30 AM CT - Welcome, Prayer, and Pledge of Allegiance
8:45 AM CT - Guest Speaker - Ohio Senate Candidate Bernie Moreno
9:10 AM CT - Delegation speaker - Congressman Darin LaHood
9:30 AM CT - Breakfast Concludes

Congressman Darin LaHood, State Representative John Cabello, and Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy will hold media availability following the breakfast programming.

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | IDPH reports first human case of West Nile Virus in Illinois this year: The person is in their 60’s and lives in suburban Cook County. The onset of WNV symptoms was in mid-June. IDPH is tracking positive batches of birds and mosquitos on its West Nile virus dashboard and has reported 33 Illinois counties this year with positive results, an early warning of the presence of WNV in an area.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Sen. Rose leads measure against proposed stricter OSHA firefighting requirements: A proposal from OSHA looks to expand protections for first responders including firefighters, but it focuses on increasing training requirements, medical screenings for all first responders, and more inspections of emergency vehicles. […] Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) initiated a resolution a couple months ago, with bipartisan support expressing the state of Illinois’ opposition to the proposed regulations as presented.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | The Feds Sent Millions To The CHA For Lathrop Homes. After 2 Decades, 300 Apartments Are Still Empty: But Lathrop residents say they suffered while the CHA delayed construction and stockpiled cash for years. Even when the next phase is completed, only 300 units at Lathrop will be reserved for public housing residents — a loss of 625 units from 25 years ago, and 101 fewer than the CHA is obligated to produce under a federal court settlement.

* The Triibe | Pro-Palestinian protestors call on city to drop charges ahead of the DNC in Chicago: The 40 people who were arrested face misdemeanor charges for obstructing traffic, which the city’s law department brought against them. Some of the 40 were present for a press conference Wednesday’s Chicago City Council’s meeting to speak out against the charges. The group sent a letter to Mayor Brandon Johnson on July 2, calling for his administration to drop their charges, but they said they haven’t received a response.

* Block Club | West Loop’s Free Parking Coming To An End As Hundreds More Metered Spots Planned: The problem: The parking meter proposal is already a done deal and has been for the past five years. But that isn’t stopping Ald. Bill Conway (34th) from trying. “I’m trying to have as few of the meters as I can and put them as close to commercial corridors versus residential as much as we can. But it’s difficult because, obviously, the ordinance predates me, so I don’t have a lot of leverage,” Conway said.

* Crain’s | Capital One commits to keep more than 1,000 staff at Discover’s Chatham call center: Capital One committed to meeting Discover’s original goal of employing more than 1,000 people at its call center in Chatham as part of its proposed $35 billion takeover of the Riverwoods-based credit card company. The commitment was included in Capital One’s announcement of $265 billion in widespread community benefits it says will stem from the deal, which must be approved by government regulators.

* Sun-Times | City Council approves $11.25 million settlement to female paramedic candidates: The settlement involves 12 women who were hired as paramedics, then flunked out of the fire academy by a “discriminatory,” post-hiring test so demanding and unrelated to the skills needed as a paramedic that four of the plaintiffs suffered “career-ending” hip and back injuries during the testing.

* Tribune | Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy will headline Chicago Live on Navy Pier: Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy will headline September’s Chicago Live arts festival on Navy Pier, according to an announcement Wednesday. Tweedy will play a free acoustic set on Saturday, the first night of the two-day event slated for Sept. 21-22. He’ll play on the Lake Stage in Polk Bros. Park, just to the west of the Pier.

* Tribune | Miche Fest went from Pilsen street fest to a leading Chicago Latino music festival: Six years ago, Michelada Fest started out of an empty parking lot in Pilsen when Fernando Nieto said he realized that most of the street festivals in the neighborhood were organized by non-Latinos. With some help from friends and community members, he created a festival to celebrate Mexican culture. […] Miche Fest, short for Michelada Festival, is now one of Chicago’s largest Latino music festivals, bringing together thousands of people from all over the city and featuring world-renowned artists who speak to different generations of Latinos.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lansing Journal | ‘Read your bill,’ says Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas in response to record tax hikes: Newly redesigned bills show taxpayers, “Where Your Money Goes.” Bills show the amount of taxes owed for 2023 and how much the bill changed from 2022. The typical bill displays about a dozen taxing districts and shows how much is paid to each taxing body. “The first thing homeowners should do about their property taxes is to read their tax bill,” Pappas said. “In order to fix the broken property tax system, you must first understand where the money goes.”

* Daily Herald | It’s official: DuPage voters to decide on tax hike for forest preserves: If it passes, the owner of a home valued at $308,500 would pay roughly $36 more a year in property taxes to the district. The increase would raise more than $17 million in additional annual revenue, provide “long-term financial stability” and allow the district to purchase more land, officials say.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Multimillion dollar warehouse project takes step forward in Springfield despite objections: A project that could bring hundreds of jobs to the Springfield area took a step forward despite concerns from residents. The zoning agenda on Tuesday had council members vote on the proposed variances to move the warehouse forward. Fred O’Connor, Doug Kent and Charles Young made an objection to zoning docket 24-028, the multimillion dollar warehouse facility which was proposed on May 1. […] One of the main areas of concern for residents like Melissa Smith was traffic.

* SJ-R | Death of Sangamon County Board member will trigger special election: The July 6 death of longtime Sangamon County Board member John H. O’Neill III will trigger a special election for his seat on Nov. 5, according to Sangamon County Clerk Don Gray. O’Neill represented District 26, which is the Chatham area. The Republican was first elected to the board in 2002 and defeated Democratic challenger Rusty Jones in the 2022 election. In an email, Gray said the special election was being held because more than 28 months remain in the term.

* WGN | Underground railroad house in Payson, Illinois for sale: The home is located at 102 N Park St, Payson, Illinois. It is currently listed on Zillow for $169,900. […] The Library of Congress includes an entry about the building in its archives. On the property, there is a plaque that says that the home was recorded by the Historic American Building Survey of the United States Department.

* PJ Star | Teen drowned in Illinois River while fleeing from police, sheriff’s department says: The Peoria County Sheriff’s Department said Wednesday that 14-year-old Leron Griffin drowned in the Illinois River while fleeing from police after he and another teenager led officers on a chase after having been allegedly caught in a stolen vehicle. “Unfortunately, these teenagers made several wrong decisions during this incident that led to one of them losing their lives,” the Peoria Sheriff’s Department said in a statement. “Our thoughts are with Leron Griffin’s family.”

* Shaw Local | Ancient fault line likely responsible for DeKalb County earthquake, NIU expert say: Mark Frank, chair of NIU’s department of earth, atmosphere and environment, said he wasn’t surprised to discover an earthquake had occurred in that area, even though earthquakes aren’t particularly common in northern Illinois. “The earthquakes we get here in northern Illinois are associated with ancient cracks in the earth’s crust,” Frank said. “So, this one is plotting very close to a known fault called the Sandwich fault, which kind of runs from Dixon through and then south of DeKalb through DeKalb County.”

*** National ***

* Royal Astronomical Society | Want to spot a deepfake? Look for the stars in their eyes: That’s the compelling finding of new research shared at the Royal Astronomical Society’s National Astronomy Meeting in Hull, which suggests that AI-generated fakes can be spotted by analysing human eyes in the same way that astronomers study pictures of galaxies. The crux of the work, by University of Hull MSc student Adejumoke Owolabi, is all about the reflection in a person’s eyeballs. If the reflections match, the image is likely to be that of a real human. If they don’t, they’re probably deepfakes.

* Bloomberg | Reckitt expects baby formula sales drop after tornado hits Indiana warehouse: The consumer goods company said Wednesday that the third-party warehouse has not been operational since the tornado hit on July 9. The Mead Johnson nutrition business contains Reckitt’s infant formula brands. Shares in Reckitt are down by more than a fifth since the start of the year after the company was hit by a damaging court verdict in the US relating to one of its formulas, called Enfamil Premature 24, which an Illinois woman blamed for the death of her baby.

* Crain’s | Top brass at Blue Cross Illinois parent take home big raises: Keeping with tradition, top executives at the parent company of Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Illinois were given large raises last year, despite a slight drop in profits. […] The raises came the same year [Health Care Service Corp] saw revenue soar to a record $54 billion as the health insurance giant hiked premium rates and added new customers to its plans across Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. However, a larger federal tax burden pulled down year-over-year net income 2% to $1.4 billion.

* ABC | Navy exonerates 256 Black sailors unjustly court-martialed for WWII-era Port Chicago explosion: The U.S. Navy has exonerated 256 Black sailors who were unjustly court-martialed in 1944 following the Port Chicago explosion in California that killed 320 people. The sailors had been punished for refusing to go back to work in what they considered to be an unsafe environment. Their prosecution took place at a time when the U.S. military was still segregated and reflected the unfair treatment that Black sailors experienced.

* Vox | The lessons Houston didn’t learn from Hurricane Harvey: Houston’s energy system has had its own unique issues within this milieu. “​​Texas in general — and CenterPoint in particular — had problems with reliability, even not during storms,” said Doug Lewin, an energy analyst who writes the Texas Energy and Power Newsletter. In Texas, CenterPoint ranked among the worst utilities for power outages and one of the worst in the country for energy efficiency. The Texas grocery chain H-E-B even installed backup generators at its Houston-area stores specifically because of CenterPoint’s unreliable service.

  13 Comments      


Beware: Corn sweat

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* I’m sure you’re aware of the heaps of rain we’ve gotten in the past week. KHQA

Did you know that certain crops can actually cause it to feel more humid outside?

Evapotranspiration, or “corn sweat,” is a process that occurs with mature corn and soybean crops in the summer months. July and August are the primary months. […]

Water is taken in via the roots of the mature plant and continues up the crop through the stem and leaves.

The leaves release water vapor into the atmosphere, which then raises our humidity levels. […]

According to the US Geological Survey, 1 acre of corn can add between 3,000 and 4,000 gallons of water to the atmosphere.

* The Washington Post in 2022

The moisture from corn evapotranspiration may not only make it intolerably muggy during the day, it can also slow cooling at night, leaving little respite from the heat. Lows on Wednesday from Texas to Illinois only dipped to 75 to 80, about 5 to 15 degrees above normal. The low temperature in Des Moines was just 82, its warmest minimum temperature since July 1936.

When ingredients are in place for showers and storms, the added juice can make them more intense; this could be the case in parts of the Midwest on Wednesday where the National Weather Service has declared an elevated risk of severe storms.

Corn is not the only culprit in summer humidity, though. Soybeans also contribute substantial moisture through evapotranspiration. In other words, soybeans sweat, too. Moisture also evaporates from bodies of water and even from the wet soils of areas with recent rains. Not to mention a good deal of the moisture that reaches the Corn Belt during summer is sourced from the Gulf of Mexico and sometimes even from the Pacific Ocean.

* From the US Geological Survey

Plant transpiration is pretty much an invisible process. Since the water is evaporating from the leaf surfaces, you don’t just go out and see the leaves “breathing”. Just because you can’t see the water doesn’t mean it is not being put into the air, though. One way to visualize transpiration is to put a plastic bag around some plant leaves. As this picture shows, transpired water will condense on the inside of the bag. During a growing season, a leaf will transpire many times more water than its own weight. An acre of corn gives off about 3,000-4,000 gallons (11,400-15,100 liters) of water each day, and a large oak tree can transpire 40,000 gallons (151,000 liters) per year.

In 2023, Illinois planted 11,200,000 acres of corn. So between 33,600,000,000-44,800,000,000 gallons of water could be added to the atmosphere each day.

* Ambrook Research

The United States grows more corn than any other crop, which means it has an outsized effect on the agricultural industry. And while it doesn’t require as much labor as many other crops, humans are still involved in the harvest. That can be unfortunate for anyone working in those fields, given that it can feel 15 degrees hotter in a cornfield than outside it. According to professor Suat Irmak, head of agricultural and biological engineering at Penn State, if you’re working in a cornfield, “You are going to sweat a lot, and sometimes you might feel like it’s difficult to breathe because it’s so humid, so hot, and there’s a closed canopy.”

That may not have too big of an impact on a farmer driving a combine from an air-conditioned cab. But when maintenance, detasseling, hand-picking sweet corn, or other work requires spending time on the ground, that heat index difference can add up to significant — and potentially fatal — health risks for farm laborers.

That was the case for Cruz Urias Beltran, who died tragically from heat stroke while working in a Nebraska cornfield in 2018. Beltran is just one of hundreds of farmworkers who have died from heat-related issues in the U.S. over the last decade, where federal protections for farmworkers have lagged behind the rate at which growing seasons are getting hotter.

“As temperatures continue to rise, farmworkers are already working in the fields through record-breaking heat and in dangerous temperatures. This is a major factor in agriculture being one of the deadliest industries for workers in the United States today,” said Antonio De Loera-Brust, director of communications for the United Farm Workers (UFW).

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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ComEd says all outages will be restored Friday, 80% will be restored today

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois was hit hard by storms this week. Block Club Chicago

A tornado hit the Near West Side and Downtown Monday, one of as many as a dozen twisters that wrecked trees and sent rooftop deck furniture flying, according to the National Weather Service.

Monday night’s storms saw multiple tornadoes reported throughout the area — including at both airports — before they swept into Northwest Indiana. Crews for the weather service are out inspecting 29 “paths of potential damage” due to tornadoes Tuesday, the agency said.

So far, the weather service has confirmed five tornadoes in the region, with one forming over the Near West side before traveling to “far western portions of the Loop,” the agency tweeted Tuesday. […]

Most of Monday’s tornados will likely be EF-0 or EF-1, the weaker classifications, but [Bill Snyder, a longtime WGN producer for retired meteorologist Tom Skilling] said the weather event was still “nothing to sneeze at”: Its winds were about as damaging as a category 1 hurricane.

* I spoke with ComEd Communications Manager Lauren Huffman this morning. As of 8:30 am Comed has restored 366,000 customers’ power following the Monday night storms. About 63,000 customers remain without power…

“We said earlier this week that about 80% of the outages, and originally there were 430,000 of them, would be restored today. We’re on track to meet that and then there’ll be a full restoration Friday,” ComEd Communications Manager Lauren Huffman said.

* WMBD

Ameren Illinois is still working on restoring power to thousands of customers across the state after a severe storm moved through the area on Monday.

According to the Ameren Outage Map, about 12,110 residents in Illinois remain without power Wednesday morning. That includes about 555 in Knox County, 2,024 in Marshall County, 1,313 in Peoria County, 404 in Putnam County and 3,421 in Tazewell County.

On Tuesday, Ameren projected that impacted customers would have power restored by 10 p.m. Wednesday.

* ABC 7 Chicago

Parts of I-55 remain shut down in south suburban Will County as crews work to clear power lines downed during Monday night’s severe weather.

In an update Wednesday morning, Illinois State Police and ComEd said the road could reopen between U.S. 6 and River Road in Channahon. early Thursday morning after clearing debris and vehicles. […]

The confirmed Channahon tornado also toppled two transmission towers. Numerous high-tension, high-power ComEd electricity lines were ripped down, now stretching across the roads, including I-55. […]

And an Exxonmobil Refinery is now without power, forced to flare some of its product as a precaution.

* Some photos of the damage


* More…

    * Tribune | As O’Hare sheltered in place during storm, passengers rode the winds out aboard planes: ‘It felt very vulnerable’: The O’Hare air traffic control tower evacuated during the storm, as did the FAA’s Terminal Radar Approach Control facility, known as TRACON, in Elgin. That led to a ground stop at O’Hare, causing all planes to stop moving on the tarmac at the major hub airport, a spokesman for United Airlines, O’Hare’s largest carrier, said in a statement. Once the FAA resumed staffing the facilities, airlines were able to move their planes again, United said. But until then, passengers like Jack were stuck aboard planes that were buffeted by the storm’s strong winds. For about 10 minutes, she watched as the wings blew up and down, and the “pretty strong” wind caused items outside the window to blow around.

    * AP | A dam fails after rain, wind, tornadoes pound the Midwest. The Chicago area is cleaning up: Water overtopped a dam near Nashville, Illinois, and first responders fanned out to ensure everyone escaped safely. There were no reports of injuries in the community of 3,000, southeast of St. Louis, but a woman was rescued after reporting that she was in water up to her waist in her home, said Alex Haglund, a spokesperson for the Washington County Emergency Management Agency.

    * Shaw Local | Kane County communities assessing damage following Monday night storms: The Campton Township Highway District is hosting a special post-storm pickup the week of July 29, Commissioner Sam Gallucci said Tuesday, following a second night of storms with heavy damage. “We had trees down two nights in a row,” Gallucci said. “Somewhere around 35 to 40 trees were down, across roads, and we’ve been busy with that, crews working on clearing trees from roads. And private property had a lot of trees down.”

    * Tribune | Warmer winters and a hotter Gulf of Mexico could be contributing to more tornadoes in Illinois, experts say: Studies have also found climate change may be affecting tornado patterns. Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University, said climate change can affect the conditions necessary to create tornadoes. Tornadoes need instability –– warm moist air near the ground with cooler temperatures higher up –– and wind shear –– a change in wind speed or direction –– to form. Instability is more potent in the warm seasons, and shear is usually stronger in the winter.

  7 Comments      


Admitting you have a problem is the first step toward recovery

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Republican Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison….

The Danger of Vitriolic Language in Politics:
A Call for Civility and Respect

In recent years, we have witnessed a distressing escalation in the use of vitriolic language in our political discourse. It has become all too common to see political opponents referred to in dehumanizing terms, their characters slandered with reckless abandon. This trend is not just divisive; it is profoundly dangerous.

Words have power. When we call our opponents by demeaning names or spread falsehoods about their intentions and integrity, we erode the foundations of civil discourse. We replace meaningful debate with personal attacks, and in doing so, we undermine the very essence of democracy.

The consequences of such behavior are far-reaching and severe. Beyond the immediate harm to individuals and their reputations, there is a broader societal impact. Vitriolic language creates an atmosphere of hostility and mistrust. It polarizes communities, driving wedges between neighbors and friends who may hold differing political views.

Most troubling of all, this toxic rhetoric can incite violence. History has shown us time and again that words can inspire actions, particularly among those who may already be prone to instability or extremism. When political discourse descends into a battleground of insults and character assassinations, it sets a dangerous precedent. It sends a message that such behavior is acceptable, even encouraged.

As a community and as a nation, we must unequivocally reject this path. We cannot afford to normalize or condone the use of vitriolic language in our political discourse. Instead, we must demand a return to civility, respect, and empathy in our interactions with one another.

Leadership starts with each of us. Whether we hold public office or participate as engaged citizens, we have a responsibility to model the behavior we wish to see. We can passionately advocate for our beliefs without resorting to personal attacks. We can engage in debates based on facts and principles, not on the vilification of our opponents.

It is time to restore dignity to our political conversations. Let us commit ourselves to fostering an environment where differences of opinion are respected, where dialogue is constructive, and where our shared values of decency and fairness prevail.

I call upon all individuals, regardless of political affiliation, to join me in condemning the use of vitriolic language in politics. Let us work together to build a future where our discourse reflects the best of who we are as a community and as a nation.

The stakes are too high to ignore. The time for change is now.

Agreed.

* However, I would’ve found this op-ed far more believable if Commissioner Morrison had included himself in that admonition…


* A search of Morrison’s account using the word “hate” brought up tons of hits, including these…



* And…


  55 Comments      


Why Illinois’ prison population at the end of 2023 was the lowest since 1991

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an email…

Loyola’s Center for Criminal Justice just published a research brief plus a data dashboard that looks at the use of probation versus prison in Illinois over the past 20 years across each of the 102 counties in the state. This is the first time information like this has been examined and made available in Illinois.

Bottom lines:

    1) Because of the general drop in crime and arrests, the number of people convicted of a felony in Illinois has decreased, but so too has the likelihood that those convicted are being sentenced to prison. Among those convicted of Class 1-4 felonies, in 2010 45% got a prison sentence, by 2023 that fell to 34%;

    2) This pattern is not due to Cook County alone, but rather, represents a shift in sentencing practices across most (70%) of Illinois’ 102 counties;

    3) These shifts have likely occurred due to improved probation services, increased use of treatment courts, and a general shift in thinking about the most effective responses to crime, and;

    4) The net impact of the change in sentencing patterns over the past 10 years translates to 30,000 fewer people sentenced to prison, which explains a lot of the decrease in the Illinois prison population.

* From the Loyola research brief

* According to that research brief, “70% of counties saw a decrease in proportion of people sentenced to prison for a Class 1 to 4 Felony from 2010 to 2023″

I asked about the roughly 30 percent which saw an increase. Here’s the list…

Adams, Bond, Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Clark, Crawford, Fayette, Ford, Fulton, Gallatin, Hardin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jersey, Kendall, Lee, Logan, McDonough, McHenry, Menard, Ogle, Perry, Piatt, Pike, Randolph, Saline, Shelby, Wabash

You can look at the data by county or by category by clicking here. The dashboard allows you to look at urban vs. rural counties. Here’s the list of urban counties, which they took from IDPH…

Champaign, Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, Lake, Macon, Madison, McHenry, McLean, Peoria, Rock Island, Sangamon, St. Clair, Tazewell, Vermilion, Will, Winnebago

Four counties are missing in the data, either because they didn’t report 2023 numbers (DeWitt and Morgan) or, in the case of Greene and Scott, they consolidated probation departments.

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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Wednesday, Jul 17, 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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Open thread

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI


Gov. Pritzker will be at the Argonne National Laboratory to celebrate improvements to Argonne Advanced Photo Source at 1:30 pm. Click here to watch.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Latecomer GOP state legislative candidates have raised little cash, records show: The latest campaign finance disclosures — covering April through June — showed significant fundraising in some more competitive general election races. Tosi Ufodike, a Republican challenging freshman Democratic Rep. Nabeela Syed for a northwest suburban seat, raised more than $10,000 in the past quarter and reported $68,000 in the bank; Syed reported a war chest of nearly $400,000 with nearly $22,000 raised this past quarter, and has since raised thousands more in large-dollar donations.

* Casino Reports | VGTs Remain The Major Roadblock For Illinois Online Casino Legalization: Two power blocks exist in the VGT realm, [Steve Brubaker, a mobile gambling analyst and longtime Illinois lobbyist] said: terminal operators and retail locations. Terminal operators’ power originates, simply, with the amount of money VGTs make the state. In fiscal year 2023, the last full fiscal year of available data, VGTs produced $818.1 million in tax money for Illinois, trailing only the Illinois Lottery and its $872 million, according to the Illinois Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA). Casino tax revenue was a distant third at $157 million, followed by sports betting ($143 million) and horse racing ($6 million).

*** RNC ***

* Tribune | US Rep. Mary Miller at RNC says media has ‘demonized Trump,’ symbolizes rightward shift of Illinois GOP: Miller’s comments on Tuesday came during a rare appearance before a group of mostly Chicago-area reporters following a delegation breakfast at a hotel outside of Milwaukee. The two-term downstate congresswoman, a member of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, has gained a reputation for refusing to respond to media requests for comment. “I’m happy to talk to people. But we would like fair coverage from the media. The media has demonized President Trump. Name-calling. That’s what my little kids did. Name calling,” said Miller, of Hindsboro, about 40 miles south of Champaign, “I always told them when you use bad language and you name call, that shows that you’re of low intellect or you don’t have anything positive to say.”

* WTTW | Democrats Restart Campaign Against Trump at RNC With Focus on Project 2025: Booker pleaded with reporters to focus on what Trump did as president — not what he is saying while running for a second term. “It doesn’t take much to just look at the four years of Donald Trump and see what you got: an erosion of women’s rights, an erosion of reproductive rights, an erosion of abortion rights,” Booker said. “I don’t care what they say. You have evidence. We have clarity.”

* ABC | FBI, DHS warn of possible ‘follow-on or retaliatory’ attacks in wake of Trump assassination attempt: The Department of Homeland Security and the FBI have issued a bulletin to law enforcement across the country warning them that, in the wake of Saturday’s attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump, violent extremists could try to conduct “follow-on or retaliatory” attacks at events over the next few months related to the 2024 presidential election. The bulletin urged local, state and federal law enforcement — and their partners — to remain vigilant and report any suspicious behavior.

* Daily Herald | ‘Very extremist views’: Pritzker, Durbin rip into VP nominee Vance: “He is someone who has very extremist views,” Pritzker added. “He’s not just anti-choice, against reproductive rights, but he also thinks that if you have been raped, or had incest committed against you, that you should be forced to have that child.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Republicans urged to look beyond traditional base as national party courts unions: “We need to challenge ourselves to get out and talk to the people who vote the least, talk to the people who have voted Republican the least,” former Republican Rep. Lee Zeldin told Illinois delegates to the GOP convention in Milwaukee. That includes finding new, persuadable voters within groups often considered Democratic strongholds, he said. “And don’t just pander to them by saying, ‘I love Black people, vote for me. I love Hispanic people, vote for me. I love Asian people, vote for me.’ That doesn’t work and it shouldn’t work,” he said. “It’s about us being proud, principled conservatives, going to those voters who are longtime disenfranchised Democratic voters and telling them it doesn’t have to be this way anymore.”

* Daily Herald | ‘A great successor’: New Illinois GOP Chair Kathy Salvi greets delegates at RNC: Salvi is expected to preach a message of unity for a state party that no longer has a statewide officeholder and is in the super minority in both chambers of the General Assembly. “I look forward to working with her to flip Illinois red,” U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, of downstate Oakland, said during remarks at Tuesday morning’s breakfast.

* WGN | Illinois GOP’s turn toward Trump keeps moderates at home: Former Illinois House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, once a convention fixture who delivered delegates for John McCain in 2008, puts it bluntly: “This party left me.” “It’s unbelievable we’re left with a pathological liar, a narcissist and a bully against a person who no longer has the ability to serve mentally or physically,” he said. “But we’re left with no options.”

* Daily Herald | RNC Notebook, Day Two: Bob Fioretti, Charlie Kirk and cops from Illinois all in town: Perennial candidate Bob Fioretti — who has been running as a Republican since 2022 — is in town for all the RNC festivities this week, believing his tough-on-crime message vibes with Donald Trump’s. “We are combining messages, absolutely,” said Fioretti, who is running for Cook County state’s attorney against Eileen O’Neill Burke, who won the Democratic primary. “We need safe streets, strong communities, and the only way we achieve it is by having order, instead of bedlam and chaos that we’re seeing in our major cities.”

* 21st Show | What do Illinois’ former GOP leaders think of the party now?: So what happened? How did the party go from shared governance to struggling for a seat at the table? We are joined by three former high-ranking Republican officeholders to talk about the past, present and future of the Republican party in Illinois.

* WGN | Illinois lawmaker suggests officials are ‘cooking the books’ to show crime drop: “I would suggest they’re cooking the books,” said State Sen. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro). “I would like to see what their data is, because perception is reality, simply because you’re the person whose living there. And when you have to sleep with a firearm next to your bed, or you have to walk around worried about whether you can safely walk on a street, the data cannot possibly be right.”

* WTTW | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin Hosts Black Republicans From Around US, Downplays Past Trump Criticism and Future Runs For Office: Asked about his past criticism of Trump on Tuesday, Irvin said the more important focus should be on a presidential election that’s a choice between an “elderly man” and a candidate who conveys strength and power when he speaks. “It’s clear what the choice needs to be, and although I have been critical of many of our elected officials, and I think rightfully so — we should criticize those officials, folks criticize me all the time — that don’t mean I don’t believe that we have what it takes to go forward and vote,” Irvin said.


*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Ahead of DNC, Brandon Johnson puts homeless on the street to make room for tent city occupants: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration is putting unhoused people back on the streets to make room for relocated tent encampment occupants who are being moved before the Democratic National Convention next month. […] A domestic violence survivor, a recovering alcoholic and others with anxiety or chronic medical conditions were among those kicked out of the hotel in the last week, according to interviews.

* First Defense | New Report Suggests Chicago Police Are Failing To Provide Lawyers/Phones To People In Custody, Ahead of DNC: A new expert report in a civil rights lawsuit challenging “incommunicado detention” in Chicago police stations has found that almost no one in police custody is consulting with a lawyer and more than half of the people in Chicago Police Department custody are not making a phone call within three hours of arrest. These findings are despite a consent decree in the case, #LetUsBreathe Collective, et al. v. City of Chicago, requiring the City of Chicago to provide prompt access to attorneys and lawyers for all people in police custody.

* F.K. Plous | Poor planning blocks the way for a vitally needed Chicago rail connection: In September 2022, the Department of Buildings issued a permit for the construction of a 33-story apartment building at 350 N. Canal St. This past May, the new tower welcomed its first tenants. But when the city signed off on the new building, it inadvertently foreclosed on the possibility of a critically needed regional transportation asset: 350 N. Canal blocks a potential connection of the former Chicago & North Western Railway’s tracks serving the Ogilvie Transportation Center with the Amtrak main line that brings trains from north of the city into Amtrak’s Chicago Union Station.

* Chalkbeat | More than $400,000 raised so far in Chicago’s 2024 school board elections: The money is a mix of small donations from candidates’ friends and family, sizable personal loans, and in-kind and financial support from existing political and labor groups, according to a Chalkbeat analysis of state campaign finance records. The political fundraising arms of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, which has $3 million on hand, and the Chicago Teachers Union, which has around $175,000, are holding their fire for now, putting off making major donations to candidates. That’s not surprising: Many candidates are still sorting out challenges to their petitions to get on the ballot, and spending is likely to pick up once a clearer picture of the most competitive races and candidates emerges.

* CBS Chicago | Rush University Medical Center and Northwestern Memorial Hospital tie for top hospital in Illinois: Northwestern Memorial Hospital was nationally ranked in 11 adult specialties – including 7th for cardiology, heart & vascular surgery and 8th for diabetes and endocrinology – and rated high-performing in 21 adult procedures and conditions. Rush University Medical Center was nationally ranked in 11 adult specialties – including 7th for neurology and neurosurgery, 10th for geriatrics, and 10th for orthopedics – and rated high-performing in 18 adult procedures and conditions.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Thornton Township Board in south Chicago suburbs clashes with supervisor over spending: A meeting of the Thornton Township Board grew heated Tuesday night, as the embattled board supervisor squared off with members of the board over spending. Thornton Township Supervisor Tiffany Henyard was accused by board members of keeping certain items off the agenda Tuesday night—including an ordinance that board members say would cap spending by the supervisor and also to minimize non-approved spending. As a result, some board members refused to approve the hiring of landscaping contractors for the township.

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Times | Probe into shooting of Sonya Massey complete: Massey’s family plans to meet with ISP officials and the Sangamon County state’s attorney the afternoon of July 17 at the Springfield NAACP building at 801 S. 11th St. to discuss the status of the case. […] An anonymous source also confirmed that Ben Crump, the prominent civil rights attorney who is representing Massey’s family, plans to be in Springfield on July 19 – the day of Massey’s funeral – and will speak to the news media after funeral services.

* STLPD | Mine sinkhole in Alton caused by collapse of ancient cave, preliminary reports say: A buildup of mud and sediment in an ancient cave above a limestone mine here collapsed into the mine, causing it, in turn, to partially collapse and leave a massive sinkhole in a city park, according to preliminary reporting from the Mine Health and Safety Administration.

* PJ Star | Thousands in Peoria area remain without power following severe storms. Here’s what we know: According to Ameren, 4,872 customers in Peoria County were without power as of 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, representing around 5% of the company’s 91,243 customers in the county. The outages in Peoria County are widespread, with many popping up around 9 p.m. Monday night. Others were reported by customers to them over the course of the morning and afternoon.

* Herald & Review | Decatur cannabis dispensary? Not likely: An attempt to plant just a seed of the concept for discussion was made by Councilman David Horn, who noted the surrounding communities of Forsyth and Mount Zion were chewing over the issue of allowing dispensaries. […] Councilman Chuck Kuhle told Horn he had attended a recent Forsyth Village Board public meeting on the cannabis issue to voice his opposition. “I would just like you to know, Councilman Horn… I was adamant that they not approve a dispensary in Forsyth,” Kuhle said.

* Herald Whig | Judge cites state agency for contempt at Tuesday hearing: Judge Tad Brenner issued a contempt citation against an Illinois state agency on Tuesday, one of two cases bringing into question the response from the state in Adams County cases. In a hearing for Bruce Dyer on charges for which he was found unfit to stand trial, a secretary-designate for the Illinois Department of Human Services was expected to appear. Since no representative of the office was in court as ordered on Tuesday, Brenner issued the contempt citation and asked that the Illinois attorney general’s office be notified. He set another hearing in the case for 10 a.m. July 24.

* Tri States Public Radio | WIU faculty union: Layoffs of tenured faculty coming: Tri States Public Radio obtained a copy of an email sent by Merrill Cole, President of the WIU Chapter of the University Professionals of Illinois. The union represents faculty members. In the email, Cole told union members that WIU President Kristi Mindrup has affirmed Unit A layoffs are coming. Unit A is tenured and tenure-track faculty.

* BND | Rain causes flooding all over East St. Louis, creating headaches for citizens, motorists: City Manager Robert Betts was out all day surveying the impact on the city. “The city of East St. Louis is being inundated by water right now,” he said Tuesday afternoon. “ We are praying the rain will ease up. We have multiple intersections that are flooded out.”

* WAND | New SMTD climate-friendly buses about to hit the road: In addition, new buses will be hitting the road in the summer of 2025 and the spring of 2026. The vehicles are low-emission, climate-friendly, diesel-hybrid and compressed natural gas buses. “If you believe greenhouse gas emissions are a problem, then you need to do something about it. And that’s what we’ve done with the bipartisan infrastructure law,” Senator Dick Durbin said Monday at the SMTD garage.

*** National ***

* The Mirror | Jeopardy! host Ken Jennings takes ‘cheap shot directed’ at Illinois contestant and former senator: Jay Fisher said: “Probably the shortest 10 year senator in Illinois history… 22 hours.” He continued: “In 2018, my senator lost his bid for re-election and decided to step down. The new governor called a lame duck session so I got down there at 2o’clock in the afternoon, made some votes that afternoon and the next morning and then the new general assembly were sworn in so my 10 year was over. Never figured out where the bathroom was and probably the only Illinois politician to lose money on the deal because I didn’t get the salary or per diem.” Ken laughed and then made a joke saying: “You’re an Illinois politician and you’re not in jail Jay, you did it.”

* The Atlantic | The chaotic aftermath of the assassination attempt shows a toxic information system working as designed: The basic facts held attention for only so long before being supplanted by wild speculation—people were eager to post about the identity of the shooter, his possible motives, the political ramifications of the event, the specter of more violence. It may be human nature to react this way in traumatic moments—to desperately attempt to fill an information void—but the online platforms so many of us frequent have monetized and gamified this instinct, rewarding those who create the most compelling stories. Within the first four hours, right-wing politicians, perhaps looking to curry favor with Trump, hammered out reckless posts blaming Joe Biden’s campaign for the shooting; Elon Musk suggested that the Secret Service may have let the shooting happen on purpose; as soon as the shooter’s name was released, self-styled online investigators dug up his name and his voter registration, eager for information they could retrofit to their worldview.

* Stateline | Angry patients spur new state watchdogs to bring down drug prices: Some state laws have authorized these watchdogs to regulate drug prices for certain groups of people, such as state employees or those with Medicaid plans. Legislatures in a few states — Colorado, Minnesota and Washington — granted boards broader power to oversee drug prices for everyone in the state. Over the past five years, 11 mostly Democratic-led states have created prescription drug affordability boards, and the model is picking up steam nationwide. Just this year, lawmakers in 14 more states proposed legislation to assemble their own boards. […] But consumers have yet to see significant savings. Most boards have had a slow rollout as they hammer out administrative and funding issues that come with creating a new state entity.

* The Athletic | French Federation to file complaint over ‘unacceptable racist’ chants by Argentina players in Copa America celebrations: Argentina defeated France in a penalty shootout in the 2022 World Cup final, with some fans of the South American nation at that tournament singing a chant ahead of that match referencing how many France players were of African heritage and were first or second-generation immigrants in the nation. […] France defender Wesley Fofana, a Black team-mate of Fernandez at Chelsea, then posted a video of the incident on X accompanied with the caption: “Football in 2024: uninhibited racism”. Fofana’s message was met with racist replies from other users on X and Instagram.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Jul 17, 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)

Wednesday, Jul 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Emily Rosca at The Patch

Debbie Kraulidis, who also served on the Will Board until 2022, delivered the Pledge of Allegiance to kick off the first day of the [Republican National Convention] Monday in Milwaukee. […]

Currently serving as vice president for Moms For America, Kraulidis interviewed Trump in late 2023 for the organization’s Presidential Candidate Podcast Special.

She was also among those to participate in the pro-Trump rally that stormed the Capitol Building on Jan. 6, 2021. Despite sharing videos on her Facebook page to say she was there to make sure “only legal votes were counted,” she said accusations claiming she was part of the violence were “false” and “ridiculous,” Patch reported.

* David Paul Blumenshine is an alternate delegate to the national convention. This story is from January 6, 2021

A candidate for Normal Town Council participated in the events that became an insurrection and riot at the nation’s capital on Wednesday.

David Paul Blumenshine hosted an event called the “Stop The Steal Bus Trip” to Washington, D.C., with Cities 92.9, a conservative talk radio station in Bloomington owned by Great Plains Media. Blumenshine hosts a weekly show on the station. The trip was in support of President Trump’s baseless claims that there was election fraud that overturned a result that favored him when, in fact, Joe Biden was elected president.

* The second story in Illinois Answers’ series on restraint chairs was published today

Brice Fritz was naked, strapped down to a chair in a jail cell when a staff member monitoring her via video delivered 80,000 volts of electricity through the stun cuff on her leg.

“I felt like I was being electrocuted,” Fritz told the Illinois Answers Project, recalling the incident at Coles County Jail in 2021. The cuff is a sort of shock collar for humans that the manufacturer describes as a wireless device to control detainees, typically used during court or transport. […]

A recent Illinois Answers Project investigation into the use of restraint chairs statewide found county jails used the devices more than a thousand times per year from 2019 to 2023. The investigation also identified a number of extreme incidents at Coles County Jail, which restrained people in chairs more than 200 times during that period and continues to use the device.

In multiple incidents, staff shocked someone with a stun cuff right before restraining them or right after releasing them. In others, staff kept a cuff on a restrained person but did not activate it. At least one other person was shocked with a cuff while restrained, one was stunned with a Taser while restrained, and one was stunned with a Taser while partially restrained. […]

The following year, in 2021, Equip for Equality recommended the jail prohibit the use of stun cuffs, increase mental health staff, revise health screening protocols, curtail use of restraint chairs and limit their use to the shortest duration possible, among other reforms. The report said many of the jail’s challenges appear linked to “insufficient staffing levels – clinical and correctional – and deficiencies in the physical space.”

[Amanda Antholt], of Equip for Equality, said the sheriff’s department took “really quick action on important steps,” such as stopping the use of stun cuffs, which the sheriff says are now in storage.

* Tribune

A group of West Side and near South Side Democrats are meeting later this month to choose a successor to the late county commissioner Dennis Deer.

That selection process could be a family affair. Multiple sources close to the deliberations say Deer’s wife, Barbara, is among the interested candidates, as is the husband of Chicago City Clerk Anna Valencia and former 24th Ward Ald. Michael Scott, whose sister, Monique, is on the selection committee. […]

“As we mourn the loss of our friend and colleague Dr. Dennis Deer, we must also fulfill our duty to the residents of the 2nd District to select a replacement. I look forward to a fair and transparent process and encourage anyone interested in serving their community to apply,” 34th Ward Alderman and Democratic committeeman Bill Conway said in a release.

He has the largest share of Democratic voters in Deer’s district and will chair the selection committee to replace him.

* SEIU Local 73…

SEIU Local 73 has endorsed Barbara Deer for Commissioner in Cook County’s Second District. SEIU Local 73 represents nearly 3,000 workers in the district.

“Commissioner Dennis Deer was a staunch ally of labor unions and working families,” said Dian Palmer, President of SEIU Local 73. “Barbara Deer is equally committed to standing up for the workers we represent and that’s why we’re supporting her for Cook County Commissioner.”

“SEIU Local 73 has a strong track record of electing progressive candidates in Cook County,” said Jeffrey Howard, Executive Vice President of SEIU Local 73. “It’s clear Barbara Deer is the best candidate to carry on her late husband’s legacy.

*** RNC ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s ‘rooftop pastor’ to speak at GOP convention: The South Side pastor who routinely crisscrosses the city among shooting scenes said on social media he was “grateful for this opportunity and looking forward to giving a shoutout to Chicago.” Brooks is a Republican who has boosted GOP candidates.

* WTTW | Illinois Republicans Urged to Take Their Message to Democrats – and Take Advantage of Early Voting Laws They’ve Decried: That was the guidance from former U.S. Rep Lee Zeldin (R-NY), the day’s guest speaker, who said if laws expanding voting access are on the books, Republicans ought to take advantage of them. “I believe that every state in the country should have voter ID,” Zeldin said to a round of applause. “Ballot harvesting should not be legal in any state. Universal mail-in balloting should not be legal in any state. But when the Democrats change an election law in a particular state and it is the law for that election, I believe that we should be leaning into that law instead of boycotting that law.”

* WTTW | RNC Live Blog, Day 2: Tuesday Night Speaker Schedule, Republicans Told to Take Part in Early Voting: Zeldin, who unsuccessfully challenged Gov. Kathy Hochul in 2022, told attendees about his time campaigning in solidly blue districts with a large number of Black, Latino and Asian voters. “I was told when I was first elected, don’t go there. Don’t waste your time. You will not get their vote,” Zeldin said. “It somehow made me think that that’s exactly where we need to be. If the political consultant is saying, ‘don’t go there, it’s not worth your time,’ … maybe no one in either party is going there.”

* Capitol News Illinois | State GOP members insist it’s a “big tent” party: State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, said while he wasn’t a member of the Freedom Caucus, the fact that he gathered signatures for Trump shows the ILGOP is a “big tent” party. When asked if the party has room for “anti-Trumpers,” Meier said, “I believe so.”

* CBS Chicago | Illinois delegation at RNC excited about future of GOP nationally and statewide: With day one of the Republican National Convention in the books, the GOP is hoping to build on their momentum on day two in Milwaukee. Republicans aim to whip up the base to get excited about their candidates and spread a message of support.

* Sun-Ties | Suburban native, far-right conservative talk show host Charlie Kirk speaks at RNC: Speaking during a prime-time slot on the first night of the Republican National Convention, far-right conservative talk show host and northwest suburban native Charlie Kirk said former President Donald Trump would reject a “fake, pathetic, mutilated version of the American dream” he claims has taken hold under President Joe Biden. During a four-minute talk that was otherwise largely focused on economic numbers, Kirk bemoaned Democrats “whose vision is this: limit your dreams. Give up. Aim lower, be content with less.”

* Daily Herald | An appeal to youth? Veep choice of Vance a key strategic move, delegates say: “He’ll bring in the young crowd, and that’s important,” said delegate Steve Balich, the Will County Board Republican Leader. “And he’s somebody that the people see as part of them.” Delegate Rick Lawrence was an early supporter of Vance. “It’s nice to see somebody that hasn’t been there forever,” said Lawrence, a former Aurora alderman. “There’s a whole generation looking for younger people.”

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Push to Give Chicago Voters Power to Recall Mayor Raises Less Than $300 in 3 Months: Despite a flurry of media attention after Daniel Boland announced the creation of the Committee for Chicago Mayor Recall, a required campaign finance report filed late Monday with the Illinois State Board of Elections showed just $258.47 in contributions. With 20 days to go before the initiative faces a deadline of Aug. 5 to file at least 56,464 signatures to put the question to Chicago voters on the Nov. 5 ballot, the committee has just $83.47 on hand after spending $175, according to the report.

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson plans to remove George Washington statue outside his City Hall office: Mayor Brandon Johnson plans to remove the statue of former President George Washington from the hallway outside the mayor’s office on the fifth floor of City Hall in a move that, a top aide said Tuesday, has nothing to do with the first president’s role as a slave owner. Ronnie Reese, Johnson’s communications director, said the statue “is being removed from the hallway outside the mayor’s office as we make updates to some areas around City Hall.”

* Crain’s | Service workers strike at UChicago Medical Center: The strike by painters, carpenters, building engineers, grounds crews and supply chain specialists represented by the Service Employees International Union Local 73 is not impacting patient care, UCMC said in a statement, and the Hyde Park hospital has engaged replacement workers. […] The union issued a 10-day strike notice earlier this month, saying contract negotiations were at an impasse after more than six months of negotiations.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago cop faces suspension for marching in uniform in pro-Palestinian demonstration: Raid Ghanimah, who’s been on a leave of absence since early 2023, was wearing his black battle-dress uniform and holding Palestinian and Blue Lives Matter flags during a downtown demonstration on Oct. 18, 2023, according to the report. Battle-dress uniforms, or BDUs, are used for special operations. Ghanimah, who was hired as a Chicago police officer in 2000, is accused of using tape to cover his name and star number on his uniform and failing to identify himself to a member of the Chicago Police Department when he was asked. The report said he violated several department rules, including one involving officers engaging in political activity.

* Tribune | Chicago White Sox in the 2024 MLB draft: 15 picks so far, including Arkansas LHP Hagen Smith at No. 5: “[Hagen Smith] took Oregon State for a ride I’ve never seen a college pitcher take any lineup for,” [Chicago White Sox director of amateur scouting Mike Shirley] said. “On the big stage. It was (17) punchouts. It was the most dominating stuff I’ve ever seen since I’ve been scouting. “As the great Jim Thome said, ‘I might need to take a day off when we face this guy.’ That’s part of it, this guy’s real.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Rebuilt bridges, improved intersections among this year’s projects in DuPage County: DuPage County has kicked off projects totaling more than $36 million to ease traffic congestion, improve safety and resurface more than 57 lane miles of county roads. The county’s 2024 road construction plan includes major projects such as the reconstruction of the Geneva Road bridge over the west branch of the DuPage River, the widening of Fabyan Parkway in West Chicago west of Route 38, reconstruction of the Warrenville Road bridge over the East Branch of the DuPage River, and York Road reconstruction from Devon Avenue to Irving Park Road.

* Crain’s | Suburban office vacancy just keeps climbing: It’s been four years since the COVID-19 pandemic and the rise of remote work began drubbing suburban office landlords with weak demand and surging vacancy. They’re still waiting for the beatdown to end. The share of available office space across the suburbs wrapped up the first half of 2024 at a new all-time high of 31.3%, according to data from real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle. The vacancy rate is up from 28.9% one year ago and 22.1% at the beginning of the public health crisis, and has hit new record highs for 14 consecutive quarters.

* Daily Herald | 180,000 without power after severe storms spawn multiple tornadoes Monday night: Nearly 200,000 people are still without power after severe storms rolled through the Chicago area late Monday, spawning multiple tornadoes, uprooting trees, downing power lines and killing at least one person in Indiana. Radar-confirmed tornadoes near Sugar Grove, Oswego and Warrenville were reported by the agency Monday night. The twisters were reported in those areas around 9 p.m.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Normal council approves expanded enterprise zone for Rivian: The Normal Town Council approved a new ordinance Monday that will expand the boundaries of the Bloomington-Normal Enterprise Zone to include 320 acres along Rivian Motorway to support potentially more expansion at the electric automaker. The zone offers financial incentives for economic development within its boundaries. The benefits include potential tax exemptions and credits for businesses that want to come to a community, including sales tax exemptions on building materials and “personal property used or consumed during the manufacturing process,” utility tax exemptions on gas and electricity, qualified investment tax credits, a natural gas tax exemption for “purchasing direct from the pipeline,” and the potential for real estate property tax abatement.

* AP | Downstate Illinois dam fails after heavy rains and tornadoes sweep the Midwest, killing 1 in Indiana: Water overtopped a dam near Nashville, Illinois, sending first responders to the flooded area to make sure everyone got out safely, officials said. There were no reports of injuries in the community of 3,000 southeast of St. Louis, but crews were sent to a home where a woman reported water up to her waist, said Alex Haglund, a spokesperson for the Washington County Emergency Management Agency.

* WGN | Illinois dam fails, residents told to evacuate area: IEMA spokesperson Alex Haglund said a portion of the dam failed early Tuesday, but it wasn’t clear if it was a break or an overtopping. A “secondary failure” happened later in the morning when the dam was overtopped.

* SLPR | Hundreds of Nashville, Illinois, residents evacuated after heavy rain and dam failures: A shelter has been set up at Trinity Lutheran Church, and the American Red Cross has been activated, according to the Washington County Emergency Management Agency. The state Department of Transportation has closed I-64 north of Nashville in both directions.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford area residents cope with loss, cleanup after flooding, storms: Hundreds of Rockford area homes and businesses flooded after the weekend’s heavy rains, but for Cynthia Lumzy it was both. The 14th Street resident and hairstylist awoke to a shock Sunday morning. The basement of her home where she has her hair studio had two and a half feet of standing water. The damage, she said, including loss of products, is thousands of dollars. […] A Rockford man drowned in floodwaters Sunday night about a mile from where Lumzy and Nunez live near Churchill Park. On Monday, high winds knocked down power lines and trees across the Rockford region, causing another round of property damage for area homeowners and businesses.

*** National ***

* Lexis Nexis | Disclosure Becomes Legislators’ Latest Tool for Regulating AI: In March, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox (R) signed SB 149, making the state the first in the nation to require individuals who use generative AI to interact with others to “clearly and conspicuously” disclose when they are doing so. Two months later, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed SB 205, sweeping legislation to regulate the use of AI in the Centennial State. Among the bill’s many provisions aimed at combating algorithmic discrimination are requirements that websites post disclosures about any automated systems that use AI to make “high risk” or “consequential” decisions, like screening for job openings.

* AP | Singer Ingrid Andress says she was drunk during panned MLB anthem performance, will get treatment: “I’m checking myself into a facility today to get the help I need,” she wrote in an Instagram post. “That was not me last night. I apologize to MLB, all the fans, and this country I love so much for that rendition.” […] Sports Illustrated writer Alex Carr posted on X, formerly Twitter, “I’m so sorry, I’m sure Ingrid Andress is a wonderful person, but that was one of the worst national anthems I think I’ve ever heard in my whole life.”

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Feds, Illinois partner to bring DARPA quantum-testing facility to the Chicago area

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The quantum-computing efforts planned for the Chicago area got a major boost today with the federal government agreeing to invest up to $140 million to do research here.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, plans to create a quantum-testing facility at the quantum-computing campus planned for the Chicago area. The funds will be matched by $140 million from the $500 million quantum investment that Gov. J.B. Pritzker convinced legislators to approve in this year’s budget. […]

The DARPA investment makes up for Illinois losing out to Colorado on being named a federal technology hub for quantum, which included $40.5 million in funding. […]

DARPA plans a “quantum proving ground” on the campus to test quantum-computing devices. The technology is still in its infancy, and companies are only now starting to build prototypes. PsiQuantum, for example, is attempting to build one of the first large-scale quantum machines.

* Sun-Times

“It’s going to ensure our quantum campus and the development of our quantum industry is secured as a global leader,” Pritzker said in an interview with the Sun-Times. “We’re the only state that put forward a quantum campus and quantum plan. And the federal government stepping up and becoming an important partner, particularly DARPA, is a lot of validation.” […]

Both the U.S. Steel South Works site in the South Chicago neighborhood and a former Texaco refinery in Lockport are being floated as potential sites for the campus. But the governor said no final decisions have been made. The location is being decided in partnership with quantum companies that plan to be part of the campus. Pritzker said he’s also seeking a “large enough space” that has access to quantum resources that already exist in northern Illinois.

Chicago is already home to the Chicago Quantum Exchange, first launched in 2017 with Argonne and Fermi national laboratories, which now has one of the largest teams of quantum researchers in the world.

The quantum campus will feature a cryogenic facility, which is needed for research and development for microelectronics and quantum technologies. It’s expected to generate up to $60 billion in economic impact, according to estimates from the governor’s office. It’s also expected to create thousands of jobs, but the governor framed it as having the potential of creating “tens of thousands and perhaps more, jobs.”

* The money won’t be doled out all at once, Governor JB Pritzker said during today’s news conference

They’re looking for the right opportunities to be able to advance a company and bring them to the campus and work with them. So, you know, that’ll happen over some period of time. And so we both committed $140 million to that effort, right? So it’s not like someone’s writing a check today for $140 [million], either side. It’s more that as the opportunities arise, we’re sharing in that opportunity as between us up to $140 million each. So we expect in the end, it will be as much as $280 million.

* DARPA Program Manager Joe Altepeter said the goal is to separate hype from reality through testing

20 years ago, when I was a graduate student at the University of Illinois, I was convinced quantum computers were going to change the world. Five years later, as a professor at Northwestern University, I realized that was going to be really hard, maybe impossible. And for most of the last 15 years I have been DARPA’s designated quantum computing skeptic.

I am the one that they brought in to prove that the algorithm you are hoping is going to change the world isn’t actually useful for anything, or the quantum computer you’re trying to design can’t ever, ever be built.

But in the last few years, something has changed. What began as really tiny DARPA investments grew into a small DARPA program, which grew into a larger DARPA program.

[T]oday, the prospect of building these machines doesn’t seem quite so impossible, and if there is a real path from the scientifically interesting quantum computers of today to critical industrial tools. The United States has to know the stakes are too high for us not to.

  2 Comments      


Pritzker, Durbin talk about Trump, Vance

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s press conference today

Q: Since the shooting of former President Trump over the weekend, some Republicans have accused Democrats of name calling and virtual attacks. Do you regret any of the name calling against Trump? … Do you plan to change your rhetoric?

Pritzker: I have never, and never would call for any political violence. And you can take that to the bank. That’s not anything that I’ve ever advocated. I think that there’s always hot competition in the world of ideas, in the political world. And so we all advance our own ideas and when their ideas are bad ones, we call them out.

But it’s still true that Donald Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist, has been a congenital liar and is unfit for the office of President of the United States.

Having said that, I am very pleased that he remains relatively unharmed, that it was a relatively minor incident for him. And of course, saddened and find it extremely tragic that someone with apparently an assault weapon killed people at that rally for President Trump. And of course, attempted to take the life of a presidential candidate. That should never happen. And here in Illinois, as you know, we banned assault weapons, and of course, I think you’ve heard all of us that are here and elsewhere talk about the abhorrence that we have for political violence.

I followed up about the “relatively minor incident” bit and was told that the governor meant “medically.”

* Asked about the negative ad pause

Well, I can’t speak for the broader, for anybody outside myself. I’m not deciding what ads get run. You know, I think that we’re in a political season. I think it’s appropriate for us to just take a pause and recognize that this violence needs to be called out. We need to make sure that this does not happen in American society anymore. It is extremely disappointing that people on the other side of the aisle are in just in the last few days calling for counter violence, as if there was anything that was done by Democrats here. It wasn’t. It turns out that the shooter, in fact, was a registered Republican. And I think none of us think that anybody, whatever their political party is, ought to be committing this kind of violence.

I asked who was calling for violence, and was told the governor was reacting to “some of the rhetoric online.”

* React to new veep candidate JD Vance

I’d be happy to stay here for about 45 minutes to tell you about the history of JD Vance. But the fact is that he is someone who has very extremist views. As you may know, he is not just anti choice, against reproductive rights, but he also thinks that if you’ve been raped or have had incest committed against you that you should be forced to have that child. He is someone who has ridiculed women’s rights, and you know, there’s a pretty long list of very, very extreme views that he holds. And I think, of course, it’s in keeping with the Maga extremism of the broader Republican Party. So I’m sure he’s being accepted by them, but I think there are a whole lot of independents and Republicans who abhor what he stands for and won’t vote for that ticket. May not have before, but now, especially, will walk away because JD Vance is on the ticket.

* Pritzker then turned it over to Sen. Richard Durbin, who said

I’ve been chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee for four years. One of our responsibilities is filling the vacancies on the federal bench, as well as US Attorney positions. Under President Trump, some 86 US Attorneys were all appointed through this process with voice votes, no record votes. When we tried to do the same thing under President Biden, there was resistance, particularly from Senator Vance. He objected to the appointment filling the vacancy for US Attorney here in the Northern District of Illinois, as well as in Cleveland, in his own home state.

Three times or more, I went to the floor and asked him, confronted him with this decision, saying,’ How can you be for law and order and talk about stopping the scourge of fentanyl and other terrible things, human trafficking and deny to this president the leaders that they’re asking for in his offices?’ He said, and he repeated himself over and over, his goal was to ‘grind the Department of Justice to a halt.’ I had that printed on a board and put on the floor, and said, ‘Did you say this?’ He said, ‘I still stand by it.’ What was his thinking? Why would he want to stop career prosecutors from moving forward to protect us? He was very clear about it. It was retribution for the weaponization of the Department of Justice toward Donald Trump. It was strictly a political move, had nothing to do with the merits of the nominees or the needs to fill those positions. That does not give me a lot of hope in terms of what his politics mean for a lot of people who are looking for law and order all across the United States to protect their families and neighborhoods.

* Asked about the Teamsters’ president speaking at the RNC and rumors that the union may not endorse anyone, this is what Durbin said

There’s not been a stronger president in the history of the United States for the union movement than Joe Biden. He has been outspoken on the issue. He doesn’t dance around or mince around when it comes to that subject. He is very direct. He supports labor unions. I do too. When they prosper and their members prosper, the middle class prospers in America we all grew in the right direction. Having said that the reality is not all members of labor unions support Democratic candidates. They are individuals making their own decisions, and some unions will go one way and some the other. I believe that Joe Biden stands by his record on unions, and I do too.

Pritzker

I would just add that Donald Trump and the entire Republican Party have stood against workers rights, against raising wages for working families, against keeping our workplaces safe. Those are things that unions do, fighting for working families, and so I realized that you might find that there are some union members who will support Donald Trump, but you’ll also find that the majority of unions and union members understand that it’s Joe Biden that has stood up for them and is genuinely the best president that the union movement and working families have had in their lifetimes, perhaps, if not ever.

  8 Comments      


Napo’s campaign spending questioned

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

State Sen. Napoleon Harris’ campaign fund has spent more than $6,600 over the past several years at high-end department stores on clothing and other items, records show, but the Flossmoor Democrat and former NFL linebacker won’t explain what was bought and why.

The largest of those expenses by Friends of Napoleon Harris, totaling $2,257.50, was made four days before Christmas in 2020 at the Neiman Marcus store in Oak Brook, according to Illinois State Board of Elections records submitted by the campaign that say the expenditures were for “clothing and supplies.” […]

Harris, who chairs the Illinois Senate’s Insurance Committee and is part of Illinois Senate President Don Harmon’s leadership team, wouldn’t answer most questions about his spending. In a written statement, he said: “As a candidate and elected official, I have filed publicly available campaign reports for more than a decade. If there are discrepancies that can be remedied to provide greater transparency or clarity, we’ll address them in a timely fashion.” […]

An Alsip company that provides food and supplies to restaurants was paid more than $100,000 by Harris’ campaign since 2022, records show. Some of the expenditures were listed as being for “supplies and food products” or just “supplies.” Three of the 10 payments to the company list no detail. Company officials didn’t return calls.

Harris’ campaign fund paid a private elementary and middle school in northwest Indiana more than $13,000 since 2017, with eight of the nine payments listed as donations. One — for more than $5,000 in 2021 — was described as “contractual.”

Lots more in there.

  8 Comments      


Illinois react: Trump’s VP pick J.D. Vance

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lynn Sweet at the Sun-Times

[Sen. J.D. Vance] is the reason there is no Senate-confirmed top federal prosecutor in Chicago. Remember that when the Trump-Vance ticket talks about crime. […]

Standing up for law enforcement is not what Vance did when it came to the Senate confirming April Perry to be the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois. Vance put a hold on Perry to protest the federal prosecutions of Trump, well beyond the time needed to make his point.

Starting in June 2023, Vance used the power a single senator has —and stalled a confirmation vote for Perry. His hold dragged on for so long that Sen. Dick Durbin, the Illinois Democrat who chairs the Judiciary Committee — and who was Perry’s chief Senate champion — moved on as the months rolled by. […]

I asked Tracy about Vance blocking the confirmation vote for a U.S. attorney in Chicago.

Said Tracy, “Nobody’s perfect. There’s no perfect person. There’s no perfect candidate. There’s no perfect vice president candidate. I think he’s going to be a good one.”

* Tribune

Illinois delegates to the Republican National Convention on Monday said former President Donald Trump’s choice of U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio as his running mate provides another shot of adrenaline to an already energized campaign while also giving a boost to the GOP ticket in a key Midwestern state. […]

Outgoing Illinois GOP Chair Don Tracy said Vance “should be good for the military vote, the working man’s vote, working women’s vote, the Midwest vote and the youth vote.”

State Sen. Andrew Chesney, a delegate from Freeport, said Vance could help Republicans pick up votes in swing states such as Wisconsin and Michigan. […]

“I think four years of mentorship under President Trump could very well set him up to be the president after that,” said Darren Bailey, a delegate and former Illinois state senator.

* Sun-Times

Earlier, Illinois delegates said they were happy with Trump’s VP selection. U.S. Rep. Mike Bost called Vance “a person who has worked up from nothing in life to understand how the American dream works.”

“He will be a great vice president. He will be able to take over on Day 1, unlike our current vice president,” said Bost, a Trump delegate for his 12th Congressional District. “I think it’s a great choice.”

Illinois state Sen. Terri Bryant, R- Murphysboro, said Trump’s pick can “bring in some of the young folks that we really want to target.”

“I’m excited about the fact that, ya know, four years from now, we wanna have someone positioned to be the 48th president of the United States,” said Bryant, an at-large delegate.

* NBC Chicago

Former Illinois House Minority Leader Jim Durkin is sharing his thoughts on the nomination of Ohio Sen. JD Vance as former President Donald Trump’s running mate, and on how the former president should proceed after this weekend’s horrific shooting. […]

“The most important thing President Trump can do is stand up and say ‘let’s hit the reset button.’ The rhetoric and actions of people over the past years have contributed to the violence we’ve seen on a regular basis. It’s becoming commonplace,” he said. “This is not the way we should be advancing the issues and the candidates. It should be about issues. It should be about organizing your people. Right now it’s about destruction, and breaking down the opponent, and it’s just wrong.” […]

The former Republican lawmaker says that the decision to nominate Vance will have a temporary effect on the party, but that ultimately the decision will come down to Trump vs. President Joe Biden.

“I think he’s going to be a very good functionary for Donald Trump. He speaks the party line, comes from a state that’s in play, but at the end of the day, it’s going to be Donald Trump or President Biden,” he said. “This is going to be excitement at the convention and certain areas of the Rust Belt for a little bit, but soon enough we’ll get back to Donald Trump vs. presumably Joe Biden.”

* Capitol News Illinois

After news broke of Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance being tapped as Trump’s vice-presidential running mate, Rep. John Cabello told Capitol News Illinois he supports the choice.

“He’s got a great story, he came from nothing. You know, he’s self-made. The man worked his tail off,” Cabello said. “Yeah, I think that’s a good fit for the story. It’s the same thing that Trump did you know, work your tail off, build yourself and you know he’s very knowledgeable. I think it’s a great pick.”

Cabello, a longtime feature of conservative Illinois politics, was one of the first elected officials to back Trump in 2016, going to that year’s convention in Cleveland and delivering the speech casting Illinois’ votes for Trump.

* NBC Chicago

Following Trump’s announcement, reaction was swift, with Democratic National Committee chair Jaime Harrison released a statement saying “stakes of this election just got even higher” with Vance’s name being added to the ticket.

Harrison went on to say Vance has supported some Trump’s “worst policies” and a Trump-Vance ticket would undermine our democracy, our freedoms and our future. He concluded the statement by saying reelecting Joe Biden and Kalama Harris is “more important than ever.”

In Illinois, several top Democrats were critical of the choice, including Gov. JB Pritzker. Pritzker’s thread on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, begins with “Who is JD Vance” and goes on to refer to him as an “anti-abortion activist,” someone who “voted against IVF access” and more.

Rep. Sean Casten, a representative for Illinois’ sixth district, has not made a public statement, but has reposted multiple posts about Vance’s history of anti-Trump comments and criticisms of his books.

* Democratic Party of Illinois



  34 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  18 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lands federal partnership to further develop quantum projects. Sun-Times

Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Tuesday plans to announce a major partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense’s research and development agency to further expand quantum research in Illinois.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, will take residency on the state’s quantum campus to establish a program where quantum computing prototypes will be tested. The location of the campus is expected to be announced soon.

According to DARPA, the goal of the “Quantum Benchmarking Initaitive,” or QBI, will be to evaluate and test quantum computing claims and “separate hype from reality.”

“It’s going to ensure our quantum campus and the development of our quantum industry is secured as a global leader,” Pritzker said in an interview with the Sun-Times. “We’re the only state that put forward a quantum campus and quantum plan. And the federal government stepping up and becoming an important partner, particularly DARPA, is a lot of validation.”

Governor Pritzker will announce federal investments in Illinois at 11 am. Then at 1 pm the governor will give remarks celebrating opening of new PACE South Campus. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Block Club | As Tornadoes Hit Chicago Area Again, City Battered By Strong Storms: Tornadoes touched down at both O’Hare and Midway airports, ABC7 meteorologists said during Monday’s broadcast. Meteorologists saw power flashes on webcams at both airports, “due to likely tornadoes and/or destructive wind gusts near those areas,” the weather service tweeted.

* Tribune | Lawyers for ex-Speaker Madigan ask judge to gut indictment in light of SCOTUS ruling: The 73-page filing largely mirrors the defense’s motion to dismiss in February 2023, which had yet to be ruled on by U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey. Instead, the judge ordered the parties to renew their submissions in light of the Supreme Court’s decision last month in the case of former Portage, Indiana, Mayor James Snyder. The filing Monday includes dozens of citations to the Snyder ruling, which says the federal bribery statute commonly known as 666 after its number in the federal criminal code does not criminalize “gratuities,” gifts given to elected officials to express thanks for taking a favorable action.

*** RNC ***

* Capitol News Illinois | At national convention, Illinois’ beleaguered GOP portrays calm amid internal storm: U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, of Murphysboro, said Monday that Trump himself has started to change his own rhetoric, but not his campaign issues. “It doesn’t change the issues,” Bost told reporters after the breakfast. “Maybe it changes the way, one, the president, Donald Trump, looks at each issue and how he deals with people. But, two, it also showed not only this nation but the world when he came up from that shot, that he’s a fighter.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Cabello praises running mate pick: After news broke of Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance being tapped as Trump’s vice-presidential running mate, Rep. John Cabello told Capitol News Illinois he supports the choice. “He’s got a great story, he came from nothing. You know, he’s self-made. The man worked his tail off,” Cabello said. “Yeah, I think that’s a good fit for the story. It’s the same thing that Trump did you know, work your tail off, build yourself and you know he’s very knowledgeable. I think it’s a great pick.”

* CBS | Illinois Republicans believe party will unite at RNC after Trump assassination attempt: Illinois State Sen. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro) agreed. “Even when we don’t agree on things totally, I think you’re going to see a Ronald Reagan-style Republican Party, where if we agree 80% of the time, we are friends,”

*** Statewide ***

* Press Release | Illinois Federation of Teachers Hires New Director of Political Activities: Today, the Illinois Federation of Teachers (IFT) announced the hiring of veteran staffer Bryen Johnson as the union’s statewide Director of Political Activities. Bryen replaces Michelle Paul, who left last month after 20 years at the IFT.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson whipping votes to install progressive ally as head of Zoning Committee: Johnson is whipping votes for Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, to chair the committee with the city’s current vice mayor, Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, taking over the Housing Committee that Sigcho-Lopez would vacate. The shuffle would put to rest the question of who would chair the Zoning Committee that has lingered since Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th, stepped aside after apologizing to colleagues for attempting to block Ald. Emma Mitts, 37th, from entering the chamber in an effort to kill a vote.

* Sun-Times | How did the White Sox get this bad? All this losing starts at the top: The Sox are the owners of the worst won-lost record in the game. At their current pace, they’re on track to finish 45-117. If they pick up their pace of losing just a bit, they might break the 1962 Mets’ record for the most defeats in the history of modern baseball.

* Chicago Reader | Chicago’s illustrious American Academy of Art is closing.: The announcement blamed the pandemic and sought to frame the school’s demise in a broader context of falling student numbers: “The decision to close comes in response to a significant decline in enrollments following the COVID-19 pandemic, a challenge faced by many educational institutions,” it said. Arrangements are being made that will allow Academy students to continue their degree programs at Columbia College Chicago. Columbia spokesperson Lambrini Lukidis confirms that “we do have a formal transfer agreement for current students.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | Kane County sheriff, state’s attorney to ramp up security at political events: In a joint statement on July 15, State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser and Sheriff Ron Hain condemned the attempted assassination and vowed to enhance security at future political events in the county. “We are horrified by the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump,” The statement read. “Political violence has no place in the United States, and we must all condemn this abhorrent act. In a democratic society, violence is never the answer. No one should have to risk their life to run for office, attend a political event, or advocate for a cause.”

* ABC Chicago | 1st suburban Cook County Restorative Justice Court opens in Sauk Village, following Chicago’s lead: A second chance is being offered for young people in south suburban Sauk Village. A court focused on restorative justice has opened. […] “We let the participants see the decision they made, there can be better decision-making and that they can restore not only within their community, but everybody else’s community,” said Andrea Boler, a case manager with the Cook County Restorative Justice Program.

*** Downstate ***

* Dispatch-Argus | Illinois Quad-Cities state senator highlights new state department, veteran grant funding: [Sen. Mike Halpin] said early childhood education will continue to be a top priority moving forward, calling it the “most cost-effective” dollars the state can spend. “When you spend it at the early childhood level, you don’t have to spend money later on to ‘catch people up,’” he said. “So, I think the $350 million we put in (for K-12 education) every year is going to go that much further.”

* WLCN | Logan Correctional Center staff, workers from other correctional centers unite on softball field to give back to community, maintain awareness of proposed Logan facility closure: While many may think that competition is the only thing taking place between teams on an athletic field, a softball tournament featuring workers from Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln and other Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) facilities from around the state hopes to accomplish more. The six-team softball tournament is scheduled for July 26 from 5 PM until approximately 9 PM on the softball fields at Lincoln Park District, 1400 Primm Road in Lincoln.

* WTVO | Rockford moves to place historic Illinois National Guard Armory up for sale: In 2000, the building was placed under landmark status on the National Register of Historic Places. The building, which has sat vacant for decades, was donated to the City in 2006. Rockford’s Code and Regulations Committee approved the authorization to put the property up for sale on Monday night. It now advances to the full City Council.

* SJ-R | More than $15,000 given out in first round of relief checks following Adams Street fire: According to a news release, 12 residents, seven businesses, and one nonprofit impacted by the fire received the checks from the INB Benefit for the Businesses Affected by the Adams Family Fire fund, which was opened by the Office of Planning and Economic Development on June 20, the day after the fire. Since the fire, the direct donations to the fund have amassed just over $18,000 to support the Adams family businesses and people affected by the blaze; and a first-round of checks totaled $15,750.

* Horse Racing Nation | Accel Entertainment agrees to buy FanDuel track for $35 million: Accel noted in the news release that it is acquiring the only track in the St. Louis-southern Illinois market along with an opportunity to develop a legislatively authorized casino project. It also is acquiring the master sports-betting license used in a revenue-share agreement with FanDuel. “Accel is committed to maintaining Fairmount’s rich horse-racing history, including continuing support of the Illinois Racing Board’s mission to enhance the Illinois horse racing industry,” the company said in the release.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | Congress Accidentally Legalized Weed Six Years Ago: This is probably not what Congress had in mind when it passed the Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018, commonly called the 2018 Farm Bill, which made the production of hemp—cannabis’s traditionally nonpsychoactive cousin—legal for the first time in nearly a century. Lawmakers who backed hemp legalization expected the plant to be used for textiles and nonintoxicating supplements, such as CBD oil and shelled hemp seeds (great on an acai bowl). They didn’t realize that, with some chemistry and creativity, hemp can get you just as high as the dankest marijuana plant.

  3 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jul 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.

  Comment      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jul 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation
* Governor Pritzker endorses Kamala Harris for president (Updated)
* Mayor Johnson's actual state ask is $5.5 billion, and Pritzker turns thumbs down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Pritzker, Durbin, Duckworth so far keeping powder dry on endorsing VP Harris (Updated x7)
* Biden announces withdrawal from reelection (Updated x3)
* Yesterday's stories

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