“So help me God”
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The last question at Gov. Pritzker’s press conference today…
I noticed yesterday that when you took the oath of office that you did not in the traditional way, as many governors have, say ‘So help me God.’ Can you explain that?
Pritzker immediately raised his right hand and said “So help me God.” Some folks chuckled.
* From the Illinois Constitution…
SECTION 3. OATH OR AFFIRMATION OF OFFICE
Each prospective holder of a State office or other State position created by this Constitution, before taking office, shall take and subscribe to the following oath or affirmation:
“I do solemnly swear (affirm) that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and the Constitution of the State of Illinois, and that I will faithfully discharge the duties of the office of …. to the best of my ability.”
Background on the phrase is here.
Thoughts?
22 Comments
|
* Press release…
Standing with working families on his first full day in office, Governor JB Pritzker took important first steps to raise Illinoisans’ wages by signing a robust initial package of legislation and executive orders designed to raise and protect their wages.
“This administration is putting Springfield back on the side of working families and these measures are a critical first step in the work that will define my administration, especially as we move toward raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “On the first day of a new administration, we’re enshrining our state’s values to create real and lasting opportunity for the middle class.
“For hardworking people across Illinois, know that your state government has your back. Whether it’s pay equity for women, prosecuting employers who engage in wage theft, instituting prevailing wage requirements, using project labor agreements, restoring state employees’ steps, or promoting diversity in state contracts, these steps are the first of many to take bold action to support working families. This work is far from done, and I look forward to continuing to work with the General Assembly to advance core priorities so working families across Illinois can thrive.”
Today, Governor Pritzker signed Executive Order 2019-02, which will:
* Require that the Department of Central Management Services and the Department of Human Rights shall review the state’s pay plan to eliminate bias generated by asking employees for salary history, which often disadvantages women, particularly women of color. The State of Illinois will no longer ask prospective employees questions about salary history, because of historic salary disadvantages women face.
* Help protect workers from wage theft. The order directs the Illinois Department of Labor to expeditiously handle all cases of wage theft and day labor exploitation, including referring appropriate cases to the Attorney General. This will allow the administration to hold bad actors accountable and protect workers.
Require that all state agencies comply with the Project Labor Agreements Act.
“As the sponsor of the no salary history bill, I am proud to stand with our new governor today as he takes strong, immediate action to close the gender pay gap and move towards pay equity,” said Rep. Anna Moeller. “Governor Pritzker is making it clear to women across our state that they have a staunch ally and advocate in the governor’s office.”
“Surrounded by workers of all backgrounds, Governor Pritzker is delivering on his promise to stand up for working families with his signature on critical legislation today,” said Sen. Cristina Castro. “The action taken by Governor Pritzker today will protect wages, help close the pay gap for women, and improve the wellbeing of thousands of hardworking Illinoisans across our state.”
“I applaud Governor Pritzker for taking immediate action to lift up the middle class and those striving to get there,” said Mike Carrigan, president the Illinois AFL-CIO. “Signing this package of legislation and executive orders on his first full day in office shows that Governor Pritzker is putting working families first.”
Governor Pritzker also took the following measures to support working families:
* SB 203: The governor signed legislation passed by the General Assembly to protect the wages of workers and promote gender and racial diversity in companies with state contracts. The legislation ensures that the Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) engages in collective bargaining with local labor stakeholders to establish prevailing wage rates. It also requires the IDOL to release reports on the diversity of workers employed on public works projects and provide recommendations to increase employment of women and people of color on projects.
* Steps: Today, the state will initiate a process to bring state employees to their appropriate salary step level. Under this measure, union employees, many of whom have not received step increases since 2015, will be placed at their appropriate step for purposes of their pay going forward. This action does not address significant outstanding issues, including backpay. The administration will continue to work toward solutions to manage taxpayer resources effectively and compensate state employees fairly.
The EO is here. SB203 is here.
…Adding… AFSCME Council 31 Executive Roberta Lynch…
Governor Pritzker’s announcement represents important progress toward ending Bruce Rauner’s illegal four-year freeze on step progression for state employees.
The process of placing employees on the appropriate step should be completed without delay.
It’s critical that the state also move quickly to make employees whole for the wages they have been wrongfully denied since 2015.
…Adding… IFT President Dan Montgomery…
By signing agreements that ensure fair pay for state workers and move toward pay equity for women, Governor Pritzker has shown more respect for workers and our unions on his first day in office than Bruce Rauner did during his entire term.
We applaud Governor Pritzker for making sure the state fulfills its end of the bargain in negotiated contracts, and we encourage that deliberate steps be taken to address the back-pay issue.
We look forward to continuing to work with the new administration to improve the lives of Illinois workers, provide high-quality public education and services for all, and ensure that the wealthiest pay their fair share to help run our great state. It truly is a new day in Illinois.
…Adding… ILGOP Chairman Tim Schneider…
Governor Pritzker has barely been in office for 24 hours, and he’s already signed an executive order spending an undefined amount of taxpayer dollars on state employee pay increases. Yesterday, we heard promises from Pritzker that he would work with Democrats and Republicans to balance the budget. Yet today, Pritzker unilaterally made reckless spending promises without specifying the costs, creating more budget uncertainty. It’s clear - the Pritzker agenda is the same agenda that has dragged our state down for decades - borrow, tax, spend, repeat.
63 Comments
|
All rise
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I mean, he is a Republican and he did lose the election, but both Republican legislative leaders rose…
…Adding… Legit classiness from Rauner’s staff…
* How do they say “bon voyage” in New Zealand?…
45 Comments
|
The “Middle Class March” that wasn’t
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* An Illinois News Network story from earlier this month…
Kristen Wiley, who is organizing a “Middle Class March” outside of Democratic Gov.-elect J.B. Pritzker’s inauguration in Springfield next week said the ad is out of touch.
“Making Madigan the last shot in this ad is completely tone deaf to people who believe in term limits, and would like to see him out of office,” Wiley said. “That was completely off-putting. Democrats know that 45,000 residents left Illinois last year, and that number will grow this year if they can’t keep their hands out of our pockets.”
She said Democrats are trying to rehab their image.
“They’ve been trying to sell taxing the upper-middle class and the rich in order to pay down the debts in this state and they’ve failed miserably at it for decades,” Wiley said.
* The “march” totaled just six people…
Outside an entrance to the convention center as the crowd of about 5,000 filed out, six demonstrators carried signs with messages included “Read my lips; No new taxes,” and “Enough is enough.”
Kristen Wiley, 33, of St. Jacob in Madison County, said the message the “middle class march” was bringing was “no new or increased taxes” and “stop the overspending.”
She said the messages are in response to Pritzker’s call for a progressive income tax and funding for an infrastructure program. Wiley said wasteful programs can be cut to pay for the state’s needs.
Ah, a firm believer in magic beans.
* Illinois News Network…
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he’ll work with minority Republicans, but warned that partisan opponents to the idea of a progressive tax will be met with “considerable political will.”
After taking the oath of office, the Democratic billionaire governor took direct aim at opponents of taxing higher earners a higher percentage of their income. He said anyone who joins the tax conversation in good faith has a seat at the table.
“But if you lead with partisanship and scare tactics, you will be met with considerable political will,” Pritzker said. […]
Standing with a handful of protesters wearing yellow vests outside the inauguration, Kristin Wiley said Pritzker’s rhetoric was “terrifying.”
“Anything different from what he thinks is going to be smacked down and that is not working together at all, that’s ‘my way or the highway,’ that’s what he said,” Wiley said.
OK.
* By the way, these “yellow vest” copycats may or may not know that many of the “real” yellow-vesters are a bunch of hooligans. From the Columbia Journalism Review…
In late November, as the Gilets Jaunes—or Yellow Vests—protest movement took hold in France, Martin Goillandeau and Makana Eyre wrote for CJR that participants were harassing, and even assaulting, journalists. Since then, the protests have become a weekly occurrence. So, too, have threats against reporters. “The harassment and violence have got worse,” Eyre told me this morning. “I went to the Saturday protests in Paris to shoot photos and see how big it would get. This was the first time that I really felt nervous with my camera… I saw people interfering with broadcasts, shouting at media teams, and getting in their faces. For much of it, I had my camera in my coat.”
This past weekend, a group of Yellow Vests in the northern city of Rouen set upon two journalists working for LCI, a French TV news broadcaster; they were spared by two bodyguards, one of whom ended up in hospital with a broken nose. Protesters aggressed another LCI team in Paris. In Toulon, two Agence France-Presse reporters were chased by about 10 people, while in nearby Marseille, photographers were hassled and blocked from taking pictures. In Toulouse, a group of protesters trapped a 31-year-old local journalist in her car and threatened her with rape. “They wanted me to open my window. I told them it wasn’t possible, that I had to go and pick up my son,” she recalled. “A man threatened me that I had two seconds to get out.” Organized groups have hampered newspapers’ core operations, too: overnight on Friday, for example, about 30 Yellow Vests blocked regional newspaper La Voix du Nord’s distribution depot and threatened to burn a truck, stopping 20,000 copies of the paper from being delivered. On Sunday, trash cans were set on fire outside the same paper’s offices. While no motive was immediately established, its director doesn’t think it was an accident.
53 Comments
|
* Press release…
In his first official act as the 43rd governor of Illinois, Governor JB Pritzker will sign his first executive order today at 1 p.m. to usher in a renewed era of transparency among state agencies. This is a “back to basics” focus on serving the public and a requirement that all agencies ensure they are in compliance with the law.
Making good government a top priority, the first executive order of the Pritzker administration will direct state agencies, boards and commissions to immediately review their compliance with statutory mandates, come into compliance with data transparency laws and release all data that is required to be disclosed under state law, as well as review potential voluntary disclosures that would improve transparency and provide plans to address all audit findings of the past four years.
“Good government starts with making the state accountable to its people and ensuring every Illinoisan has access to the services they need,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Our state’s hardworking residents deserve to know how taxpayer money is being spent, and I will ensure that transparency is a core value of my administration. By shining a light on how the state is and isn’t living up to its responsibility to our citizens, we can start making real improvements in the lives of families across Illinois.”
The elements of the executive order include:
A requirement that every agency, board and commission review all statutory obligations and audit findings from the past four years and provide a plan within 60 days to address findings;
A requirement that every agency board and commission review laws and regulations on publishing data and ensure compliance within 30 days;
A requirement that every agency, board and commission review their data publishing practices – including past practices – within 60 days to move toward greater voluntary data disclosure.
“Governor Pritzker is beginning his term by providing bold leadership with a commonsense measure holding state government accountable to its people,” said former Governor Jim Edgar. “This initial action by Governor Pritzker shows Illinoisans that he will prioritize high quality services to residents that are provided effectively, efficiently and transparently.”
“Illinoisans deserve to have a state government that is open and accountable to the people, and focused on delivering needed services effectively and transparently,” said U.S. Senator Dick Durbin. “Bringing the state into compliance with transparency requirements on day one in office shows this governor is working to move beyond our past and chart the right course for Illinois.”
“Every resident of our state should know how their state government is meeting or falling short of its obligation to provide quality services for all,” said Senator Melinda Bush. “Governor Pritzker’s action today shows he’s putting the people first and ensuring we are fulfilling the needs of all Illinoisans.”
“Taxpayers ought to know how their money is being used and if the state is actually serving its residents, and Governor Pritzker understands that,” said Senator Andy Manar. “In his first act as governor, he is demonstrating leadership and inviting accountability into the crucial services our state provides, and that will help all Illinoisans restore trust in their government.”
“For too long, the state has withheld critical data on how human services are functioning, but Governor Pritzker’s executive order writes a new chapter of good government for the state of Illinois,” said Thomas Yates, Executive Director of Legal Council for Health Justice. “We think everyone — providers, recipients, and the public — should be able to see accurate, up-to-date information about how human services and health care are administered by the state. With this executive order, state agencies will be on track to provide data to better inform policy for programs that improve the lives of millions of people in Illinois.”
The EO is here. [Fixed link.]
Any other EOs you’d like to see?
36 Comments
|
Do better, dude
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I haven’t interacted much with Illinois Supreme Court spokesman Chris Bonjean, but I sure hope when I do he responds better than this. From a Tina Sfondeles Sun-Times story…
Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza — who has joined a long list of those vying to replace Mayor Rahm Emanuel — avoided some controversy by being sworn in by Cook County Circuit Court Judge Rossana Patricia Fernandez — not Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke, whose husband Ald. Ed Burke was charged earlier this month in an attempted extortion case. Justice Burke, a close friend, gave Mendoza the oath of office in 2016. WBEZ first reported the switch on Jan. 11.
Asked for comment on why Burke did not administer the oath, Illinois Supreme Court spokesman Chris Bonjean declined to elaborate, simply saying, “I hope the Sun-Times has better news judgement [sic] than that.”
Wow. That was a pretty condescending non-response.
* So, what, then, could possibly be the difference between Tina’s news judgment and that of WBEZ’s Dan Mihalopoulos? Because Dan called the court about the same story just a few days ago and Bonjean had no patronizing retort…
And state Supreme Court spokesman Christopher Bonjean told WBEZ that he spoke with Anne Burke, and she said Mendoza had invited her to swear her in again — then withdrew that request recently.
Bonjean said he did not know when exactly the invitation was withdrawn or why.
Was that so hard?
…Adding… Sfondeles tells me that Bonjean called and apologized.
28 Comments
|
* Gov. Pritzker mentioned some Downstate communities as examples of what the state can be during his speech yesterday. He also said this…
As we enter Illinois’ third century, we must bring a renaissance to downstate Illinois which has been deprived of some basic resources for education and business building that are taken for granted elsewhere in our state. To begin, we will work to deliver high speed broadband internet coverage to everyone, in every corner of Illinois. Today every new job and every student is dependent upon connectivity, and no part of our state should be left out.
Broadband access is not just a Downstate concern, of course. It’s also an issue in poorer areas across the Chicagoland area.
* Pritzker seems to be reaching out to legislators in the region…
As Pritzker begins [the budget] process, Sen. Dale Fowler, R-Harrisburg, is confident he’ll keep Southern Illinois in mind.
“I’ve had numerous conversations with the governor about Southern Illinois,” said Fowler, who’s been named to Pritzker’s job creation and economic opportunity transition committee. “Projects in my district, like the Cairo river port terminal, I know he’s got that on his radar.”
The phone calls from Pritzker and his transition team have been frequent, Fowler said, and the governor has suggested he’ll tour Southern Illinois in March. […]
“Almost all of the policy proposals that he outlined are things I’ll probably be on the opposite side of,” Schimpf said, “But when he talks about listening to everybody, as long as you come to the table with good faith, I think that’s the way the process is supposed to work.”
Gov. Rauner traveled all over Illinois, but he didn’t actually do much for anyone and he listened to almost nobody. So even the appearance of giving a darn is naturally going to be met with welcoming arms. We’ll just have to wait and see how Pritzker follows through.
* Sen. Fowler even said he’s keeping an open mind about the graduated income tax…
Fowler said he’s willing to listen.
“There hasn’t been any numbers attached to those yet,” Fowler said. “We’ll be open-minded. If it’s a tax on the rich, we’ll take a good look at it, but if it’s going to a challenge or a detriment to the middle class, then I’m going to have an issue with that.”
* Meanwhile…
On the day that Democrat J.B. Pritzker was inaugurated as governor, the two Republican state representatives who live in Springfield sent him a letter highlighting the new state law that makes Sangamon County the default location for many new state jobs.
“As you begin the process of filling various positions across the agencies of state government, we hope you will keep this new law in mind as positions are filled,” wrote Reps. Tim Butler and Mike Murphy. “Springfield is a wonderful city to live, work, and raise a family. The contributions made to the economy of our area by state employees are tremendous. We hope that your administration will continue the work of prioritizing Sangamon County and recognizing the city of Springfield for being the capital of our great state.”
Monday’s letter, which also offered congratulations to Pritzker, referred to legislation signed in August by then-Gov. Bruce Rauner. Sponsored by then-state Rep. Sara Wojcicki Jimenez, R-Leland Grove, the bill makes Springfield and Sangamon County the default location for employees in most state agencies. The director of Central Management Services would have to establish a geographic location for each state job and specify why positions located outside the capital city need to be there. […]
At the Bank of Springfield Center Monday before the inauguration ceremony got underway, Butler characterized the letter as “just a reminder” and said he’s had “a few quick conversations” with Pritzker and looks forward to “sitting down with him and talking about the needs of not only Sangamon County but the 87th District.
“I’ve been impressed so far with the folks that he’s brought into the administration,” Butler said. “Hopefully, we’re going to have a good working relationship.”
Your thoughts on this law?
* Related…
* Champaign County State’s Attorney: Pritzker Should Take Downstate Concerns To Heart: “We have some different issues (than Chicago). We have some similarities. But we can’t just let what’s going on in Chicago with the Chicago Police Department, the issues that they face necessarily are not the same and shouldn’t entirely run the conversation,” Rietz said.
31 Comments
|
That was some party last night
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I have no idea what the future will bring, but here’s the one thing of which I am certain: JB and MK Pritzker know how to throw a party. This, my friends, is the Expo Building on the state fairgrounds…
Yeah. The Expo Building. You know that place. It’s the one with all the little commercial booths. Unrecognizable last night.
…Adding… If you’ve never been to the Expo Building, here it is in its “natural state”…
* SJ-R…
A large crowd of Pritzker supporters and others mingled, took selfies and danced to various bands, including a surprise appearance from Maroon 5, an internationally known, three-time Grammy Award-winning band usually seen playing large arenas and stadiums.
In fact, just a day earlier, the NFL announced Maroon 5, fronted by Adam Levine, will be the main act of the Super Bowl halftime show on Feb. 3. But there they were on the stage in the Expo Building Monday night, playing hits such as “Payphone,” “One More Night,” “Sunday Morning” and “Harder to Breathe.”
Speculation over the identity of Monday’s headlining act circulated around town all day. Inauguration officials remained tight-lipped about who it was.
Just before Maroon 5 came out, the new governor and his wife, M.K. Pritzker, came out on stage for their first dance as the first couple. They danced to “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You).”
I had to Google Maroon 5 to see who they were. I told people I’d done that and almost all of them said, “Dude, they’re playing at the Super Bowl.” My response was, “Yeah, I realized that during my Google search.” Turns out, I knew several of their songs.
* The crowd went crazy…
* I don’t know how much the Pritzkers spent on last night’s shindig, but they also did some good…
“This is amazing. It is for the people, all the proceeds are being donated to charity from what I understand, so we are all here just to have a great time,” said Sanovia Reynolds Parks, campaign volunteer.
One of the charities is the Illinois State Fair Foundation; the other is Cabrini Green Legal Aid, which helps low income Chicagoans maneuver the legal system. The executive director of the organization was a colleague of Lieutenant Governor Julianna Stratton.
“Being the recipient of this award was quite a surprise um Juliana called me during the week at like 10 o’clock at night and gave us the big news and so I was like ‘What is going on!’ Um, this is so exciting,” said Esther Franco-Payne, executive director CGLA.
With over 1,000 people in attendance, the ball raised at least $250,000 for those charities.
* The one thing I didn’t expect to see was a ton of Republicans. I think I’d been at the ball five or ten minutes before I finally talked to a Democrat.
Both Republican legislative leaders were also there and they didn’t just make a quick appearance and leave. They stuck around and partied. I talked to them and they were clearly having a good time and were both very hopeful about the future.
So, I wouldn’t put much stock into this analysis…
And while [JB Pritzker’s inauguration] speech was imbued with the bipartisanship that’s been running throughout inauguration weekend, the GOP didn’t buy it. Before Pritzker had left the building, Illinois GOP Chairman Tim Schneider released a scathing statement.
He said Pritzker delivered “the same agenda that has dragged our state down for decades—borrow, tax, spend, repeat.” And he accused Pritzker of failing to mention “promised” support of legislative leadership term limits and an independent redistricting commission. Both initiatives are supported by the Illinois GOP. “We didn’t hear anything about them today. Why? Because they were only a ploy to win votes,” Schneider said.
The honeymoon seemed over with Republicans, but Dems were swooning.
Um, what?
It’s going to take a whole lot more than one silly press release from the state party to poison the well. People on both sides appear to be legitimately hungry for peace and progress. I don’t know how long this will last, but party hacks are gonna party hack. The real work is being done in Springfield, not GOP headquarters in Chicago.
43 Comments
|
Rhymes with bracism
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Sun-Times…
Police asked to conduct searches of vehicles driven by black motorists nearly twice as often as those driven by whites in 2017, according to the report. Police asked to search cars driven by Latinos 1.4 times more often those driven by whites.
At the same time, white drivers were found with contraband about 1.3 times more often than black or Latino drivers. The report, titled “Racism in the Rear View Mirror,” was released Monday.
“The data shows that law enforcement officers throughout the state of Illinois continue to stop black and Latinx drivers at rates beyond their representation in the driving population and continue to perform searches of black and Latinx drivers at higher rates than white drivers,” the ACLU said. “In short, biased policing continues to be a problem in Illinois.”
The report examined data collected by the Illinois Department of Transportation between 2015 and 2017 from more than 900 law enforcement agencies statewide. Police made about 6.5 million traffic stops and performed more than 283,000 searches in that time.
In certain cities, such as Aurora and Champaign, black drivers were stopped at rates more than twice that of the population of black people who lived there, according to the report.
Go read the whole thing, plus there’s much more here.
* ACLU’s recommendations…
* Make permanent the Illinois Traffic and Pedestrian Stop Statistical Study Act
* Abolish consent searches during traffic stops
* Review and report data on police dogs
* Consistent statewide use of body cameras
* Investigate and report all outcomes of complaints against officers
32 Comments
|
*** UPDATED x1 *** Oops!
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From Gov. Pritzker’s inaugural address…
[Illinois] is where, on the Sunday morning after the Great Chicago Fire, Reverend Robert Collyer, pastor of the First Unitarian Church, an immigrant, an ardent anti-slavery abolitionist, and a women’s suffrage advocate, stood amidst the broken ruins of his once grand church and brought hope and vision to his devastated congregation. His parishioners gathered around him, the sun peeking through gutted walls and splintered beams, an overturned column serving as his pulpit.
His words that morning have survived the 147 years since he delivered them…a testament to their power and truth:
“What is lost?” he asked. “First, our homes. Second, our businesses. But these are temporary. … We have not lost our geography. Nature called the lakes, the forests, the prairies together in convention long before we were born, and they decided that on this spot a great city would be built. … We have not lost our hope. … The fire makes no difference to me. If you’ll stay here, I will. And we’ll work together, and help each other out of our troubles.”
Since Reverend Collyer’s time, Americans have often had to gather in broken cathedrals – some of stone and glass – some of aspirations and promises – to reaffirm our faith in one another.
We find ourselves at such a moment now.
* Wrong Unitarian church…
*** UPDATE *** From Gov. Pritzker’s office…
On the church, that’s our bad. We should have been more clear that the fire destroyed the Second Unitarian church and not the First.
Interesting historical fact: there were two Robert Collyers – Robert Collyer, who preached at the First Unitarian Church and then was drafted to preach at the Second Unitarian Church – so he preached at both. There was also another Robert Laird Collier who became pastor of the First Unitarian Church (see the same section of the Our Roots page, under 1857-1871).
In the spirit of Rev. Collyer, we ask your forgiveness.
Nicely done.
43 Comments
|
I almost feel kinda bad doing this, but…
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* He started out so high energy…
* Toward the end, not so much…

* Eventual success…
But, hey, at least he showed. Quinn didn’t bother to show up four years ago.
65 Comments
|
* Secretary of State Jesse White spoke proudly of his Tumblers today. He’s been a coach of the team for 59 years. 1White said today that 8,000 young people have gone through the program. Three hundred are now on the team, according to White, with 290 in training…
And the young people have to become leafless, smokeless and pipeless. They cannot practice pharmacy without a license. You know what I’m talking about, no drugs. And they cannot drop out of school to be part of SWU, Sidewalk University, where they drop out of school, hang around on the corners and get themselves in trouble with the law and get arrested and cost we the taxpayers roughly about $30,000 to put one person in prison for one year. 83 percent of the people in prisons today have not graduated from high school. So, now you know who they are, I know who they are, and I’m going to try to save as many as I possibly can.
* Sun-Times…
When Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White unveiled plans nine years ago for a North Side fieldhouse that would bear his name, he promised that his private charitable foundation and its donors would pick up the bulk of the multimillion-dollar tab.
But that’s not how things turned out. Instead, records show, taxpayers paid all but a small fraction of the cost.
White, who will be sworn in Monday for a record sixth consecutive term as secretary of state, pledged $10 million to build the athletic facility in partnership with the Chicago Park District on part of the former Cabrini-Green public housing project in White’s 27th Ward political power base.
His foundation actually ended up paying only about $650,000. The fieldhouse, originally pegged at $15 million, cost about $12.2 million. Chicago and Illinois taxpayers ended up covering $11.5 million of that.
The 29,000-square-foot facility at 410 W. Chicago Ave. opened in 2014 and, in addition to housing a park district gymnasium, provides a home for White’s famed Jesse White Tumblers and headquarters for his Jesse White Foundation, which pays the park district just $1 in annual rent. The park district covers all utility, custodial and maintenance costs, records show.
White’s groups also get exclusive use of many of the facilities for several hours after school and on Sunday mornings. And his foundation controls most of the second floor.
Even Gov. Bruce Rauner’s office signed off on a state grant, according to the article.
20 Comments
|
AG Raoul announces top staff
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Press release…
Attorney General Kwame Raoul today was sworn in as Illinois’ 42nd Attorney General. Born in Chicago to the son of Haitian immigrants, Raoul brings a lifetime of legal and policy experience, advocacy and public service to the Office of the Attorney General.
Attorney General Raoul took the oath of office, which was administered by U.S. District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman, who is also a retired Illinois Appellate Court justice, at the 2019 Inauguration in Springfield. Joining Attorney General Raoul onstage were his children Che and Mizan Raoul, as well as his fiancée Dr. Lisa Moore, and his sisters Dr. Edwidge Raoul and Ninaj Raoul. After being sworn in, Raoul paid tribute to Lisa Madigan’s 16 years of service as Illinois’ Attorney General and pledged to continue working to advocate for all Illinois residents.
“Today we make new commitments to raising our voices constructively to protect and promote our greatest assets – our workers, our young people, our natural resources, our seniors, our veterans and our diverse communities,” Raoul said.
Raoul highlighted Illinois’ diverse population and the work of the Attorney General’s Office to block misguided federal policies that violate the rights of Illinoisans. Raoul also announced plans to work with the legislature to pass legislation to create a bureau, set in state statute, within the Attorney General’s Office to protect working people from wage theft, misclassification, workplace discrimination and other violations.
Attorney General Raoul also emphasized the need for a comprehensive, statewide approach to addressing the opioid and gun violence crises that plague communities throughout Illinois. Raoul called for a statewide approach that emphasizes prevention, addresses gun trafficking and responds to victims of violent crime in a trauma-informed manner.
“The level of violence we experience within our state is unconscionable. There should be no public official anywhere in Illinois who does not take responsibility for doing his or her part to address it,” Raoul said.
Attorney General Raoul earned his undergraduate degree from DePaul University and his juris doctorate from Chicago-Kent College of Law. He began his legal career as a prosecutor in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office and subsequently served as a senior staff attorney for the City Colleges of Chicago. In 2004, Raoul was appointed to serve as the state senator representing the 13th legislative district where he chaired various committees and lead negotiations and sponsored some of the most significant pieces of legislation that have become law over the past decade, including eliminating the death penalty. Raoul has also been a partner at two national law firms, serving in the health care and labor and employment practice groups.
Also today, Attorney General Raoul announced the following top staff appointments:
Chief of Staff Kim Janas has worked in a variety of positions in state government, including as Secretary of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission. Formerly, she was an Associate Counsel at the Office of Illinois Senate President John J. Cullerton, where she advised the Senate Judiciary and Insurance Committees. Janas was also an Assistant Attorney General in the General Law Bureau under Attorney General Lisa Madigan and a Staff Attorney at the Legislative Reference Bureau. Most recently, Janas was the General Counsel for the Illinois State Medical Society and ISMIE Mutual Insurance Company. She is a graduate of the University of Illinois College of Law and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Executive Deputy Attorney General Adam Braun was previously Of Counsel at Greenberg Traurig LLP, where he was a member of the Government Law & Policy group since 2012. At Greenberg Traurig he has represented clients before state agencies and the General Assembly. Previously, he served as Deputy Legislative Director and Legislative Counsel to Governor Pat Quinn. Earlier in his career, he worked as Staff Attorney in the Office of the Illinois State Treasurer. Braun chaired the Illinois Holocaust and Genocide Commission from 2011-2014 and was appointed to chair the State Workers Compensation Advisory Board in 2011. He earned a juris doctorate from Loyola University Chicago School of Law and undergraduate degrees from Columbia University and Jewish Theological Seminary.
Chief Deputy Attorney General Brent Stratton joined the Attorney General’s Office in 2005 and has served as the Chief Deputy Attorney General since 2011, overseeing more than 400 attorneys and providing counsel to the Attorney General and Chief of Staff. He previously served as Assistant Chief Deputy and Deputy Chief of the Public Interest Division. Stratton was in private practice for more than 20 years, including as a partner at Tuite, Stratton & Menaker; Jenner & Block; and McGuireWoods. His private practice included criminal defense, appellate work, and civil and commercial litigation. Stratton has also been a faculty member of trial practice programs for the Chicago Bar Association and the National Association of Attorneys General, and a lecturer for the Short Course for Prosecuting Attorneys and Defense Lawyers in Criminal Cases at Northwestern University School of Law. Stratton obtained a bachelor’s degree in political science and sociology from Whitman College and a juris doctorate from Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.
15 Comments
|
* December 5, 2016…
Democratic Chicago City Clerk Susana Mendoza is set to be sworn in as Illinois comptroller on Monday, taking the office that controls the state’s checkbook away from a Republican appointed by Gov. Bruce Rauner.
Mendoza will take the oath at 10 a.m. in the Capitol rotunda in a ceremony officiated by Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke.
Justice Burke swore Mendoza into office on three separate occasions.
* Just the other day…
“I’ve told her that, no matter what I run for, she’s the one and only who could ever swear me in,” Mendoza said of Anne Burke in that inaugural speech, according to a video recording of the [2016] event. “It would just not be special without you. So thank you for being here and and being a part of my life as well. Thank you, Anne.” […]
Despite Mendoza’s promise that she could have it no other way, WBEZ has learned Anne Burke will not be swearing Mendoza in for her new term as comptroller at Monday’s inaugural festivities in Springfield.
Mendoza spokesman Abdon Pallasch said Cook County Circuit Court Judge Rossana Fernandez will do the honors instead. Pallasch said Fernandez is a “longtime friend” of Mendoza.
And state Supreme Court spokesman Christopher Bonjean told WBEZ that he spoke with Anne Burke, and she said Mendoza had invited her to swear her in again — then withdrew that request recently. […]
In a statement released by her office, Mendoza did not address why Anne Burke would not swear her in this time. “I have deep admiration for Anne Burke, but I think it’s best to respect her privacy at this time,” Mendoza is quoted as saying.
20 Comments
|
* Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider…
It’s clear that Governor Pritzker’s agenda will be the same agenda that has dragged our state down for decades - borrow, tax, spend, repeat. Over the course of the election and again today, Pritzker promised billions of dollars in new spending, programs, and regulations, all of which our state cannot afford.
And just a few short months ago, Pritzker broke with his party boss, Mike Madigan, when he promised to support legislative leadership term limits and an independent redistricting commission - two initiatives supported by the Illinois Republican Party - but we didn’t hear anything about them today. Why? Because they were only a ploy to win votes. Pritzker never intended to end the status quo in Springfield. Rather, he’s reinforcing it.
Over the coming weeks and months, we will hold Pritzker, Madigan, Cullerton, and all Democrats accountable for their false promises because we know that they are the main culprits behind Illinois’ fiscal demise. We won’t be afraid to speak out against the latest policy disasters Illinois Democrats are embracing.
The numbers prove it - Illinois taxpayers are fleeing our state in droves. We must change course before it’s too late or else there won’t be any taxpayers left. As the next debates begin in Springfield, Illinois taxpayers will know that the Illinois Republican Party is on their side.
*** UPDATE *** Message to Republicans from Chairman Schneider…
And so begins the reign of the tax-hiking, tax-avoiding billionaire, Madigan’s hand-picked hand-maiden for the government unions and the special interests feeding on our tax dollars.
The Democratic Party is in ascendency in Illinois: Democrats control every lever of government, unchecked by anything but their own shame and the strength of our voices calling out their abuse and extremism.
We had a glimpse yesterday of what’s to come: more money for the folks who work for the government, increased debt and higher taxes for the rest of us. What a deal!
Governor Pritzker announces that the highest paid government workers in the Midwest don’t make enough — and doubled the government salaries of the top folks around him with pay from his own pocket. Not only does this trample ethical limitations on private payments to public servants, but it sends a clear message to all other government workers too — more is coming to you.
Will Pritzker supplement the pay for all these folks too? Don’t bet on it: recall this is the billionaire who dodged hundreds of thousands of dollars in property taxes on his Chicago mansion and hides his wealth in the Bahamas to avoid Illinois’ already high taxes — paying literally NO state income tax in 2014.
This higher pay is coming from you. And, with Illinois’ appalling pension system, higher pay today means higher pay forever. So, generations of Illinoisans who don’t work for government and have no right to maintain their salary when they stop working for their current employer will pay for Pritzker’s “largesse.”
Remember: it’s your money, not his, that he’s offering to spend. He won’t move his wealth from the zero-tax Bahamas to pay either the current taxes or the higher taxes he proposes and, being born a billionaire, he has no real idea what each dollar means to the rest of us.
While it may be that marijuana eases suffering for some who are sick, but legalizing its sale here will not cure what ails Illinois. While taxing pot will generate some tax dollars, this new revenue is a minuscule fraction of Pritzker’s new spending — and it simply isn’t worth the terrible social tax that promoting pot imposes. Legal pot will lead to more DUI’s, more fatalities, more opioid use and more bad options for our children.
Government should support moms and dads who are trying to teach values to their children; undermining Moms to pay for ever sweetened deals for government workers is not good government.
It’s often said that voters get the government they deserve. I reject that: it’s often hard to see the truth about what’s happening in this age of fake news and biased media.
People deserve a government that serves them, not a government that takes more than it serves. People deserve a government that produces real opportunities, not a government that undermines property values and family values.
It breaks my heart to think of the damage Democrats will do to this state; you don’t deserve it. But, there won’t be any confusion or obfuscation about who has done what: everything that happens here now is done by Democrats.
And, when you see what they do, come join us. Republicans are the party of people government. Democrats have all the power of government today, but there is no greater power than that of informed and concerned people.
So don’t just worry, come help Republicans take your community and the state back for the good of all.
For Illinois,
Tim Schneider
Chairman, Illinois Republican Party
69 Comments
|
Pritzker’s inaugural address
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From Gov. Pritzker’s press office…
Taking the oath of office as Illinois’ 43rd Governor, Gov. JB Pritzker drew on Illinois’ history of hope and progress to share his vision to work together to create another century of boundless opportunity and fulfill the state’s possibility and promise.
“At 200 years old, Illinois is still a young promise. Our time here has been but a blink. In 2019, we must begin a new century with new maturity – and enough foolishness to believe we can make a difference,” Governor Pritzker said.
“Our history is a story of leaps forward and occasional stumbles back – and a promise renewed with each generation that we will try harder, that we will do better, that big breakthroughs are built of centuries of selfless effort by unheralded heroes. That big change rides on what we can do together, not what one person attempts alone.
“That’s the Illinois I see – one of possibility and promise. That’s the Illinois I know, one whose people are fearless and audacious. That’s the vision I have for our state – another century of boundless opportunity.”
The Governor also made clear that he will move swiftly on priorities for working people so that the government works for the people and will confront the state’s deep challenges with honesty and courage – with an understanding that “the seemingly dry acts of government really do affect the richness and joy of our lives.”
A copy of the Governor’s remarks as prepared for delivery is below.
January 14, 2019
Inauguration Address of Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker
Possibility and Promise
I want to begin today by thanking my family. First, my partner, my best friend, the love of my life, and now the First Lady of Illinois, MK Pritzker. My wonderful children Teddi and Donny. I love you more than life itself. And my parents Sue and Don Pritzker, who departed this world too soon more than three decades ago but who left behind a set of values around honor and decency that will endure as long as there are good people in the world.
And please join me in giving an ovation for my partner and your Lieutenant Governor, the incomparable Juliana Stratton.
I want to acknowledge the other distinguished guests here today: Chief Justice Lloyd Karmeier, President John Cullerton, Speaker Michael Madigan, Leader Bill Brady, Leader Jim Durkin, Attorney General-elect Kwame Raoul, Secretary of State Jesse White, Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Treasurer Mike Frerichs, Members of the General Assembly, Members of the Congressional delegation, Governor Jim Edgar, Governor Pat Quinn, Governor Bruce Rauner, Governor Jim Thompson, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, and National Guard Adjutant General Richard Hayes. To all of you, on behalf of the people of Illinois, thank you for your service.
Ladies and gentlemen, for 200 years Illinois has proudly stood as the beating heart of our Republic… a place whose people have high hope and clear vision. This is where Lincoln found the mettle to grip a warring nation in both hands and hold us together. This is where Obama came to organize and to witness the courage that runs deep in our communities – in whom he found the fortitude to launch his bid to make history. This is where the 13th and 19th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were first ratified, ending slavery and guaranteeing a woman’s right to vote.
This is where, on the Sunday morning after the Great Chicago Fire, Reverend Robert Collyer, pastor of the First Unitarian Church, an immigrant, an ardent anti-slavery abolitionist, and a women’s suffrage advocate, stood amidst the broken ruins of his once grand church and brought hope and vision to his devastated congregation. His parishioners gathered around him, the sun peeking through gutted walls and splintered beams, an overturned column serving as his pulpit.
His words that morning have survived the 147 years since he delivered them…a testament to their power and truth:
“What is lost?” he asked. “First, our homes. Second, our businesses. But these are temporary. … We have not lost our geography. Nature called the lakes, the forests, the prairies together in convention long before we were born, and they decided that on this spot a great city would be built. … We have not lost our hope. … The fire makes no difference to me. If you’ll stay here, I will. And we’ll work together, and help each other out of our troubles.”
Since Reverend Collyer’s time, Americans have often had to gather in broken cathedrals – some of stone and glass – some of aspirations and promises – to reaffirm our faith in one another.
We find ourselves at such a moment now.
We contend every day with an economy that gives little and takes too much… that allows passion and work ethic to be overwhelmed by student loans, unexpected health emergencies and the rising cost of living.
We want strong families, but we have yet to embrace more robust policies supporting paid parental leave and affordable child care that will sustain them.
We watch 100-year storms that now come every year – and yet we don’t allow the science of climate change to guide our decision making.
We fail to hold accountable leaders who sacrifice truth for personal gain – who substitute pageantry for patriotism.
We are a nation founded on fearless ideas - and yet we move away from those drawn to that vision.
We want better roads, better schools, better wages – but we vilify anyone who dares suggest a workable path to those things.
We allow our schools, our movie theaters, our hospitals, our neighborhoods to become battlefields – legally accessible by the weapons of war.
Our abdication of responsibility must end.
Just a few weeks ago, I went to Mercy Hospital to attend a vigil honoring the victims of the murderous shootings there:
To honor the police officer who ran into gunfire and not away.
To honor the doctor – a University of Illinois graduate – who raised money for disadvantaged kids and led her church choir.
To honor the pharmacist who went into medicine because she had struggled with health problems herself.
These are the very best of Illinois.
As a public servant, it’s hard to bear witness to violence such as this.
But this job also exposes you to the people who stitch us back together time and again, to the Illinoisans who remind us what amazing capacity we have to change. At the Mercy Hospital vigil, Sister Barbara Centner read a Franciscan prayer that speaks to who we are in Illinois:
“May God bless us with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, hunger, and war, so that we may reach out our hands to comfort them and turn their pain into joy. And may God bless us with enough foolishness to believe that we can make a difference in this world, so that we can do what others claim cannot be done, to bring justice and kindness to all our children and the poor.”
At 200 years old, Illinois is still a young promise. Our time here has been but a blink. In 2019, we must begin a new century with new maturity…and enough foolishness to believe we can make a difference.
That starts with leadership that abandons single minded, arrogant notions.
No. Everything is not broken.
Our history is a story of leaps forward and occasional stumbles back - and a promise renewed with each generation that we will try harder…that we will do better…that big breakthroughs are built of centuries of selfless effort by unheralded heroes …that big change rides on what we can do together, not what one person attempts alone.
Neighbors working side by side in Taylorville lost their homes and worldly possessions in the recent tornadoes. They know that what Reverend Collyer said after the Great Chicago Fire was right – we work together to help each other out of our troubles.
So today, with all the challenges Illinois faces, Democrats and Republicans will work together, and we must begin with our most basic responsibilities. We will propose, debate and pass a balanced budget this year.
It won’t be easy, but let’s confront this challenge with honesty. Our obligations as a state outmatch our resources. Our fiscal situation right now is challenging. And the solution requires a collective commitment to embracing hard choices.
We need to bring real efficiencies to state government. Our information technology systems are outdated and cost more to maintain than they do to replace. Inexpensive healthcare prevention programs were decimated, causing higher spending to treat diseases that could have been cured. Balancing the budget means lowering the cost of government while delivering the high quality services Illinoisans deserve.
But be clear about this: I won’t balance the budget on the backs of the starving, the sick, and the suffering. I won’t hollow out the functions of government to achieve an ideological agenda – I won’t make government the enemy and government employees the scapegoats. Responsible fiscal management is a marriage of numbers - and values.
Which is why it’s time to start the earnest work of creating a fair tax system here in Illinois. Our regressive tax system, including property taxes and sales taxes, currently has the middle class paying more than double the rate the wealthy pay. That’s not fair, and it also doesn’t pay our bills. Today our state’s fiscal instability affects every single person who lives and works in Illinois…whether you earn millions or the minimum wage. It means that our government wastes tens of millions of dollars paying higher interest rates than almost any other state, and we scare businesses and families away because they fear our uncertain future.
The current tax system is simply unsustainable. Others have lied to you about that fact. I won’t. The future of Illinois depends on the passage of a fair income tax, which will bring us into the 21st Century like most of our midwestern neighbors, and like the vast majority of the United States.
I’m not naïve about what it will take to do this. All who enter a discussion about our state’s budget and a fair tax system in good faith will be welcomed to the table. But if you lead with partisanship and scare tactics you will be met with considerable political will.
It is time to update and repair our state’s aging infrastructure. Railways, roads, bridges and fresh water arteries are on the verge of collapse. Crumbling bridges mean people’s lives are in danger. Deteriorating rail systems mean goods and services take longer to deliver and cost more. We are the nation’s supply chain hub and we must be built like it.
Let’s remember too that an aging highway system is not just concrete and steel. It’s a longer commute home. It’s missing those golden hours between dinner and bedtime when your kids are young where you spend a few minutes reading a book together and talking about their day.
The seemingly dry acts of government really do affect the richness and joy of our lives.
We must treat the decisions we make together – the decisions of our elected officials to champion a cause and the decisions of our citizens to embrace or reject those efforts – with an eye to the pursuit of their happiness.
As we enter Illinois’ third century, we must bring a renaissance to downstate Illinois which has been deprived of some basic resources for education and business building that are taken for granted elsewhere in our state. To begin, we will work to deliver high speed broadband internet coverage to everyone, in every corner of Illinois. Today every new job and every student is dependent upon connectivity, and no part of our state should be left out.
Our future depends upon our actions today. That’s why we must embrace a broad vision of environmental protection, or else decisions are going to be forced upon us in ways that will offer us little control and catastrophic outcomes for our children.
I believe in science. To that end, as one of my first acts as Governor, Illinois will become a member of the U.S. Climate Alliance, upholding the goals and ideals of the Paris Climate Accord.
Working men and women deserve to have a governor and a Department of Labor that will enforce laws protecting workers’ wages and workers’ rights. And they deserve a $15 minimum wage. It’s good for the working families of Illinois and good for our economy.
As your governor, I’ll be committed to helping us become the fastest growing big state economy in the nation. I will be our state’s best Chief Marketing Officer to attract jobs and businesses to Illinois. We will bring capital, technical assistance and mentorship to help Illinoisans across our state start and build new businesses and new jobs. Our economic success depends upon it.
In the interests of keeping the public safe from harm, expanding true justice in our criminal justice system, and advancing economic inclusion, I will work with the legislature to legalize, tax and regulate the sale of recreational cannabis in Illinois.
We will approach education with a holistic mindset – recognizing that students do best in community schools where teachers are paid well and where kids start learning at the earliest ages. And our economy grows when vocational training, community colleges and universities are strong.
We will do all of this with the most diverse set of voices and perspectives that Illinois has ever seen. I have built a cabinet of people who bring with them experiences I don’t share, from communities I did not come from, with expertise I don’t have, because to lead well, all of Illinois must be represented in the decision making. Furthermore, I want all the children of Illinois to see someone who looks like them in my government.
High hope and clear vision are what have built this state. Despite all the turmoil in this world, Illinoisans continue to build, innovate, create and dream. Our agriculture sector is built on some of the most fertile soil in the world, and it’s expanding, employing nearly a million people in every part of the state. We have nearly 13,000 manufacturing firms in Illinois that employ more than 580,000 people – many of them proud union workers with the best training in the world. One out of 10 computer science degrees in the nation comes from Illinois colleges and universities.
Our entrepreneurs continue to be tireless dreamers, whether it’s Jamie Gladfelter creating a software development incubator in Galesburg, Jeremie Draper shaping glass in Peoria or Leif Anderson still using his grandfather’s original recipes to make and sell candy in Richmond.
That’s the Illinois I see…one of possibility and promise. That’s the Illinois I know, one whose people are fearless and audacious. That’s the vision I have for our state…another century of boundless opportunity. When your faith in this future flags, I urge you to remember Reverend Collyer and his ruined church – how he was the vessel for his parishioners’ burnt hopes. How he saw the natural beauty of Illinois and knew nothing could steal that from them.
I see the natural beauty of Illinois every day – in our people. More than anything else I see it in our capacity to be kind.
Consider the story a few weeks ago of Casey Handal and Zadette Rosado. Casey and Zadette moved to Barrington last May and they proudly flew a rainbow flag behind their home. And then someone snuck into their yard and stole it, replacing their pride flag with an American flag – ironic because the thief doesn’t understand that you rob the American flag of meaning when you steal a person’s symbol of self-expression.
That could have been the end of the story, but Casey and Zadette’s neighbor Kim Filian wouldn’t let it be. She put a pride flag in her yard in solidarity. And then she kept buying them because her neighbors kept asking for them too. Soon there were pride flags everywhere – a place that hate had tried to fill was conquered by love instead.
As Kim noted: “Frankly, I’ve grown weary of this, of all this hate. And I gotta say, it just seemed like there was one thing that I could do that I had control of.”
Remember that our ability to grow weary of hate fuels our enormous capacity to be kind. The bright moments of our past…the North Star of our future…are all lit not by ambition, partisanship or greed…but by kindness.
A willingness to be kind is a virtue often overlooked in life…a commitment to be kind in politics can change the world. Over a century ago, public policy grounded by kindness offered a penniless immigrant to Illinois a bed to sleep in, a public school education and the opportunity to succeed. 130 years later, his great grandson just took the oath of office to be Governor of this great state.
So thank you Illinois, for your faith in me. I promise to live up to it every day. Together let’s go into this new century with enough faith to help each other out of our troubles, with enough foolishness to believe we can make a difference in the world, and with enough kindness to find the courage to change.
Thank you. God bless the state of Illinois. And God bless the United States of America.
28 Comments
|
Not as many spoils for the new governor
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Finke…
Hundreds of state jobs that once were exempt from Rutan anti-patronage protections have been reclassified to remove them from political influence during the four years of Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administration. […]
[Joe Hartzler, who was special counsel to Rauner] said that “we knocked out like 2,500 patronage positions.” […]
At one point, several thousand state jobs were considered Rutan-exempt and subject to patronage considerations. Hartzler said the number is now below 1,500. […]
Hartzler said most of jobs in question have not been filled under the Rauner administration. […]
Hartzler said that Gov.-elect J.B. Pritzker’s transition team has been apprised of the situation. He said Pritzker is supportive of it.
That sound you heard is the collective groaning of the job-seekers attending today’s inauguration.
31 Comments
|
* One very practical reason for bipartisanship means the majority party has “political cover” for doing certain things. That could partially explain why former Rep. David Harris (R-Arlington Heights) was named the new director of the Illinois Department of Revenue by JB Pritzker…
Harris also said that unlike his GOP colleagues in the House, he didn’t sign on to a resolution opposed to a graduated income tax. Moving the state to such a system was a key campaign issue for Pritzker, who says the rich would pay more and those in the middle class and “striving to get there” would pay less.
Rauner and many Republicans said most people would pay more, and Pritzker hasn’t revealed proposed graduated tax rates, saying he wants to work with lawmakers on brackets.
“I believe that the graduated income tax is a question of fairness,” Harris said.
The Department of Revenue, of course, is the perfect spot for a Republican who supports the concept of a graduated income tax. He’ll likely be called upon about the constitutional amendment when it’s eventually taken up by the General Assembly.
* Speaking of the graduated income tax, here’s the SJ-R editorial board…
This newspaper editorial board did not endorse Pritzker, largely because of unease over his unwillingness to share specifics about major initiatives, like his plan for a progressive income tax and how he would pay for the many initiatives he wanted to pursue. We’re still wanting to hear those details, hopefully soon after he takes office, perhaps in his budget address.
As you know, I tried and tried and tried to get those details out of him during the campaign. His response always was that he wanted to wait and negotiate details with the General Assembly and other stakeholders. So, I do not expect him to preempt that process by showing his full hand during the February budget address.
Besides, that budget address which will cover this fiscal year (2019) and next fiscal year (2020). The constitutional amendment won’t go before voters until November of 2020, which will be in Fiscal Year 2021.
* Meanwhile, Director-designate Harris has Pritzker’s back in other ways, too…
“A lot of the Republicans have said, ’Well, Speaker (Michael) Madigan is going to dictate to him, or (Senate) President (John) Cullerton is going to dictate to him,” Harris said. “I don’t think anybody is going to dictate to anybody else. … He’s going to listen, …. but he’s not going to be dictated to, and, at the same time, he’s not going to try to dictate to them — which (is) maybe what our incumbent has tried to do.”
22 Comments
|
* Mark Maxwell on JB Pritzker’s plan to personally supplement the salaries of 20 top staffers in his office…
While the disclosure adheres to a measure of transparency not seen in recent years, it also invited immediate criticism from government watchdog groups who raised a host of questions about a dangerous precedent they say could lead to greater risk of corruption, and the appearance of misplaced loyalties.
“If the law allows this, what’s to say the law doesn’t allow a different LLC — whose donors we’re not familiar with — to supplement the salaries of state employees,” asked Alisa Kaplan, the Policy Director at Reform for Illinois, a group that shines a spotlight on campaign finance and ethics in government.
“Do we want a system where companies or individuals can pay state employees on the side,” she asked.
Rachel Leven, Policy Manager for the Better Government Association, raised similar concerns.
“While it may have been good intentioned, this is unprecedented and therefore opens up a lot of procedural and ethical questions that we hope the incoming Governor’s staff and legislators will consider,” Leven said in an email. “For example, what if another private individual or entity wanted to fund state positions. Could a future governor create a private fund based on donations from other individuals? What are the rules that would govern this?”
Notice that they aren’t necessarily criticizing Pritzker’s specific plan. They’re worried about a slippery slope. Some commenters mentioned the Gift Ban Act last week, but gifts are only banned from “prohibited sources” and those sources do not appear to include the governor (click here for the statute).
And, despite the stated fears of some reformers, most state workers are currently allowed to earn outside income. Some of them are landlords, for instance. Or they have other side business, or weekend gigs, or night jobs or whatever. Should the state ban that income?
“Dark money” groups could pose a problem, of course, but that has nothing to do with what Pritzker is doing, since it’s all being fully disclosed and could happen no matter what Pritzker did.
* Illinois News Network…
State Rep. David McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills, said as long as the private dollars supplementing salaries for Pritzker’s top staff is all transparent, he doesn’t mind. He thinks Pritzker should cut the taxpayer cost and pay for more out of his own pocket, including to cover the bill passed in lame duck to increase department heads’ salaries by 15 percent.
“Depending on who you listen to, it’s up to a million dollars a year it could cost, maybe $700,000 on the low end, that’s like pocket change to Pritzker,” McSweeney said. “Why doesn’t he just say he won’t sign that bill and that he’ll pay for it himself.”
But paying those agency directors an extra stipend out of his own pocket would likely violate the state Constitution, as Hannah Meisel pointed out today…
Article V, Section 21 of the Illinois Constitution bans “officers of the Executive Branch” from receiving any other compensation for their services, which is generally interpreted to mean the state’s six constitutional officers — the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state, comptroller and treasurer. But Section 9 of the executive article does refer to personnel who are nominated by the governor and confirmed by the Senate as “officers,” which by some interpretations would then ban them from receiving extra compensation. But Pritzker’s transition team stipulated that the governor would not offer the pay boost through his LLC to those who must be confirmed by the Senate.
* Brian Mackey asked Pritzker: “How can you assure the people of Illinois that your staff will be loyal to them and not to the man who is giving them private pay for public sector work?“…
Well each of them has agreed that they are working for the state and not for me. They are state employees. I’ve been very transparent about what we’re doing. I think that’s not been the case with everybody that served as governor. And it’s very important to me that that each one of them knows that they work for the taxpayers of the state.
Now, as you know with the combination of the new offshoring prohibition the that was passed last year because of Gov. Rauner using people from other agencies as part of his governor’s office, as well as the fact that salaries really have not been commensurate with the quality of the talent that I think we should have in the governor’s office, that’s why I set it up this way.
I didn’t want to cost the taxpayers more. In fact this cost the taxpayers less, because many people are being paid less from the state government. They’re actually going to get a smaller pension as a result of that, and I think this ends up being very good for the taxpayers.
And they are committed. They are taking their own sort-of oath that they work for the people of the state. […]
Look, I just chose some extraordinary people for whom — they’re (currently) making multiples of what they will be making even with the additional income that they’re getting. And they were willing to take that salary cut to come do the right thing for the state. But many of them have multiple children in college and they’ve got other commitments. And so I wanted to make it as fair as I could for them as well as for the taxpayers, and so I’ve taken that burden on myself.
Pritzker told me that the supplemental income can be thought of as applying a “market rate” to the positions.
* From the documentation that the Pritzker transition team gave to reporters last week…
Staff will be required to sign paperwork reaffirming that their fiduciary duties as employees are to the state of Illinois, and their first and only obligation is to serve the residents of Illinois.
* I pointed out to Pritzker yesterday that this topic had generated over 100 comments on my blog last Friday. “I saw that,” he said. So, I asked, what he would say to state employees about this…
I have all along said that I am fully committed to the collective bargaining process. And a fair and open collective bargaining process is what we need to have, it hasn’t happened in four years. I understand why people are frustrated and I want to remove that frustration. The state of Illinois needs to live up to its obligations to ensure that public employees are being compensated fairly.
We need to bring them up to their appropriate step level, we need to compensate them for the back pay pay that they’re owed. In the process of that we need to take into account the financial challenges that the state faces.
Discuss.
66 Comments
|
Pritzker provides a look ahead
Monday, Jan 14, 2019 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Greg Hinz…
Look for fast action to raise the minimum wage, legalize the sale of marijuana for recreational use and boost child welfare and early school funding.
Passing a new state budget will be a slog, with a much-needed capital program wrapped into that process. […]
“We’re going to move quickly on a number of priorities,” he said, specifically noting child care assistance and a minimum wage, adding that the latter will be accompanied by steps to help entrepreneurs and startup firms access capital.
After what I hear has been quite a debate on how quickly to move on a capital bill—and a revenue source to pay for it—Pritzker signaled that it will be a few months before one comes, right around the time that lawmakers adopt a budget. The budget “leads to everything else,” he said.
Pritzker was far less committal when I asked him about passing a big gambling package, one that could include a casino for Chicago, a top priority of outgoing Mayor Rahm Emanuel. “I’m not sure that’s my right” to dictate, he said, but did add that he personally sees some potential in expanded online betting on sporting events.
Mary Ann Ahern also sat down with Pritzker and you can watch her three-part interview by clicking here.
* Tina Sfondeles…
After taking the oath of office Monday, incoming Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker says he’ll pose — as an “optimist” — that he’ll work to get rid of hyper-partisanship, balance a budget and give the middle class a break.
“Expect me to present a picture of where I believe Illinois needs to go, which is in a very different direction than it has been going over the last four years,” Pritzker told the Sun-Times on Sunday ahead of his inaugural speech Monday. […]
“You know the priorities that I ran on — making college affordable for families, bringing back vocational training, lifting up wages, retaining jobs and lowering the cost of health care and expanding it,” Pritzker said. “Those are all things that I’m working on — on day one. You can’t just sort of decide, well, we’ll wait two years. That doesn’t mean we’re going to get it all done in one year, and some of the groundwork needs to be laid for some of these things.”
Also on his hefty priority list: legalizing marijuana, raising the minimum wage and expanding MAP grants.
* Joe Bustos…
“There’s a lot of opportunity in . . . turning East St. Louis into a logistics and transportation hub, but we’ve got to make the right kind infrastructure investments to make that happen,” Pritzker said. […]
“I’m a guy who focuses on fairness and I also will say, downstate Illinois has often been left out or at least left behind,” Pritzker said. “I committed during the campaign I want to create jobs in downstate Illinois and I’m going to do that.” […]
Pritzker said he has no intention of interfering with hunting or shooting competitions.
“I think people should have the opportunity to do that with their kids if that’s something they like to or just with their friends,” Pritzker said. “I’m a fan of the Sparta complex as something that might bring business to the state or provide people competitions. “
* Derrick Blakley…
He backed a graduated income tax but stopped short of supporting a gas tax hike to fix roads and bridges.
“You’ve got to look for ways to pay for infrastructure, but it doesn’t have to be one particular source,” Pritzker said.
* Mike Riopell…
Now, [the sale of the Thompson Center], too, could end up on Pritzker’s desk. The governor-elect didn’t say whether he’d sign that bill, but he did indicate his support for selling the building.
“I think that the Thompson Center is something that we should be selling, but not just in theory,” he said.
He said Rauner didn’t work with Mayor Rahm Emanuel to cut a deal.
“There are things you have to work out with the city of Chicago,” Pritzker said. “The current governor, unwilling to work with the mayor of the city of Chicago to try and work those things out. I’m not unwilling, and I think we need to look hard at making sure that if we do it that we get the right terms so that we can go out … to the market and sell.”
* Emily Blume…
The minimum wage increase was vetoed by former Governor Rauner in late 2017 and Pritzker is hoping to get this passed and signed. While this is a priority for him, he’s also looking out for small businesses. Pritzker says, “It’s a $15 minimum wage hike and it would be phased in over time and we want to add to it some help for small businesses to make sure they aren’t badly affected by the raise we think everyone should get in the state.” That help will be providing tax creditors some other alleviation to ease the burden on them through the minimum wage hike. Pritzker says job creation is very important to him and he recognizes that small businesses play a big role in that.
* Brian Mackey…
Q: Does [the Illinois Board of Higher Education’s request for a 16 percent funding increase] sound like a reasonable request?
A: Right now I would say that we have a lot of fiscal challenges in our state. So, you know that I’m committed to lifting up our universities and making sure that we’ve got proper funding for them, but as to 16 percent I wouldn’t comment about the specific percentage. Just to say that I agree that our universities and colleges are underfunded. […]
Q: In the event of an economic downturn or a recession — and since your progressive income tax proposal is at best two years out — would you consider raising the flat tax to help shore up state finances?
A: No, I’m committed to getting a graduated income tax for the state through a constitutional amendment.
In the meantime, we’ve got to look at bringing efficiencies to state government. We’re in the midst of a what is now I think in year four of a massive computer infrastructure upgrade for the state that hasn’t yet gone into effect, that will help us bring efficiencies.
* Rachel Droze…
“We need to bring stability back to state government,” Pritzker said. “I’m going to be introducing a balanced budget. That’s something that will come in mid-February, late-February. Very important that the world sees Illinois as getting its act together and that’ll help us bring jobs to the state, that’ll help us keep jobs in the state and help families and businesses decide to stay. So that’s probably job one and the first thing that I want to do.”
* Craig Wall and Will Jones…
During his term, Gov. Bruce Rauner infamously declared that he was not in charge in Springfield, blasting his nemesis House Speaker Mike Madigan for strong-arming the political process as the longest serving state House Speaker in the country.
Asked whether he or Madigan will be in charge, Pritzker said: “Oh, I’ll be in charge as the governor of the state of Illinois, I’m going to work with the legislature, with the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House. I’m sure that there will be disagreements over time.”
33 Comments
|
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
I missed J.B. Pritzker’s impromptu speech to a gathering of Republicans last week by a few minutes. But the fact that Pritzker even stopped by the event, hosted by Senate Republican Leader Bill Brady and House Republican Leader Jim Durkin, was notable in and of itself.
As one top Republican said after Pritzker’s speech, just imagine Gov. Bruce Rauner showing up to speak about bipartisanship and then heaping praise on House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton at a Democratic reception. If you can’t imagine such a thing, well, that was the Republican’s whole point. It never would have happened (Rauner did show up for a Black Caucus event his first year in office, but he used the occasion to bash the Democratic Party, which didn’t exactly go over too well).
The Republicans have every right to be demoralized in Illinois. They hold no statewide office, their party lost two suburban congressional seats and they are now firmly in the super-minority in both the House and Senate. And yet, in conversations with both Republican legislative leaders last week, it seemed pretty clear to me they were both pleased and optimistic about finally having a governor they believe they can work with.
We all know the history. Gov. Rauner is an extremely difficult person to deal with even for those who agree with most of his political agenda. He assumes he’s right and he assumes you feel the same way, or else. He demands complete loyalty, but offers little in return. His word cannot ever be trusted. He seems incapable of making small talk beyond a few minutes and no one has ever accused him of having a warm personality.
The same lack of interpersonal skills held back Rauner’s immediate predecessor, Pat Quinn. Gov. Quinn wouldn’t have been cracking jokes last week about how his microphone wasn’t working at a Republican inaugural reception. He just wasn’t that sort of guy. And he most definitely didn’t have the natural ability to put a legislator at ease and do a deal.
Pritzker has yet to be tested, so we’ll see if he can be trusted to keep his word and offer as much respect to others as he expects for himself once he delves into the difficult process of governing a state with huge problems.
But it’s pretty obvious to anyone who’s spent time with him that Pritzker most definitely has a warm personality, and that trait is charming the heck out of Springfield right now. And while he was a hit at last week’s Republican reception, that was nothing compared to how crowds reacted to him at the Democratic parties.
Building personal relationships is an integral part of governing, and the dude has that down pat so far. Rauner would do things like call you on your birthday, but his words were always stilted and seemingly scripted. He had legislators over to the mansion during his first spring session, but, again, the conversations just weren’t natural, and many departed with the impression that he was, um, less than genuine.
Quinn spent most session nights deliberately holed up in the governor’s mansion with his staff. Both men just didn’t appear to be comfortable in their own skin.
I have no idea if finally having a governor with a real personality will make a huge difference when it comes to solving this state’s extremely serious problems. Eventually, of course, Pritzker is going to have to do things that people are not going to love and we’ll just have to wait and see how that all turns out.
But in almost 29 years of doing this, I’ve never seen Statehouse types more excited about the end of a governor’s term than they are now. After presiding over the Senate’s inauguration, governors by tradition quietly leave through the door behind the podium which leads into the ante room. Last week, Gov. Rauner was given a formal escort out the front door and members loudly applauded. Several explained later that they weren’t cheering for him. They were, instead, cheering his final exit.
Pritzker has an opportunity here that has been afforded few of his predecessors. But this also means that expectations are sky high. And the higher the expectations, the greater the disappointment if and/or when they aren’t met.
* Related…
* Pot, minimum wage, child care: What are Pritzker’s first priorities?: Pritzker did signal that his outreach to minority Republicans will continue, even though Democrats have the power to do whatever they want if they stay united. That outreach has included inviting the GOP leaders of the House and the Senate over to his home for dinner, attending a swearing-in party for new Republican lawmakers and naming retiring state Rep. David Harris, R-Arlington Heights, to be his revenue director. “It’s very important that we have not our partisanship, but that we work together. That’s what this administration is all about,” he said. “Can you do it with a supermajority? Yes. But you shouldn’t.”
* JB Pritzker to be sworn in as Illinois governor on Monday: One sign of Pritzker’s willingness to listen is the fact he has tapped former Republican state Rep. David Harris to be his revenue director, pending Senate approval. “I’ve had several conversations with him, lengthy conversations and he is the most energetic, the most enthusiastic individual I’ve met in a long time and he has the right attitude about moving the state forward in a positive way, I’m pleased to be part of that,” Harris said.
* Pritzker vows ‘different direction’ for state ahead of inauguration: Durbin said Pritzker has already shown that he’s willing to work with the other side of the aisle by asking former Republican Gov. Jim Edgar to serve on his transition team — and by stopping by a Republican fundraiser last week in Springfield after the General Assembly inauguration. “Goodness sakes. Could you imagine the former governor walking into a Mike Madigan gathering in the Capitol?” Durbin said. “The fact that he’s making this a bipartisan effort I think reassures people across the state he’s really going to do his level best to find bipartisan solutions.”
* Big crowd turns out for Pritzker meet-and-greet at Old State Capitol: An hour into the event, the line still snaked outside.
* Gov.-elect J.B. Pritzker says ‘Democrats stand together’ as party takes total power in Illinois, and all the problems: Mooney says that now that he’s in office, Pritzker might have to learn to tell some people “no” if he wants to dig Illinois out of a financial hole. Transitioning from campaign speeches to policy particulars is a change all new governors have to make, he said. “Up to that point, all they’d have to say is pleasant things. Warm, fuzzy things,” Mooney said. “And then, when in office, you have to make choices.”
28 Comments
|
Comments Off
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax
Advertise Here
Mobile Version
Contact Rich Miller
|