[The following is a paid advertisement.]
We are pleased to announce an exciting and important milestone for ComEd’s transformation of the electrical system serving northern Illinois. We have submitted our plan to the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) for the installation of smart meters across our service territory. Here are the highlights:
• The deployment plan will occur over a 10-year period and introduce more than four million smart meters in all.
• ComEd will install approximately 130,000 smart meters in 2012 in the following communities: Berkeley, Brookfield, Cicero, Elmwood Park, Forest View, Franklin Park, Harwood Heights, La Grange Park, Lyons, Norridge, North Riverside, Northlake, River Grove, Riverside, Rosemont, Schiller Park, Stickney, Stone Park and Westchester. Installation will continue in areas served by the Maywood operating center, where most of the meters were installed for ComEd’s AMI Pilot Program.
• Beginning next year, we plan to install approximately 400,000 smart meters annually through completion of the program in 2021.
• Our plan was developed in consultation with Governor Quinn’s Smart Grid Advisory Council and we’ve met with numerous community groups and stakeholders to discuss the plan.
We are proud of the collaboration and coordination that went into this plan and we are excited about the benefits smart meters will bring, including fewer and shorter outages, an improved customer experience, more opportunities for customers to control their energy consumption and save money.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Gov. Pat Quinn has said he’ll keep the General Assembly in session throughout the summer if necessary if the gaping $2.7 billion hole in the state’s Medicaid budget isn’t resolved. He also says that Medicaid and pension fixes must both happen this spring.
* The Question: I know it’s only May 2nd, but do you think the General Assembly’s spring session will last into the summer? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Today’s maps: Illinois churches
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* OK, it’s a little fuzzy looking because I had to increase the size so you could see it, but this is from the decennial Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies survey of predominant religions by county. First up, mainline Protestants…
The color key…
The differences between north and south here are more than just apparent, they’re striking, although not exactly surprising.
* Roman Catholics…
The color key…
* Explanation of how the data was collected…
In most cases, the numbers are supplied by the headquarters of each denomination, though organizations count membership differently. In a few instances, such as the nondenominational and Muslim categories, scholars’ surveys were used. The geographical spread reflects where people worship, not where they live.
* Illinois stuff…
That calculation revealed that evangelicals affiliated with independent churches make up the second-largest religious group in Illinois. In fact, in 48 of the 50 states, independent evangelicals occupy a top-five spot. In the Chicago area, Illinois and nationwide, Roman Catholics rank as the largest religious group.
With 176 religious traditions, Illinois slipped from its top spot as the most religiously diverse state in 2000, falling to Pennsylvania with 184. […]
Nationwide, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Mormons, reported the most growth of all religious traditions in the U.S., adding more than 1.9 million adherents. In Illinois and Cook and DuPage counties, that distinction belonged to Muslims, a piece of information that intrigued researcher Clifford Grammich, of Downers Grove, who collected Catholic data for the study. […]
The Assemblies of God, a Pentecostal denomination, added 22,854 adherents — more growth than any other Christian tradition in the state, including Mormons.
The study shows that Catholics, though still the largest denomination in the state and the nation, declined about 5 percent nationwide as well as in Illinois and the Chicago area. Researchers warned, however, that numbers from previous studies were not wholly comparable.
Discuss.
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Bloomberg’s fuzzy math
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A Bloomberg headline from earlier this week…
Illinois Faces 25% Cost Increase to Borrow $1.8 Billion
The explanation…
The tax-exempt deal for the state, rated lowest by Moody’s Investors Service, includes a 10-year segment that underwriter Jefferies & Co. plans to offer to investors at 1.85 percentage points above benchmark AAA securities, according to a person familiar with the sale.
Illinois’s last general-obligation sale was on March 13 for $575 million, with 10-year securities priced to yield 1.51 percentage points above benchmark tax-exempts, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s 0.34 percentage points below tomorrow’s tentative pricing plan, or a difference of 22.5 percent.
Well, that’s just silly. Borrowing costs would not have risen 25 percent. What was projected to increase 22.5 percent was the points above benchmark tax exempts that were paid in March. That’s ridiculous math and in no way justifies the headline or the rest of the breathless story, which was obviously designed to create maximum controversy ahead of the sale.
* And, no surprise, it turns out that when the bonds were actually sold they were priced to yield less than what Bloomberg had predicted. From the Wall St. Journal..
Ten-year bonds were priced to yield 3.62%, or 1.75 percentage points over a widely used municipal-bond benchmark. Ahead of the sale, comparable existing debt issued by Illinois was trading at a premium of 1.68 percentage points.
* But even though the state had $5 billion in orders for $1.8 billion of bonds, the WSJ still felt the need to trot out a lone bond vigilante…
Justin Land, a portfolio manager at Wasmer, Schroeder Co., said his firm owned some Illinois debt maturing within five years, but it was passing on this deal. Illinois “needs to get farther down the road toward fiscal responsibility before we are going to become big buyers again,” he said.
Bonded indebtedness gets paid first. Every state employee would miss out on their paychecks before bond payments were skipped. Mr. Land is right that we have a long way to go before we’re fiscally responsible, but anybody who thinks that Illinois will skip a bond payment is just downright crazy.
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“Oscar Mike”
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The State Journal-Register pleaded today with four area Republican legislators who oppose the governor’s pension and Medicaid fixes, but won’t come up with alternative ideas of their own…
But at this point — with the session set to end in four weeks — putting up opposition without offering alternatives is not an option. At least, it’s not an option if you want to be part of averting the greatest financial disaster in the state’s history. […]
Come on, guys. If all you’re willing to provide at this point is opposition, you’re relegating yourselves to the rearmost back benches of your chambers. This is the biggest game of your political careers. Are you really prepared to sit it out?
I totally agree.
And I’d say that very same thing to every member of the General Assembly. Usually, legislators prefer to avoid kicking up any dust. But as I’ve said before, this could be the most important legislative session of my lifetime.
Easy solutions just don’t exist any longer, so stop hoping that magic faeries will flutter down from the skies and make everything all better. They don’t exist. You wanted this job, so do it, already.
* Related and a roundup…
* More local lawmakers sound off on Quinn’s Medicaid, pension plans: McCann said he believes negotiations between the executive branch and its employees can work through the state’s pension problems if everyone is doing so in good faith. “If we are going to change the system in any way, shape or form, one thing we must do is make sure that it’s fair to everyone in the system,” McCann said. “It has to affect everyone equally. One group cannot get a sweetheart deal while another group doesn’t.” McCann said he has heard from his constituents, a number of whom are state workers, who have said that they believe they are working for an administration that doesn’t take agreements seriously. “I think we need to honor our obligations and negotiate with our employees in good faith,” McCann said.
* Editorial: Illinois’ ‘rendezvous wiith reality’ still a ways off: Mr. Quinn gets credit for an imperfect but politically courageous proposal. Lawmakers must swallow hard, refine the proposal on the revenue side and pass it.
* House Republicans protest Madigan rule: If I could speculate for a moment: Part of what seems to be going on is two of the House GOP’s new floor leaders – Bost and Rep. Dennis Reboletti, R-Elmhurst – are trying to fire up a caucus that has otherwise been in kind of a funk.
* Illinois Suspends Illinois Suspends Insurance Exchange Setup
* Zorn: Is Chicago really getting cheated?’ and other follow-up questions on teacher pensions
* Illinois Schools spent $48 million on taxi cabs
* Editorial: University of Illinois finance, judgment prompts questions
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Cullerton advances legislative scholarship ban
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The House approved a bill in March to abolish the so-called General Assembly scholarship program by a vote of 79-29. The bill has been sitting in a Senate subcommittee ever since, and the chairperson of that subcommittee, Sen. Kim Lightford, is a major GA scholarship advocate…
“I think it is a valuable resource that we are dismantling,” Lightford said. “I just believe we’re responding to media pressure.”
* It looked for a time like we were in for the same pattern: GA scholarship bill passes House, Senate kills it.
But Senate President John Cullerton took over the sponsorship of the bill after being beaten up badly by editorial boards far and wide. He also tacked on an amendment which mandates that all tuition waivers, valued at $415 million a year, be studied by a new Tuition and Fee Waiver Task Force, with a report due back by April 15, 2013.
The subcommittee moved the bill to the full committee on a 2-0-1 vote, with Lightford abstaining. The bill now appears headed for passage. And as long as there are no shenanigans in the House, once that chamber concurs with the amendment it’ll head to the governor’s desk before too long.
The legislative scholarship program has done a lot of good over the years, but too many of those scholarships were passed out as blatant political favors. It was time to end it. Past time, really. But, hey, sometimes things take a little time.
* From a Cullerton press release…
While Cullerton has long held that reforming the legislative scholarship program was possible, it has become clear that the majority of the General Assembly supports ending rather than reforming the program.
“This program has become a major distraction from what should be the focus the session – the state budget, Medicaid and pension reform, said President Cullerton. “It’s time to put it behind us so that we can turn our attention to larger issues that must be addressed this year.”
This step follows Cullerton’s past efforts to reform the General Assembly scholarship program by targeting specific abuses revealed by investigations and media reports. Reforms included prohibiting awards to family members of political contributors, blocking waivers to students outside of a member’s legislative district, and tightening the requirements for applicants.
As part of the effort to reform the system, Cullerton has also been a proponent of reviewing state requirements for all tuition waivers. Given the fact that the General Assembly scholarship program makes up only 3.25 percent of the total value of all state tuition waivers, Cullerton believes there may be a need for more scrutiny related to cost and requirements associated with the universe of waivers. The bill calls for a task force to review all waivers and report findings on or before April 15, 2013.
The bill abolishes the 103 year old General Assembly scholarship program by striking the program from state statute this year.
Discuss.
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Nekritz tries again
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Rep. Elaine Nekritz has revamped her bill to delete Illinois’ felony penalties for audio recording a police officer in the line of duty…
SB1808 is nearly identical to HB3944 except for one key aspect. The new bill requires state’s attorneys to consider charges if a person alters an audio recording of a law enforcement official in order to make it look like he or she is guilty of wrongdoing.
That could result in a charge of obstruction of justice or disorderly conduct , said Melinda Bentley, assistant director of legislative affairs for the Illinois State Bar Association.
Nekritz said the provision was added to address the concerns of law enforcement, but conceded she does not expect those groups to change their position. […]
At least two law enforcement groups, the Illinois State Police and the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police, have said they oppose SB1808.
The new provision about penalties for altering recordings is a step in the right direction, said Laimutis Nargelenas, a lobbyist for IACP, but he said the bill is still unfair to law enforcement. He reiterated his support for one-party consent, in which only one person in a conversation would have to consent before being recorded. Nekritz opposes that idea.
One-party consent? So, if I’m ever (God forbid) recording, from a safe distance, a dastardly criminal shooting at a cop I’d have to first obtain permission from one of them? I suppose that’d be easier than following current law and getting permission from both, but, seriously, what the heck?
The natural reaction is to ask what they’re so afraid of. But I’m pretty sure it’s just the usual “This is our turf, so don’t mess with us” stuff we always see in Springfield from just about everybody.
* From the Illinois Press Association…
“There are already nine exemptions to the Eavesdropping Act that allow officers to record citizens without a warrant,” said Josh Sharp, government relations director of the Illinois Press Association, which supports the bill. “The score today is Police — 9, Citizens — 0.” […]
Stephen Franklin, president of the Chicago Headline Club, a chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, added, “Any effort that decriminalizes and removes a threat to journalists doing legitimate work is a benefit to all journalists in Illinois.” He said his group “has long opposed this [current] law, which is unique to Illinois and unhelpful in the gathering of information.”
Sharp noted that the current law hinders reporters from doing their jobs but also makes it impossible to use citizen-supplied recordings of suspected police abuse on their websites.
“You can have the recording in your hands and see what’s going on right in front of you, but you can’t share that with your audience? In the most free country on Earth? That’s hard to believe, but that’s the law in Illinois today.”
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Prisons chief alleges fraud
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* It’s hard to argue with the guy…
The head of the Illinois prison system told a legislative subcommittee that he believes millions of dollars paid out in workers’ compensation claims to Menard guards who claimed injury from turning keys involved “fraud.”
Tony Godinez, director of the Illinois Department of Corrections, alleged fraud in response to a question from Rep. Dwight Kay, R-Glen Carbon, during an April 18 session of the Appropriations-Public Safety Committee.
“I am not surprised nor am I taken aback too often in this job, but that was one time I was,” said Kay.
That was Kay’s reaction when Godinez, drawing on his long experience working in the state’s prison system, told the committee, “I think there’s fraud.” This was in reference to more than $10 million paid to guards and Menard Correctional Center employees for repetitive trauma injuries, usually carpal tunnel syndrome of the wrist or cubital tunnel syndrome of the elbow. […]
“I think there’s fraud. I’m sorry to say that but I’ve been working in this business a long time and was (warden) at Stateville for 12 years, some 12 very hard years, and I never saw claims like I’ve seen since I’ve been back,” Godinez said.
In answer to another question from Kay as to why the maximum security Menard prison, and to a lesser extent the medium security Pinckneyville Correctional Center, would be the only two prisons to have numerous repetitive trauma claims, Godinez said, “In my professional opinion, on a personal side, if you’re running a maximum security facility and your claim is using the keys too much, you’re not using them much in a maximum security facility. They’re not coming out a lot. So, I don’t understand why (Menard) as opposed to other facilities where the inmates in minimum and medium are coming out more and the keys are turned more.”
* Part of the problem here is that state agencies no longer have to pay workers’ comp claims. CMS now does that. So the agencies, like Corrections, have no incentive to either stop the fraud (since the cost is coming out of somebody else’s pocket) or fix the problem that’s causing the injuries (since that would cost the agency money and not fixing it would be somebody else’s problem).
Attorney General Lisa Madigan explained this situation in a recent letter to legislative leaders…
Prior to the Blagojevich Administration, some of the largest State agencies – IDOT, IDOC, DHS and ISP – each administered their own workers’ compensation claims, using their own funds. As a result, those agencies had a direct financial interest in improving the workplace to avoid or minimize workers’ compensation claims, defending against workers’ compensation claims and ensuring that injured workers could return to work as soon as possible to reduce the cost of TDD [Temporary Total Disability] payments.
Under the consolidated system for workers’ compensation claims, however, the employing agencies do not experience any impact to their budgets when their employees file claims or remain off of work and on TTD for an extended period of time, providing those agencies with no financial incentive to determine the cause of the increase in claims and take steps to eliminate it. The agencies also have little incentive to accommodate employees whenever possible (including with light duty work) to allow them to return to work quickly.
* Madigan also related this workers’ comp horror story from the private sector…
In 2009, the Second District Appellate Court reinstated benefits to an employee who was injured when he threw himself up against a vending machine in an attempt to dislodge a bag of Fritos that had become stuck after a co-worker attempted to purchase them. Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. IIC, 391 Ill. App. 3d 913 (2d Dist. 2009). The IWCC had awarded benefits to the employee by finding that the personal comfort doctrine applied and that because the employee’s use of physical force to shake the machine to dislodge a bag of chips was neither unusual nor outrageous, the employer was liable for workers’ compensation benefits.2 The Circuit Court reversed, finding that the personal comfort doctrine did not apply. The Appellate Court then reversed and reinstated the benefits.
Some doofus flings himself at a vending machine and that’s covered under workers’ comp? How the heck is that possible? From Madigan…
While acknowledging that the personal comfort doctrine did not apply, the Appellate Court found the claim was nevertheless compensable under the “Good Samaritan” doctrine. The Appellate Court noted that prior cases applying the Good Samaritan doctrine involved an employee providing aide to someone in urgent need (such as rescuing someone who fell into a lake, protecting a young child from physical harm or providing transportation to a stranded motorist and her children). The Appellate Court, however, extended the doctrine to cover an injured worker’s attempt to rescue a co-worker’s stranded bag of chips because the Court found that it was reasonably foreseeable to the employer that this may occur. In addressing the “arising out of’” employment analysis, the Appellate Court concluded that a reasonable trier of fact could find that the “injury originated in a risk incidental to [the employee’s] employment” because (1) the employer provided the vending machine for the convenience of its employees, (2) the machine was defective and (3) the defect “creat[ed] a need for action to dislodge the bag of Fritos.” Circuit City Stores, Inc. 391 Ill. App. 3d at 990-91.
The Illinois Supreme Court has made it clear that Illinois employers are not liable for accidents or injuries solely because they occur at work. The IWCC and the lower courts, however, have increasingly applied an expansive approach to determining whether an accident or injury arose out of and in the course of employment. These decisions have created significant challenges for employers in defending claims on the issue of compensability.
Sheesh.
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* No surprise here…
An Illinois legislative commission opposes Gov. Pat Quinn’s plan to close two prisons and a center for people with developmental disabilities.
The Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability voted 7-3 Tuesday against closing prisons in Tamms and Dwight. It also advised against closing the Murray Developmental Center in Centralia.
The panel’s action is only advisory. Quinn can still close the facilities, which he says must be done to cut spending and improve care for people with mental disabilities.
* More…
The commission agreed with the plan to close an office of the Department of Children and Family Services in the Chicago area. But it voted down the Administration’s closure plans for Tamms, the Murray Center for the Developmentally Disabled at Centralia, Dwight Correctional Center, the Illinois Youth Center at Joliet, and two adult transitional correctional centers in Chicago and Joliet.
* This is odd…
n a surprise, the commission’s chairman, Sen. Jeffrey Schoenberg, D-Evanston, said the City of Centralia had proposed in recent days that the Murray Center campus be made available for private use, if it were to close.
Schoenberg said the sate had received “some documentation from the City of Centralia, in the last couple of days, sketching out a proposal” for a consortium of not-for-profit groups to acquire the campus.
After the commission’s meeting, Centralia Mayor Tom Ashby said the city had made no such proposal. Ashby said he thinks it was “just something that was suggested by the commission.” […]
Two area lawmakers, Sen. Kyle McCarter, R-Lebanon, and Rep. Paul Evans, R-O’Fallon said it was the first they’d heard of such a proposal.
*** UPDATE *** From AFSCME…
AFSCME Council 31 executive director Henry Bayer issued the following statement in response to votes today by the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) rejecting Governor Quinn’s proposed closures of Dwight Correctional Center (by a vote of 7-3), Joliet Illinois Youth Center (5-5), Murray Developmental Center (7-3), Peoria Adult Transition Center (10-0), Tamms Correctional Center (7-3) and Westside Adult Transition Center (5-5).
“We applaud the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability for rejecting Governor Quinn’s wrongful and damaging closure threats. The commission voted to protect essential public services and preserve more than 2,000 Illinois jobs.
“The governor’s push to force individuals with disabilities out of their homes, reduce mental health treatment, jeopardize prison safety, end reentry programs and put thousands of public servants out of work are the wrong priorities for Illinois.
“The commission’s work is an example of good government in action. COGFA brings together lawmakers from both parties, both chambers and every part of the state who along with their diligent staff studied Governor Quinn’s proposals. Unlike the governor, they toured the facilities, visited the communities and listened to testimony from employees, advocates, local officials, individuals and families. In stark contrast to the Quinn Administration, they considered all the evidence, reached the sensible conclusion and rejected each of the closures.
“We call on Governor Quinn to listen to the commission and withdraw his ill-considered closure plans, and we urge the legislature to make sure all state facilities are fully funded in the 2013 budget.”
COGFA also clarified that absent any motions made to reconsider, its previous votes stand, rejecting the threatened closures of Jacksonville Developmental Center, Murphysboro Illinois Youth Center, Singer Mental Health Center and Tinley Park Mental Health Center.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* There were a lot of lowlights from yesterday’s arraignment of Rep. Derrick Smith. Here’s a quote from Smith…
“God gives us all a cross to bear and this lawsuit is mine.”
Um, excuse me, Representative, but this is no mere lawsuit you’re facing. You’ve been indicted on federal bribery charges. Perhaps you need to look up the difference between civil and criminal matters.
* Mark Brown talked to some Chicago politicians who backed Smith in the Democratic primary against a white Republican who appeared to be campaigning as a black Democrat…
“I’m a bit disappointed quite frankly,” Congressman Danny K. Davis told me Monday after learning of Smith’s comments. “I would have hoped that Rep. Smith would have resigned his position as a member of the General Assembly.” To be clear, Davis would like him to resign his spot on the ballot as well.
Davis, who headlined the group that urged a vote for Smith after his arrest, said he did so because he “thought it was for the greater good of the district.”
At this time, “the greatest good would be served if Rep. Smith would put people out of their agony [by resigning]. Only he can do that,” Davis added.
Davis said he appreciates that Smith is in a difficult position and he’s entitled to the presumption of innocence, but added: “Sometimes you have to put the good of the group before your individual self.”
Ald. Emma Mitts (37th), chairman of the West Side Black Elected Officials who convened the pre-election press conference backing Smith, also said he should resign.
“The sooner the better,” Mitts told me. “He’s got enough to deal with without holding the district hostage.”
Mitts said Democratic committeemen whose wards encompass Smith’s 10th legislative district are preparing to run an independent candidate against him if he doesn’t step aside. That effort is being organized by Secretary of State Jesse White, Smith’s political mentor, who engineered his appointment.
* And WBEZ had a doozy of a quote from Smith’s attorney…
Henderson said the case reminds him of a poem.
“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist,” Henderson said, reading a printout from the website of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I am not a Jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak to, for me.”
That poem is about Germans who ignored Nazi actions.
Asked if he was really comparing Derrick Smith’s case to the Holocaust, Henderson replied that when the government does something wrong, everyone has “an obligation to stand up.”
“Today it’s Derrick Smith,” he said. “Who is it tomorrow? That’s the point of [my reading] the poem.”
Oy.
* The Question: Derrick Smith is to _____ as Rod Blagojevich is to _____?
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* The Republicans want to intensely vet the folks who want to be appointed to the ballot in the 13th Congressional District in the wake of Congressman Tim Johnson’s retirement. They’ve devised a questionnaire and some of the questions are pretty basic…
Have you ever been delinquent with personal, business or property taxes?
Is your voter registration current with your current election authority?
Have you ever voted in the primary of any political party other than the Republican Party?
* But some are fare more personal…
Have you ever been denied car insurance or had car insurance cancelled?
Has any member of your immediate family filed for bankruptcy?
Has the IRS audited you or your business or family business?
An IRS audit doesn’t mean anything unless the IRS found something bad. Even then, it’s usually no big deal.
* And this set of questions appears to be directly aimed at Jerry Clarke, who once worked for the House Republican operation, which was the subject of a federal probe years ago…
Have you ever been questioned by state or federal authorities in connection with the alleged commission of a crime? If so, when? If applicable, did you provide testimony or material evidence (testimony or documents) in the case? What was the ultimate disposition of that case?
Have you ever testified or been served with a subpoena to testify before a grand jury, trial court, administrative or regulatory agency? If so, provide all details.
Have you ever been served with a subpoena to produce records to a grand jury, trial court, administrative or regulatory agency? If so, provide all details.
That’s one more possible nail in the coffin.
* They also want a “one-page outline demonstrating how you will win the 13th Congressional District.” But as Jon Zahm points out, not a single policy question was asked.
* Meanwhile, Common Cause wants Attorney General Lisa Madigan to investigate the American Legislative Exchange Council to check to see if it’s in compliance with state tax and lobbying laws. From a press release…
On the heels of filing a whistleblower complaint with the IRS charging abuse of federal tax laws, Common Cause Illinois today asked Attorney General Lisa Madigan to look into the tax status of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) in Illinois.
ALEC is registered in Illinois with the Attorney General’s Office as a charitable organization, and at the federal level, where it enjoys tax-exempt status under section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. A letter delivered to Attorney General Lisa Madigan on Tuesday, May 1st, charges that ALEC is primarily a lobbying organization and may therefore be in violation of its tax exempt status. Common Cause Illinois is calling on the Attorney General to review ALEC’s 990 form and investigate their activities to ensure that they are in compliance with state tax and lobbying laws.
“ALEC is a corporate lobby front group masquerading as a public charity on the taxpayers’ dime. Illinoisans shouldn’t have to subsidize ALEC’s agenda to limit voting rights, undermine our public schools, spread Stand Your Ground gun laws, and weaken laws protecting our environment. Tax fraud is illegal, which is why Common Cause Illinois is calling on the Attorney General to review ALEC’s registration as a charity and whether its lobbying activities in Illinois are being properly disclosed,” said Rey López-Calderón, Executive Director of Common Cause Illinois.
Common Cause Illinois’ letter comes just days after the national organization of Common Cause filed a whistleblower complaint with the IRS on the grounds that ALEC is flouting federal tax laws by posing as a tax-exempt charity while spending millions of dollars to lobby for hundreds of bills each year in state legislatures across the country. The complaint was filed on Common Cause’s behalf, pro bono, by the prominent whistleblower law firm Phillips & Cohen LLP, under the Tax Whistleblower Act of 2006.
The full complaint is here.
* Related…
* Watchdog groups file FEC complaint against U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock: “Rep. Schock and Leader Cantor’s campaign spokesman Ray Allen told Roll Call in no uncertain terms that a solicitation was made for $25,000, which amounts to a public confession to a clear violation of the law,” said Paul S. Ryan, Campaign Legal Center senior counsel, in a statement. “The FEC must pursue this violation by Rep. Schock or the agency would in effect be green-lighting candidates soliciting multimillion-dollar contributions to the ostensibly ‘independent’ super PACs that have been doing the dirty work of presidential candidates in the primaries — an activity expressly banned by the agency.”
* Aaron Schock hit with FEC complaint
* Campaign Finance Watchdogs File Complaint Against Illinois Congressman
Stay on top of Chicago business with our free daily e-newsletters
* How ALEC became a political liability
* American Legislative Exchange Council to abandon gun rights, other social causes
* Legislative group turns focus amid Martin backlash
* Did the American Legislative Exchange Council Give Me the Full Story?
* ALEC’s ‘ghostwriting’ legislation an excellent practice
* ALEC valuable resource for good public policy in Idaho
* American Legislative Exchange Council has a hand in S.C. politics
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There They Go Again: Nine Times? $12 Billion? Really?
Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department
[The following is a paid advertisement.]
Opponents of SB 678 and the Taylorville Energy Center have a math problem.
Since Illinois law limits any rate increase associated with the project to 2.015% over 30 years, or about $1.67/month for a “typical residential customer” according to the ICC, their math has to be pretty creative to scare the public.
After all, if they were honest and said, “it may cost you less than a ½ gallon of gas per month,” few people would be too concerned. Instead they’ve unleashed their robocall invasion around the state to scare seniors into believing electric bills will go up NINE times, which is only an 898% exaggeration.
And because an 898% exaggeration wasn’t enough, last month Exelon paid $40,000 for a bogus study claiming the Taylorville rate impact has spiked.
The Truth?
While projected natural gas and power price decreases have caused a modest rate impact increase, 40% lower interest rates (which will save the project nearly $900 million over 30 years) have more than offset any increased rate impact.
Remember the SJR warning:
“ComEd would do anything necessary to protect its bottom line and keep competition away, no matter how much hyperbole and alarmism was necessary.”
Springfield Journal-Register Editorial – September 13, 2011
So next time the Exelon-funded STOP coalition tries to scare you and your constituents about SB 678 and Tenaska, remember: there they go again.
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Oh, yeah, this will soothe a lot of tensions
Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This was at the bottom of a press release yesterday from Illinois Transportation Secretary Ann Schneider announcing the state’s new multi-year transportation construction program…
To ensure the continuation of the state’s capital plan and projects like these, which are putting hundreds of thousands of Illinois residents back to work, Governor Quinn has proposed necessary changes to stabilize and restructure the state’s pension and Medicaid programs after decades of fiscal mismanagement.
The proposals outline up to $85 billion in savings from changes to the pension system (based on current actuarial assumptions), and $2.7 billion in savings from restructuring Medicaid. These changes will lead to greater certainty in Illinois’ business climate and help respond to serious concerns from the ratings’ agencies.
The billions of dollars saved through these reforms are key to the state’s ability to ensure that critical capital improvement and road safety projects in Illinois are able to move forward.
* One possible translation: Kicking seniors and poor people off their health care coverage and zapping pensioners is a really great thing because we can patch more potholes! Hooray!
* Secretary Schneider defends herself...
Four years ago, the state’s road fund was responsible for $60 million in pension payments for employees responsible for road projects, Schneider said. Next year, that amount is projected at $172 million, she said.
“Without any action to address the pension problem, in just six years that pension contribution could be upwards of $400 million per year for IDOT employees at our current headcount level,” Schneider said. “We think it is a significant issue that needs to be addressed.
“I believe by addressing the issue this session it could potentially free up additional funds for transportation improvements,” Schneider said.
Similarly, she said, if the state can control Medicaid costs, it will stabilize the state’s credit rating, making it less expensive to issue bonds for road projects.
Schneider said she could not point to specific projects that could be undertaken if pension and Medicaid costs are controlled.
So, yeah, her statement has plenty of logic and facts behind it. But it’s still a bit unseemly and might possibly even enflame the debate.
And it doesn’t help that black and Latino legislators have been upset at IDOT and road contractors forever because of their truly lousy minority hiring records. They might look at this statement as tossing the poor over the side in order to employ more white men. Did anybody over there bother to think of that? Of course not. It’s IDOT.
Try harder, please.
* Related…
* U.S. investigating IDOT payments for jobs program
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Let’s see what you got, before it’s too late
Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A whole lot of state employees comment here. I have no objections to that. In fact, I welcome their input and even encourage it.
But ever since Gov. Pat Quinn unveiled his pension reform plan I’ve found myself deleting more of their comments than usual. Most of the deleted comments were all heat and no light. All anger and no reason.
So, when I saw the State Journal-Register’s story today quoting four Springfield-area Republican legislators about pension and Medicaid reform, I found a passage that will help me illustrate my recent thoughts on this matter…
As for the governor’s pension plan, the four lawmakers echoed public employees’ contention that the state is to blame for underfunding the systems — but offered few solutions.
[Rep. Rich Brauer] said the state needs to see how much it can save in Medicaid first.
“They’ve used that thing as a credit card,” Brauer said of the pension system. “Now you want to punish those people (employees) who put the money in.”
* Listen, folks, when the state is talking about kicking tens (even hundreds) of thousands of some of Illinois’ most vulnerable citizens (elderly and the poor) off Medicaid programs, it’s really tough to totally sympathize with public employees. Senior citizens paid taxes their entire lives, but now health care benefits are about to be snatched away from them. So, this whole idea of how you contributed to your pension and how the state screwed up so you should now be spared any cuts at all just doesn’t pull at my heart strings.
I am opposed to this disgusting national race to the bottom. I cannot stand the argument that just because millions of people are never going to be able to retire at any sort of comfort level that public employees ought to be forced into the same nasty fate. And I fully understand our state Constitution and why it was drafted to protect pensioners.
But, I gotta tell you, I’m really growing tired of your complaints. And if you’re alienating me to this extent, imagine what effect you’re having on everybody else.
* So far, the unions and the workers have been all about criticism and nothing about alternative ideas.
And, by the way, there ain’t gonna be another tax hike. Forget it. That’s not a viable alternative and y’all know it. Don’t insult my intelligence by proposing one.
* Look, I don’t want to see any lives destroyed or irreparably harmed. My favorite uncle (who’s more like a big brother to me) is a retired state employee and I really doubt he could afford to pay his full health insurance premium.
But it’s time for some workable solutions here, and so far I’ve seen nothing from your side but anger and endlessly repeated history lesson talking points. What’s done is done, man. It’s time to move forward.
In this business you’re either part of the solution or you wind up as roadkill. Trust me when I tell you that you’re about to be the latter.
* Related…
* Civic Federation lauds Quinn’s proposed 2013 state budget: Gov. Pat Quinn’s proposed fiscal 2013 state budget is getting a big thumbs-up from an unexpected source: Chicago’s Civic Federation. In somewhat of a man-bites-dog mode, the usually critical federation says Mr. Quinn’s proposed $57.4 billion budget not only “acknowledges the depth of the state’s financial problems” but would put finances “on the road to recovery with major reforms” of Medicaid and worker-pension spending.
* Civic Federation press release
* Civic Federation budget analysis
* Rural school districts prepare for cuts
* Is Illinois still a ‘union-friendly’ state? - Organized labor taking on ‘friendly-fire’ from Illinois Democrats.
* States scaling back worker pensions to save money
* State job losses drag down recovery: Since the beginning of Obama’s presidency, 611,000 state and local government jobs have been lost. That number includes 196,000 teachers, and the decrease in state and local spending caused by the job losses has played a role in the glacial pace of our economy’s recovery.
* State lawmakers consider constitutional amendment to contain pensions
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* From an e-mail to his supporters…
It has been an honor serving as your Secretary of State for over twelve years promoting positive change, improving services and restoring integrity to an office once plagued by corruption.
Our work is not done. My goals for this office are to continue to modernize customer services, fight drunk driving and to make our roads even safer. I will continue to protect our new teen drivers and to ensure that the Illinois Organ/Tissue Donor program remains the best in the country.
Because of this and more, I am seeking a fifth term for re-election as your Secretary of State in 2014. I have devoted my life to public service. Whether it was as a paratrooper in the Army, a school teacher, a legislator, a county and state elected official, or as the founder and coach of the Jesse White Tumbling Team, I have worked hard to protect and improve the lives of the people of Illinois. I ask you to partner with me once again, so that together we can continue working to make Illinois a better place for all of us to live, drive and raise our children.
I am equally proud of my electoral successes. As you may recall, in 2002 I was the first candidate from either party, in over 40 years, to win all 102 counties. In 2006, I won another landslide victory and again, in 2010, I won 100 of 102 counties in a year that was certainly tough for Democrats. Since being first elected to the Secretary of State’s office, I have successfully advocated for important initiatives that impact the quality of life for all Illinoisans.
As we prepare for the 2014 election, our campaign will continue to send you information about upcoming events and ways you can get involved to help energize and engage voters in the electoral process.
I appreciate your support and friendship.
Sincerely,
Jesse White
Secretary of State
Unsurprisingly, White made no mention of his role in the Derrick Smith saga.
Discuss.
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Smith: “I will not cower”
Monday, Apr 30, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* As expected, Rep. Derrick Smith (D-Chicago) pled not guilty today and then read a statement to reporters…
Smith, under pressure to resign his position, accused the FBI of engaging in “shenanigans” during the investigation and said agents pressured people to “say bad things about me.”
“I will not cower,” he said as his family stood behind him in the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse lobby after entering his not-guilty plea. “I intend to stand tall.
Smith also suggested he will remain in office while he fights the charges.
“The people in my district elected me on March 20, 2012, even after the government charged me with wrongdoing,” he said. “And that’s because they believed in me.”
Smith has never been elected to his office. He was appointed, then won the Democratic nomination against a white Republican. He’s starting to sound like Rod.
Also, regardless of whether people were pressured to “say bad things” about him or not, the guy is on tape taking $7,000 in cash. I don’t know how you “stand tall” after you do something like that.
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Question of the day
Monday, Apr 30, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Illinois Review pointed to this 2008 Gallup poll today which surveyed over 75,000 American adults and found that personal income has a pretty direct correlation to smoking propensity…
Nationwide, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index reveals that 21% of Americans say they smoke. As the accompanying graph illustrates, the likelihood of smoking generally increases as annual incomes decrease. One exception to this pattern occurs among those making less than $6,000 per year, an income bracket often skewed because many in that bracket are students. Among those making $6,000 to $11,999 per year, 34% say they smoke, while only 13% in the top two income brackets (those with incomes of at least $90,000 per year) say the same — a 21 percentage-point gap.
The Well-Being Index also confirms distinctions in U.S. smoking rates relating to gender and race. Among respondents, 23% of men and 19% of women say they smoke. Blacks are the most likely to smoke (23%) and Asians are least likely to smoke (12%). Hispanics and whites fall in between, at 17% and 20%, respectively.
* The chart…
* The Question: Is it fair to increase the state cigarette tax by a dollar a pack to help fund Medicaid costs when such high percentages of poor people will be impacted? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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* As I told subscribers on Friday, House Speaker Michael Madigan has introduced an amendment to do away with government subsidies for state and university retiree health insurance…
Legislation to do away with the health insurance premium subsidy available to state retirees opens a new front in the battle between legislators determined to cut the state’s retirement debt and unions representing state workers.
“It would wipe out retiree health care entirely for retired state employees,” said Anders Lindall, spokesman for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the largest public worker union.
The amendment to Senate Bill 1313 would eliminate subsidies for health insurance for retirees. Instead, the Department of Central Management Services would determine how much the state would contribute to “the basic program of group health benefits on behalf of retired employees, annuitants and survivors.” […]
“This is another place where the state is spending money and it’s important as we go through the whole budget debate to look at each one of these situations and determine if that is the best way to go forward,” said Madigan spokesman Steve Brown.
The subsidy is essentially written into the union’s contract, but that contract expires this year and doing away with the subsidy would likely kill it off.
* Related and a roundup…
* ‘A lot of angst’ among teachers over pensions: Most details about the plan are unclear at this point, but the most worrisome part of the proposal for teachers is a provision that would require educators to be 67 years old in order to retire with full pension benefits.
* School officials decry Quinn’s pension-shifting plan
* Finke: A little of the old Quinn surfaces in pension talks
* Pension presentation in Naperville draws hundreds of suburban teachers: “I think it’s fair to say there’s a lot more work to be done,” Ingram said. “There’s a lot of conversations that still need to take place. This is nowhere close to being a done deal right now. We’re going to be sorting it out over the next six weeks, or perhaps longer.”
* Gov. Pat Quinn’s pension reform ideas are a ‘big deal’ for unions
* Zorn: Quinn rebooted
* Illinois State Museum faces financial crisis: The Illinois State Museum might have to close one of its six sites — or push for an entrance fee — if its finances don’t improve.
* State Legislators Question State Officials on Animal Disease Lab Closure: “I’m against all the closures because after all is said and done, I think the total amount of dollars that we’re going to earn by closing is $100 million. What is $100 million in jobs, and making things unsafe, and not being able to set the services for the people of this state, for them to come here, to come back home, and for us to run and take our test out of the state, and on and on, it’s just kind of like a circle”, said Cavaletto.
* Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn says Gov. Scott Walker’s budget increases property taxes by $500 billion
* 2 more Illinois counties can allow courtroom cameras
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There are no easy fixes
Monday, Apr 30, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The trouble with cutting programs like Medicaid is that those cuts can cause other, even costlier problems. For instance…
The governor has called for the closure of Tinley Park Mental Health Center, which currently is budgeted to hold 75 residents. It currently employs 195 workers and has an annual budget of $19.8 million.
He also wants to close Singer Mental Health Center in Rockford, putting 145 people out of work and shuttering bed space for 76 residents. It costs about $14 million to operate the facility.
His budget also calls for cutting community mental health programs by $58.4 million.
Quinn’s Medicaid overhaul, designed to save a total of $2.7 billion, would place a moratorium on admissions to intermediate care facilities. The proposal, which would affect people with mental illnesses, would impact about 14,900 admissions in order to save $114 million.
The Medicaid cuts also would place a moratorium on admissions to a mental disease program impacting about 1,800 people. It would save about $36 million.
All that amounts to nearly a quarter of a billion dollars being diverted away from mental health programs and infrastructure. Lawmakers are trying to wrap up their action on the budget by May 31.
Christopher Larrison, a professor of social work at the University of Illinois, said the proposed reductions will likely result in more people seeking treatment in emergency rooms and more mentally ill people being arrested and jailed. Neither place, he said, is an appropriate setting — medically or financially — for someone needing treatment for a mental illness.
Like I told subscribers this morning, anybody who tells you that fixing things is easy has probably never fixed anything.
* Related…
* Questions face Quinn on cigarette tax hike
* Nursing home residents rally against Medicaid cuts
* Illinois Lawmakers On Taxes: Reality Is Catching Up
* Tom Loewy: ‘Entitlement mentality’ runs counter to the facts: But residents of Knox County shouldn’t tolerate a politician who walks into our midst and spouts off about an “entitlement mentality” when our friends and neighbors are struggling to find affordable medical care for their children. We should never tolerate a politician who tries to pit “us” against “them” when we are all citizens of the same state, faced with the same crushing economic uncertainties as those who live in other ZIP codes. Sorry, but that kind of attitude never made our country great.
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* 9:51 am - From Courthouse News Service…
Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan will get another chance to challenge his mail-fraud conviction, the Supreme Court ruled Monday.
The disgraced politician, who is serving 6 1/2 years for racketeering, conspiracy, tax fraud and lying to the FBI, found relief in precedent set just last week by the high court.
On April 24, the justices said appellate panels cannot deny a prisoner’s habeas petition based on issues that the state has chosen not to raise.
Ryan’s second appeal to the 7th Circuit argued that jury instructions and several evidentiary rulings were defective in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Skilling v. United States. The errors, Ryan contended, permitted the jury to convict him on an honest-services theory without finding a bribe or kickback.
But the federal appeals court found that Skilling permitted his fraud conviction because the record established that Ryan took bribes in exchange for official services.
“Jury instructions that misstate the elements of an offense are not themselves a ground of collateral relief; likewise with erroneous evidentiary rulings,” Chief Judge Frank Easterbrook wrote for the court.
Whereas lawyers for Jeffrey Skilling challenged the mail-fraud statute directly, Ryan’s lawyers contributed to the jury instructions that they now claim caused prejudice, thus forfeiting the challenge, the three-judge panel found.
“If Ryan’s lawyers had done what Skilling’s lawyers did, the controlling decision today might be Ryan rather than Skilling,” Easterbrook wrote, referencing the fact that Ryan’s petition for certiorari beat Skilling’s to the Supreme Court.
* A more succinct explanation from Crain’s…
The appeal is based on whether the governor’s defense team effectively waived their objections to the district court judge’s instructions to the jury, even though government prosecutors conceded that those objections had not been waived.
The court ruled that Mr. Ryan’s conviction has to be reconsidered in light of last week’s unanimous Supreme Court decision in Wood v. Milyard, which restricted what a court can do when a government prosecutor doesn’t object to a defendant’s legal argument.
* Sun-Times…
Ryan’s appellate attorney, Albert Alschuler, said that the ruling means the case will be sent back to the appellate court to reconsider the question of whether Ryan waived his objections to the jury instructions.
But Alschuler said there re still many issues to resolve.
“For now, it’s just further appellate proceedings,” he said. “The court is now remanding the case for the 7th Circuit to reconsider its ruling. Ultimately, it means we have a whole lot of issues to consider. But when all of those issues are considered, we’re hopeful the court would give Gov. Ryan a new trial.”
Another Ryan lawyer, former Gov. James Thompson, said it’s likely, though, that rather than a new trial, the defense team hopes ultimately to have some of the counts on which Ryan was convicted thrown out, allowing him to be released from prison on time served. [Emphasis added.]
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*** UPDATE *** He may appear, but will he really say anything? We’ll see. From Illinois Issues…
A lawmaker who is set to enter a plea today on bribery charges also plans to appear before a legislative committee charged with deciding whether he will face disciplinary action. […]
Victor Henderson, Smith’s lawyer, said that Smith plans to appear before the House committee. “Yes. He absolutely will be appearing in Springfield in front of the committee,” Henderson said. “The representative will definitely be there and is looking forward to the opportunity to speak in some detail about where he is and his continued desire to serve and represent the people in his district.”
[ *** End Of Update *** ]
* It’s been expected all along that Rep. Smith would claim he was entrapped somehow into accepting a $7,000 cash bribe, so this is no big surprise…
Illinois state Rep. Derrick Smith will plead not guilty Monday to a federal bribery charge, according to an attorney for the Chicago Democrat. […]
Vic Henderson is Smith’s attorney, and he’s strongly hinting he’ll argue the government entrapped his client.
“The government’s own information that is publicly available indicates that they manufactured documents, created - I think - fictitious website venues and things of that nature,” Henderson said in an interview last week.
Separate from the criminal proceedings, an Illinois House special investigating committee is looking into the allegations, a process that could end in Smith’s expulsion.
“He’s going to continue to serve as he was elected to do, and we’re going to defend him and business will go on as usual,” Henderson said.
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column expresses impatience…
State Rep. Derrick Smith (D-Chicago) may have more legal troubles than his federal bribery indictment.
U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald has told the House Special Investigating Committee that his office’s investigation of Smith has not concluded.
“I can tell you that our investigation of Representative Smith is continuing,” Fitzgerald wrote, which could be an indication that the government may file more charges.
But the active federal investigation also means that Fitzgerald refused to cooperate with the committee, which is looking into the allegations to determine if any legislative action is warranted against Smith. Fitzgerald also asked the committee to not do any investigating beyond what already is in the public record, except for interviewing Smith himself.
Smith cannot be forced to testify to the special committee, but that refusal can be held against him when it comes time to recommend whether punitive action should be taken.
Fitzgerald wrote his letter April 10, but the committee didn’t meet to discuss it until 16 days later. Another hearing may not happen for a couple of weeks. This thing is in real danger of dragging on through the summer if the committee doesn’t get its act together soon.
Last week, a member of the House committee privately defended the slow process to date, pointing to the time it took to kick former Gov. Rod Blagojevich out of office.
But Blagojevich was arrested Dec. 8, 2008 and removed from office by the Senate on Jan. 29, 2009 — a total of 53 days start to finish, including House impeachment hearings, two House impeachment votes (one before and one after new members were sworn in), Senate hearings and a full Senate trial and vote to remove.
Smith was arrested March 13, 45 days before last week’s special committee meeting. By Blagojevich standards, Smith should be removed from office by the end of this week. But as I write this, the House doesn’t appear to be close to completing the first small step in the process.
The special committee is the initial step in the process of removal (or other punishment). If it decides that punishment is warranted, another committee will be appointed to decide what punishment, if any, should be meted out. Then the full House has to debate and vote on the matter. It’ll take a two-thirds majority vote to expel Smith.
There are indications that at least some Democratic members of the House committee aren’t completely convinced that this is a slam-dunk case. As if being arrested after allegedly accepting $7,000 in cash in exchange for providing an official letter of recommendation and having it all caught on tape somehow isn’t enough to warrant some sort of punishment for Smith.
I mean, even if the guy was entrapped (and the feds are pretty good about avoiding that), he’s still heard on an FBI tape while a “cooperating witness” counts out a pile of cash for him.
Cooperating witness: “One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Damn, stuck together. Six. Seven. Talk to you later.”
Smith: “You don’t want me to give you yours now? … I’m gonna get you your two, man!”
I can understand why House members don’t want to set a dangerous precedent of kicking out a fellow member after only an arrest. I completely agree that such a radical move should definitely not be a blanket policy.
But Smith was indicted on federal bribery charges directly related to his official legislative duties. This was not a drunken driving case or some minor crime relating to his personal life or something trumped up by a local, partisan prosecutor.
A recent statewide poll I’ve seen shows that just 29 percent of likely Illinois voters approve of the job that the Legislature is doing, while 61 percent disapprove. Endless dawdling on the Smith case won’t do anything to improve that pathetic standing with the public. It’s time to get this Smith inquiry moving, already.
* A different Derrick Smith has been popping up on Google News lately. This Derrick Smith owns a horse that’s racing in the Kentucky Derby. Daddy Long Legs is owned by Smith and others. I’m not sure if that’s a good omen for betting or a bad one. Your thoughts?
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Saturday is officially “Philip Humber Day”
Saturday, Apr 28, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From a press release…
Governor Quinn Proclaims “Philip Humber Day” in Illinois
CHICAGO – April 28, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn proclaimed today “Philip Humber Day” in Illinois in honor of the White Sox pitcher throwing only the 21st perfect game in Major League Baseball history. The Governor will present a framed proclamation to Humber and the White Sox before tonight’s game against the Boston Red Sox. The text of the proclamation is below.
WHEREAS, the people of Illinois are both entertained and inspired by demonstrations of athletic excellence and take great pride in the achievements of their favorite Major League Baseball teams; and,
WHEREAS, on April 21, 2012, Chicago White Sox Pitcher Philip Humber threw a perfect game in a 4-0 victory against the Seattle Mariners at Safeco Field in Seattle; and,
WHEREAS, with this accomplishment, Philip Humber became only the 21st pitcher in the history of Major League Baseball ever to pitch a perfect game; and,
WHEREAS, Philip Humber became the first pitcher to throw a perfect game in the month of April since former White Sox hurler and fellow Texan Charles Robertson in 1922; and,
WHEREAS, Philip Humber became the first pitcher to not allow a single base runner against the Seattle Mariners; and,
WHEREAS, this extraordinary occasion marks the third perfect game for the White Sox, combining the achievements of Humber, Robertson, and Mark Buehrle in making the Chicago White Sox the leader in perfect games of all Major League franchises; and,
WHEREAS, in his perfect game, Philip Humber showed extreme poise and pure domination in a 96-pitch outing with 9 strike outs, including striking out Mariners’ pinch-hitter Brendan Ryan on a 3-2 count for the final out of the game; and,
WHEREAS, during his time on the mound, Philip Humber was able to pitch for a full eight innings without allowing a single batter to receive three balls and kept nearly every hitter from threatening to reach base; and,
WHEREAS, other players of the Chicago White Sox exemplified the highest ideals of teamwork in contributing to Philip Humber’s achievement, namely Alex Rios whose over the shoulder catch of Dustin Ackley’s line drive in the fourth stopped the Mariners attempt to get on base in their tracks; Paul Konerko, who struck first with a home run in the second inning and added another RBI in the third, and Anthony John Pierzynski, who not only caught Humber’s perfect game, but also drove in a run in the third and preserved the perfect game with a heads up play in the bottom of the ninth to end the game; and,
WHEREAS, sports fans throughout the world acknowledge Philip Humber’s contributions to the
Chicago White Sox, the State of Illinois, and the game of baseball; and
WHEREAS, Philip Humber’s remarkable performance on Saturday, April 21, 2012, now takes its place among the most memorable moments in the storied history of our national pastime:
THEREFORE, I, Pat Quinn, Governor of the State of Illinois, commend and salute Philip Humber for his exemplary performance on the baseball diamond and do hereby proclaim April 28, 2012, as PHILIP HUMBER DAY in Illinois in recognition of this historic and extraordinary accomplishment.
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