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Eye-poppers

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Whatever else you can say, give the man a kabillion chutzpah points

Criticized repeatedly for stacking the public payroll with family members, Joe Berrios has hired his son and sister to work for him as he takes the reins of the Cook County assessor’s office.

Berrios, who was sworn in as assessor Monday after winning a rough-and-tumble election, hired son Joseph “Joey’’ Berrios as a $48,000-a-year residential analyst and sister Carmen Cruz as director of taxpayer services at a salary of $86,000. Their salaries will remain unchanged from when they both worked for Berrios when he served on the Cook County Board of Review, which hears property tax appeals.

“They’ve got experience, and I’m hiring people with experience,’’ Berrios told the Chicago Sun-Times Wednesday.

Berrios said he wants competent people he can trust working in his administration.

“I trust them,’’ he said. “It is what it is.’’

It’s true that Berrios was “criticized repeatedly” for nepotism. But he won anyway, so he apparently figures he has a mandate. His daughter already works at the assessor’s office, by the way, so that’s three family members on the payroll.

* On to more serious matters. About half of all human services agencies have been forced to lay off staff because of late state payments, according to a new survey

According to the study conducted by Illinois Collaboration on Youth and others, more than half of agencies responding, 53%, have reduced hours or levels of service and 41% reported increasing waiting lists.

Just about half, 49%, laid off staff — an average of 13% of workers, the study found.

This as the state faces a cumulative budget hole approaching $14 billion.

“Illinois residents who need help have been on the chopping block at budget time for many years. Now we see the results: fewer children in child care; fewer after-school programs for teens; less help for people to get and keep jobs, and less assistance for those with mental illness . . . and the elderly,” said Judith Gethner, director of another sponsor, Illinois Partners for Human Service [Emphasis added]

Results are here.

* And Voices for Illinois Children has more bad news

More than 2,600 children have lost preschool opportunities this fall as dozens of programs have closed under the pressure of long-delayed payments from the state, according to the Illinois State Board of Education.

The state government remains one of the greatest drags on the state’s economy.

  33 Comments      


SJR: Illinois should take clean-coal lead

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Capitol Fax Blog Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

On November 28, the State Journal Register editorialized in support of Tenaska’s Taylorville Energy Center, Illinois should take clean-coal lead. Below are key excerpts:

“As the Tenaska foes’ hyperbole has escalated in recent months, however, so has our skepticism of the critics and the STOP Coalition’s underlying purpose. At the heart of the opposition is Exelon Corp., the Chicago-based power-generating and distribution conglomerate. As old coal plants shut down and power gets more scarce, Exelon — operator of nuclear plants — stands to benefit.”

“Passage of the bill by the General Assembly would allow construction on the plant to begin. Its failure, we believe, would strike a fatal blow not just for the Taylorville plant, but for any potential future development of clean-coal technology in this state. If Tenaska’s effort fails, we can’t imagine any clean-coal company attempting to do business in Illinois.”

“As lawmakers debate this bill, we urge them to keep that in mind.”

“They also must remember that every figure quoted by opponents of Tenaska is a worst-of-the-worst-case scenario…It also assumes power won’t get more expensive as new environmental laws force old coal plants to shut down…”

The Taylorville Project last week agreed to absorb two-thirds of the cost of capital cost overruns and two-thirds of the cost of carbon sequestration cost overruns — meaning these costs, if incurred, can’t be passed along to customers.

“We hope lawmakers see through the hyperbolic spin against this project and vote to bring jobs to central Illinois and put Illinois among the leaders in clean-coal technology.”

Learn the facts! Cleancoalillinois.com

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Emanuel up with new black radio ad - Avoids debates - Won’t say if he’ll send his kids to public school - Unfairly hit again

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rahm Emanuel has a new radio ad targeting African-Americans

In a radio ad airing on Chicago hip-hop station WGCI, Annette Nance-Holt, mother of slain Chicago Public Schools student Blair Holt, endorses Emanuel.

In May of 2007, a 16-year-old gang member opened fire on a CTA bus. Blair, also 16, dove in front of a classmate to shield her from the gunfire and was killed.

Annette Nance-Holt, a Chicago Fire Department captain, and the boy’s father Ronald Holt, a Chicago police officer, have been committed to stopping gun violence in Chicago’s communities since their son was slain.

“Soon, Chicago will choose a new mayor,” Nance-Holt says in the ad. “I want someone with a strong record of fighting crime and gun violence. As President Clinton’s point man on crime, Rahm Emanuel put 100,000 more police officers on the streets, including hundreds more here in Chicago.”

The ad also uses a quote from Barack Obama. Rate it


* Emanuel is sticking closely to the script, letting his paid media do the talking and staying away from events that could get him off-message. He’s becoming the Bill Brady of Chicago

Something’s missing from Chicago’s mayoral candidate forums: Rahm Emanuel.

On at least three nights next week — Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday — just about all of the major candidates for mayor, except the former White House chief of staff, have agreed to sit side-by-side at community forums and take questions from voters or panelists.

But Emanuel is taking a pass, as he has done with other forums this week and last.

“I don’t think he’ll do any of them,” Emanuel spokesman Ben Labolt said of next week’s forums. “He’s been speaking to voters directly where they live and work every day of the week.”

* But reporters did manage to get some news out of him yesterday when Emanuel held a press conference about boosting teacher training

Former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel would not commit to sending his children to public schools if elected Chicago mayor. Fellow candidate James Meeks wasn’t faulting him for that, but opponent Gery Chico talked about “leading by example.”

Emanuel said Tuesday what school his children attend was a decision his family would make. His comments came after he proposed increasing teacher training academies. He said he wasn’t saying he wouldn’t send his three children to Chicago Public Schools.

But the Tribune did a nice job of looking at Emanuel’s chief critics on this issue

State Sen. James T. Meeks, who has made equitable school financing a hallmark of his political career, did not send his children to public schools. He sent his children, who are now adults, to parochial high schools.

“I don’t want a school system the mayor of Chicago is ashamed to send his own kids to,” Meeks said, while adding that he wouldn’t fault Emanuel for not doing so. “We should have quality schools everyone wants to send their kids to.”

Meeks has also been a major advocate of school vouchers, which would allow parents to send their children to private schools.

Mayoral contender Gery Chico attended Chicago public schools, and his children graduated from Northside College Prep and Von Steuben high schools. Northside was built during Chico’s tenure as school board president, and some critics accused him of pushing for the high-performing school near his home for personal reasons.

* Every time John Kass writes about Rahm Emanuel’s residency he claims he thinks Emanuel should be allowed on the ballot. Then he always adds a falsehood about the law or about history in an attempt to prove that Emanuel probably isn’t a Chicago resident or can’t legally prove he is entitled to ballot access. Kass claimed Emanuel couldn’t have possibly voted absentee because he’d been purged from the voter rolls - except that Emanuel wasn’t purged and all he had to do was sign an affidavit that came with his absentee ballot to legally vote. He claimed that Paul Vallas was kept from running for governor in 2006 because he was ruled a non-resident - without informing his readers that Vallas registered to vote in Philadelphia and had sold his Chicago home.

Today, Kass breezes by more inconvenient facts

Right now, the story involves the residency drama. All that jabbering and shrieking this week at the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners plays into Rahm’s hands. There’s more to come Monday.

This week, some in the hearing room wore “Indict Rahm” buttons and yelled and yelled and yelled.

“The days of running this board as a racketeering-influenced conspiracy organization are OVER!!!!” shouted one man. […]

And so it went, the caterwauling and finger-pointing and everybody demanding to be able to question witnesses. It exasperated Burt Odelson, the election lawyer who put together what is considered to be the most credible challenge to Emanuel’s residency. […]

Well, Burt, you might want to move on, but Queen Sister and her friends want their media face time. And the Daley-friendly (and therefore Rahm-friendly) city elections board has folded them all together.

Yeah. That Daley-friendly and Rahm-friendly city elections board is all to blame for consolidating those cases. There absolutely must be something going on. But this is the response I received today from the city’s board of elections…

The board [consolidated the complaints] to prevent witnesses from being called (and issuing subpoenas to those witnesses) for 30 separate appearances to testify on the same issues. Such consolidation is common.

We also consolidate record exams (aka “binder checks”) when the same candidate is facing multiple and related objections over signatures on his or her petition.

In the Emanuel cases, all of the objections center on residency. Many of the objections are quite literally fill-in-the-blank photocopies of each other.

Kass also forgot to mention the background of the hearing officer appointed by the board. From the Illinois Review

A Cook County Republican, former president of United Republican Fund, former candidate for Cook County Board, and former Reagan Administration appointee, attorney Joseph Morris will act as presiding officer over challenges to Rahm Emanuel’s bid for Chicago mayor Monday at 11:00 am.

You can read a pretty good history of Morris at the Chicago Reader’s site.

So, yet another conspiracy theory is undone by simple facts.

* Is it me, or did the State Journal-Register just publish an anti-Semitic letter to the editor which was ostensibly about how people don’t care when they offend Christians

In the halls of schools and government institutions, no one will object to the profane use of Christ’s name (think Rahm Israel Emanuel).

Think: Israel.

Sheesh.

* Roundup…

* Mayor hopeful Chico gets backing of Ald. George Cardenas

* Emanuel Campaign Internet Video: Getting it Done: Pat Kehoe

* Meeks’ residency questioned in Chicago race

* Meeks on TIF money

* Emanuel wants to boost teacher training, but won’t commit to sending kids to public schools

* Emanuel not taking bait on Chicago mayoral ballot challenges

* BBC: Oiling the Machine - Uncovering corruption in Chicago

* Frost took bitter, now savors sweet

* 50th ward candidates talk business

  62 Comments      


Our grim, grim budget

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have no idea why the media has completely ignored the governor’s offer of early retirement for the state police which I wrote about last Friday, but the Tribune editorial board picked up on it today

To be eligible for Quinn’s offer, troopers need to be 50 years old with 25 years of service, or 55 years old with 20 years of service. They can use accumulated time-off credits to help satisfy their years-of-service requirements. And, on their last day of work in 2010, they’ll receive 6 percent cost-of-living raises that are scheduled for calendar 2011.

Age 50? Think about that. Some of these retirees may spend the entire second halves of their lives — the next 50 or more years — drawing pensions from Illinois taxpayers. And while we have you: Has anyone offered you a 6 percent cost-of-living increase? In this time of low inflation? We didn’t think so.

The governor’s office told us Tuesday that many of these senior troopers were expected to retire as soon as they received their cost-of-living raises next year. Makes sense: Sticking around for those raises would feather their pension calculations with the highest possible final salary. Under this deal, the retirees don’t have to work at all next year — and they get the juicier pension benefits pronto. In return, the state saves money by offloading these high salaries: If 70 percent of the eligible troopers accept Quinn’s offer, the state expects to save about $500,000 in payroll expense.

If that were the end of it, Quinn’s offer might make sense. But the governor’s office couldn’t provide one crucial number: What will the troopers’ early arrival cost the state pension system? Taxpayers are on the hook for that, too, just as they are for the budget. We’ll bet the governor lunch at any place of his choosing that he’s shifting way more than $500,000 in burdens from his budget to the failing, flailing pension system.

They’d probably lose that bet. Since most were retiring anyway, the additional cost of the retirees for the next six months won’t total anywhere near $500,000. Still, it’s a cost shift. And one can only wonder if the governor has any more of these plans up his sleeve.

…Adding… Or not. From a reader…

If 80 troopers retire (the state expects 70 to 90) and each collects a mere $1,000 per month for six months, that’s $480,000. And these folks will collect far more than $1,000 a month. Their total pension payments for the first half of 2011 will
substantially exceed $500,000.


…On second thought…
Unless their pension payments exceed their salaries (highly unlikely), then that reader analysis is off.

* In other budget news, things may be easing somewhat, but they’re still bad

Even after cutting a combined $84 billion at the start of this fiscal year, 15 states face persistent deficits that must be closed over the next six months. Meanwhile, 35 states project deficits in the next fiscal year, which begins in July 2011.

Arizona sold the capitol building? Wow…

Arizona is another perennial budget disaster. Lawmakers have gone to extremes to try to close that state’s persistent budget deficit, selling the state Capitol building and cutting state payments for organ transplants. The latter move is likely to be reversed; some patients died once the transplants were halted.

And, of course, there’s Illinois…

The state in the worst shape is Illinois, which faces a deficit this year of a staggering 47% of its entire budget, about $13 billion. A sense of despair has settled over the state capital of Springfield, where various desperate measures, including a major expansion of gambling, have been kicked around.

* From that NCSL report

The task has been daunting: Lawmakers expect to have closed multi-year budget gaps exceeding $530 billion by the time the effects of the recession dissipate. And despite recent revenue improvements, more gaps loom as states confront the phase out of federal stimulus funds, expiring tax increases and growing spending pressures.

The full study is here.

* A real-world case study

Three weeks ago, one of the state’s largest social services provider almost ran out of money. It was saved by a multi-million dollar government infusion, but this was no bailout; Illinois was merely paying off part of what it owes Lutheran Social Services of Illinois.

“We were facing not being able to make payroll for almost 2,000 people,” said the Rev. Denver Bitner, the group’s president. “It’s an up and down kind of affair, and it’s resulted in our needing to borrow substantially from credit lines and reserves, and cuts in programs.”

The group, which runs dozens of programs serving vulnerable Illinoisans — children, the elderly, those recovering from addiction — has been left with IOUs from the state ranging from $5 million to $13 million over the past two years. The debt hangs over the head of Bitner, as vendors that supply LSSI’s foster homes, recovery centers and old age assistance programs demand payment.

Just a week before Thanksgiving, LSSI exhausted $9 million from its reserves and standing credit line. It was only able to pull back from the brink after the state borrowed money to begin paying down its unpaid bills.

The good news is that the comptroller’s office say the state will pay off last fiscal year’s late bills in the coming days. The bad news is there’s $5 billion in unpaid bills from the current fiscal year.

* Meanwhile, the governor is still cool to gaming expansion

Illinois Governor Pat Quinn is still showing no signs of support towards a bill to expand gambling. The bill approved by the Senate last week could add 5 new casinos, including one in Chicago. But Quinn said he doesn’t think the bill will get through the House of Representatives.

“I wouldn’t hold your breath,” he said. “It’s pretty top heavy. Illinois’ not going to be the Midwest venue for gambling second only to Las Vegas.”

* Related…

* Higher Ed Commission recommends performance-based funding: One controversial, yet key reform is a funding shift based on performance instead of enrollment. Performance-based funding creates incentives for institutions to boost performance because the more success they exhibit in meeting state goals, the more funding they receive, the commission states. “The fact is we have state colleges that have been historically performing at very poor levels in terms of graduation and retention rates,” said state Rep. Fred Crespo, a Hoffman Estates Democrat serving as the commission’s House speaker appointee. “That to me is not acceptable when you consider every college is being funded by state dollars.”

* Ill. casino plan could amp up gambling competition: Existing Illinois casinos, which have seen their business fall off by nearly one-third over the past couple of years, are fighting the idea vigorously. “This monumental expansion is like saying, ‘Homes have lost 32 percent of their value and the number of people buying homes is at an historic low, so let’s build more homes until we have three times the number we need,’” Tom Swoik, executive director of the Illinois Casino Gaming Association, said at a recent legislative hearing.

* Emanuel: Gambling not a “panacea” for budget woes

* Ill. plan could include Chicago casino

* Empress casino gets new look, name - Penn National Gaming revamped pavilion after fire, chose to go Hollywood

* Illinois sets auction for Thomson prison

* Villages hail legislation’s passage

  34 Comments      


Question of the day - Golden Horseshoes, Round 2

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As always, keep in mind that I look far more at intensity than at the quantity of votes, so make sure to explain your reasoning or your favorite could lose…

* Best campaign staffer - state legislative

* Best campaign staffer - constitutional office or congressional

* Best campaign spokesperson

* Best government spokesperson

* Yesterday’s winner for best political bar goes to The Globe. It was the clear favorite…

Hands down, the globe. Best bartenders, who actually do get to know your name (and drink) if you go in there enough. They have a piano, so it’s not uncommon to walk in and hear Danny Burke on the piano with some poor woman he conned into singing along with him. Lots of legislators hang out there, so I’ve been able to get work done at 11:00 at night.

* Best political restaurant was won hands-down by Saputo’s. It helps that the man who runs the place is also running for mayor of Springfield…

Politicos of all stripes and the owner/operator will soon be the next Mayor of Springfield. Where else will be you be able to get served by the Mayor?

* Best Springfield hotel is the Statehouse Inn

Best, most modern rooms, so close to the Capitol you never have to move your car, free computers, the bar is convenient, best free breakfast, tons of legislators stay here. No equivocations here.

All decisions are final, so congrats to everyone.

By the way, my own personal choices are here.

  64 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Dec 8, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

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SJR: Illinois should take clean-coal lead

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Capitol Fax Blog Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

On November 28, the State Journal Register editorialized in support of Tenaska’s Taylorville Energy Center, Illinois should take clean-coal lead. Below are key excerpts:

“As the Tenaska foes’ hyperbole has escalated in recent months, however, so has our skepticism of the critics and the STOP Coalition’s underlying purpose. At the heart of the opposition is Exelon Corp., the Chicago-based power-generating and distribution conglomerate. As old coal plants shut down and power gets more scarce, Exelon — operator of nuclear plants — stands to benefit.”

“Passage of the bill by the General Assembly would allow construction on the plant to begin. Its failure, we believe, would strike a fatal blow not just for the Taylorville plant, but for any potential future development of clean-coal technology in this state. If Tenaska’s effort fails, we can’t imagine any clean-coal company attempting to do business in Illinois.”

“As lawmakers debate this bill, we urge them to keep that in mind.”

“They also must remember that every figure quoted by opponents of Tenaska is a worst-of-the-worst-case scenario…It also assumes power won’t get more expensive as new environmental laws force old coal plants to shut down…”

The Taylorville Project last week agreed to absorb two-thirds of the cost of capital cost overruns and two-thirds of the cost of carbon sequestration cost overruns — meaning these costs, if incurred, can’t be passed along to customers.

“We hope lawmakers see through the hyperbolic spin against this project and vote to bring jobs to central Illinois and put Illinois among the leaders in clean-coal technology.”

Learn the facts! Cleancoalillinois.com

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Money, money, money, money… Money

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The last time a Chicago casino was on the table, some labor leaders were quietly hoping that the city could buy the Congress Hotel - which has been the subject of a strike since 2003 - gut it, and turn it into a classy Michigan Ave. venue with union employees.

In that same tradition of using a casino to solve a vexing, long-term problem, the CEO of the Chicagoland Chamber wants a new city casino to be located on the city’s Block 37

Several years after a retail mall opened on the site, much of the building is still vacant.

Leaders of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce claim it’s the best possible location for a proposed new downtown casino.

“I want it to go in a location that will take advantage of our restaurants, our hotels, Macy’s,” said Gerald Roper, Chamber of Commerce CEO. “This is the type of amenity we need to have: an entertainment/casino to continue to attract people to our city, to keep people here more than one day, more than two days.”

Roper said a casino might draw other attractions to State Street, including perhaps a branch of London’s famed Harrod’s department store. And the old Carson Pirie Scott store that’s been vacant for several years might host a Chicago-based company of Cirque du Soleil.

Roper said a Chicago-based casino could create 17,000 new jobs.

* Speaking of money, for once the state isn’t the sole deadbeat behind a local school district’s woes

With Jan. 1 less than a month away, finance officials in Elgin Area School District U-46 are unsure whether the district has enough cash to last through New Year’s Day.

To ensure the district can cover a $34 million debt payment due Jan. 1, the U-46 school board on Monday authorized issuing up to $30 million in short-term loans by Feb. 1, 2011. […]

U-46 finds itself in a cash crunch because the state is $22 million behind on payments to the district (as of November) and Cook County sent out its second-installment tax bills late.

U-46 Director of Financial Operations Dale Burnidge said Monday that the district’s ability to meet its cash needs hinges on whether Cook County starts to deliver some of that tax revenue to the district later this month.

* More doom and gloom

The combined funded level of Illinois’ five state retirement systems would weaken further, even if the state issues some $4 billion in pension obligation bonds to finance its required annual contributions, according to a Moody’s Investors Services report on Monday.

An anticipated issue of eight-year general obligation bonds to pay the state’s pension contributions for the current fiscal year to the state systems “would at least limit deterioration in the funded status of the state’s pensions, which are the lowest-funded among states,” the one-page report said. “Nonetheless, we expect the state’s pension funded ratios to weaken further before improving, given that statutory contributions are below the actuarially determined amounts needed to amortize the plans’ unfunded liabilities.”

The state Senate last month in a special session failed to pass a bill to authorize the state to issue up to $4.1 billion in pension obligation bonds, even though the House passed the legislation 71-44, with two voting present, on May 25.

It never ends.

* I originally posted this below, but I’ve moved it because it fits better with this topic

If the federal government bails out the nation’s debt-ridden states, Illinois will be among the first to grab a lifeline, according to one financial expert.

“If there’s even a hint of a bailout, you’re gonna have Illinois, New York, several other states right behind California,” said Christopher Whalen, bank analyst and managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics.

Whalen told the Business Insiders website that California, which is running a $25 billion deficit, is close to defaulting on its bills. Should that occur, the federal government would be compelled to come to California’s aid by crafting some type of financial restructuring plan or rescue effort.

The Senate’s Republican “moderates” are the ones who prevented more state money from being included in the original stimulus plan. It’s gonna take a mega crisis to get the feds to approve something new. But if Wall Street gets behind it, then we could see some movement.

Take a look, for instance, at what happened in Illinois earlier this year. When Wall St. analysts privately threatened Illinois with a double-reduction in its bond rating, both legislative chambers quickly pushed through a huge pension reform bill. When the bond guys say “Jump,” governments of all sizes usually ask “How high?”

* A case in point from the NYT

This October, Moody’s issued a report explaining why it now rates all 50 states, even Illinois, as better credit risks than a vast majority of American non-financial companies.

One reason: the belief that the federal government is more likely to bail out a teetering state than a bankrupt company.

“The federal government has broadly channeled cash to all state governments during recent recessions and provided support to individual states following natural disasters,” Moody’s explained, adding that there was no way of being sure how Washington would respond to a bond default by a state, since it had not happened since the 1930s.

* Related…

* Instant payouts from expanded gaming plan unlikely

* Bankruptcy Is Not An Option For Illinois: The Land of Lincoln isn’t the only state dealing with a severe budget gap. Indeed, 46 states faced shortfalls when crafting their FY 2011 spending plans. In October, the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities identified 39 states who already have projected holes for 2012. And almost every state government has to find a way to pay down long-term debts resulting from rising pension and health care costs.

* Illinois tax amnesty program collects more than expected, but money not ‘new’

* Inmate releases need a 2nd look: But in the heat of a hotly contested primary election, Gov. Quinn late last year suspended so-called “meritorious good time,” under which inmates could be freed up to 180 days earlier than their official release date. So instead of a program designed to save money and reduce recidivism, the state has a record high population behind bars.

* What Comes After MGT?: With the help of Young, the Reader’s Steve Borgia calculated that the early release suspension would add $158 million to Illinois’ balance sheet between now and July 2012. And that’s just the dollars and cents:

* Preckwinkle takes over as Cook board president

* Hire More Cops, Tax LaSalle Street, Re-do the Parking Deal

* Chris Christie is a role model to new governors, but do his cuts add up?

* Moody’s: Bond sale not enough to help Illinois plans

* Nicor buyer AGL vows to keep workers, but don’t expect lower gas rates

* IDOT upgrades popular travel website - Getting around Illinois redesign debuts for winter driving season

  29 Comments      


Chicago Tribune: Taylorville’s Not Ready

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Capitol Fax Blog Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

November 29, 2010

Dirty and dangerous, coal has a hard time making friends. The proposal for a Taylorville Energy Center in central Illinois isn’t helping.

You might think the Taylorville plan would be winning popularity contests all around the state: This wouldn’t be a typical coal plant, of the sort that provides roughly half of America’s electricity today. This would be a “clean” operation, using cutting-edge technology to reduce hazardous emissions, while taking advantage of the state’s abundant coal supplies. We have supported the idea of “clean coal,” with the caveat that it has to provide power at a reasonable cost to ratepayers. That is, there has to be the prospect that it can genuinely compete in the marketplace.

Taylorville has not met that test. The General Assembly should not give its approval to the $3.52 billion project.

As currently envisioned, Taylorville amounts to an extremely expensive and speculative bet on a long-term payoff that may never materialize. The one guarantee: It will hike the cost of electricity in Illinois for a long time.

A proposal going to the legislature would cap the rate increases paid by residential customers at 2 percent. But that would leave business and government to pay the rest of the increased costs, without the protection of a rate cap. Click here to continue reading.

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This thing of ours

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There was some hand-wringing on Twitter yesterday from Springfield reporters about this news

The State Journal-Register announced Monday it is considering a move to print the Springfield newspaper in Peoria.

SJ-R Publisher Walt T. Lafferty said if the change is made, the Springfield newspaper would be able to take advantage of a more modern printing plant at the Journal Star in Peoria. Both newspapers are owned by Fairport, N.Y.-based GateHouse Media Inc.

The change in print location could occur within the first quarter of 2011, but any move is subject to bargaining with certain unions, Lafferty said.

It is unclear how many jobs would be lost as part of the proposed change. There are currently 32 full-time and 32 part-time positions in the departments that would be affected.

Let me be clear up front that I feel terrible for the people who may lose their jobs. But this could be a sound business move that could keep reporters working. If there has to be a choice, I’d take reporters over printers any day.

The Daily Herald is still reeling from its decision to build a gigantic multi-million dollar printing plant just as the Internet took off big. Ever since, it’s been newsroom cutback after newsroom cutback, and it shows in the quality of some of the paper’s reporting.

Newspapers, like every other business, need to make money. But they also need to put out a quality product. That product has suffered greatly as the bean-counters dumbed down their content so they could pay off the horrific debt the companies almost universally racked up during the gigantic buying spree earlier in the decade. If this move saves reporters’ jobs, then I’m for it.

* Not every media outlet these days is a for-profit venture. The BGA recently hired several ex-reporters as investigators and is doing some quality journalism. Today, the BGA is pointing to its online cache of every city mayoral petition.

BGA honcho Andy Shaw also has a daily “What I’m Watching” post that you should check out.

* From the New York Times

In less than four weeks, NJN, the public radio and television network owned by New Jersey, will run out of state money to operate. Without a last-minute intervention, its outlets will go off the air on Dec. 31, and NJN’s 130 employees have already received layoff notices.

With plenty of competing options being floated to reinvent NJN, no one really expects it to go dark in the long term. Last week, Gov. Chris Christie told The Star-Ledger in Newark that he expected to delay the cuts in order to give interested parties time to come up with a plan. NJN had been receiving about $11 million a year in state subsidies, including $4 million as part of its $18 million operating budget.

One advantage Gov. Christie has over Illinois is that he inherited a far more featherbedded budget than we’ve ever had here. New Jersey has fewer people than Illinois and yet has vastly more state employees, for instance. And that public broadcasting budget is way more than what Illinois spends - both in per capita and in actual dollars.

At its peak, Illinois spent about $5 milion a year on public broadcasting, with TV getting three-quarters of that. This year, it’s down to about a million dollars or so, with the same 75-25 TV to radio split.

Springfield’s WUIS is getting about $25-30K this fiscal year. But some innovative ideas from station boss Bill Wheelhouse are starting to pay off. Wheelhouse is one of the greatest Americana afficionados I’ve ever met, and his Bedrock 66 concert series is currently showing a surplus.

More like this, please.

* Several of my subscribers have asked me why they’re getting daily promo e-mails from the Chicago News Cooperative’s mayoral race newsletter. I sent CNC an e-mail weeks ago inquiring about the situation, but haven’t heard back. Rest assured, I did not sell my list. It’s not for sale to anyone at any price unless they want to buy my company, and that won’t be cheap. A few years back, however, I accidentally sent out a Capitol Fax without blind-copying the recipients. I sure hope nobody is using that list because it’s copyrighted material. I’m not saying, I’m just saying.

* Related…

* Tribune creditors to vote on 4 reorganization plans

* Tribune Co. reorg plan packet won’t include strongly worded letter: judge

  27 Comments      


Street rackets mystery deepens and the trouble with gumads

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The plot thickens

City Treasurer Stephanie Neely submitted hundreds of election petitions bearing the names of two notaries who say they didn’t sign them — the same notaries who say their signatures were forged on petitions submitted by four candidates running for mayor.

The two notaries — Alex Caplan and Maricela Rodriguez — say their signatures were forged on 725 of the 2,331 petition pages that Neely submitted to city election officials last month so she could run for re-election in February. One of Neely’s petition sheets contains both Caplan’s forged signature and Rodriguez’s notary stamp.

We may be about to get to the bottom of what Mark Brown accurately called a longtime Chicago “street racket” this week - the neighborhood hucksters who make a few bucks every election doing things like circulating petitions and setting up “events.”

Neely’s campaign claims innocence, and there’s no reason yet not to believe her…

Neely’s petitions were circulated by ward organizations and volunteers, according to her spokesman Paul Stewart, who says she didn’t pay anyone to collect signatures. Stewart said he doesn’t know who gathered the petitions that bear the names of Caplan and Rodriguez.

“It’s horrible that people who say they were out helping us did something fraudulent,” he said. “Whoever turned in those sheets, it had to be the same source’’ who circulated petitions for the four mayoral candidates — former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, businessman Rob Halpin, state Sen. James Meeks and community activist Patricia Van Pelt-Watkins.

* Back when George Ryan was governor, some of his friends got themselves in trouble because they needed some untraceable (by their wives) cash to take care of their goomahs in style. All those guys made plenty of legit money, but they also thought they needed some on-the-side cash for their mistresses. By the looks of things, Phil Pagano might have had the same problem

Metra’s longtime chief was supporting two other households in addition to his own, leaving his wife with staggering debts after he took his life, according to a lawyer for Phil Pagano’s widow.

James Mullally, who represents Barbara Pagano, made the disclosure in federal bankruptcy court last week, claiming that she was left with more than $1 million in debts.

Saying he didn’t want to get involved in “innuendo and hearsay,” Mullally said that “in addition to the household in Crystal Lake … Pagano had not one, but two additional households, one in Palatine and one in downtown Chicago,” according to a court transcript.

It wasn’t known who belonged to those households. Mullally on Monday declined to provide any names or details. Nor would he say if Barbara Pagano had determined who might belong to the “other households.”

There’s no proof yet, so keep things toned down in comments, please.

  39 Comments      


Question of the day - Golden Horseshoes, Round 1

Tuesday, Dec 7, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s time once again for our annual Golden Horseshoe awards. Let’s start with something easy…

* Best political bar in Springfield

* Best political restaurant in Springfield

* Best Springfield hotel

Remember, I don’t just tally votes, I mainly look at the intensity of the votes. So, five unexplained votes for Tavern X won’t count as much as two well-written votes for Tavern Z. In other words, fully explain yourselves.

Also, as always, the decision of the judges (me and my other personalities) are final and we reserve the right to hold runoffs if we can’t make up our minds.

  40 Comments      


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* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
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* That site is just ridiculous
* Boutros to former federal prosecutors: There's now more work for everyone
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