Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * My thanks to the Illinois State Fair for booking Jason Isbell… It’s not the long, flowing dress that you’re in
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Report: Bears focusing on Chicago, also want to expand ISFA debt
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I’ve been hearing some rumblings about this as well. We could know lots more by next week. Greg Hinz…
They will almost definitely have to come up with more revenues that don’t involve passing an unpopular tax hike for at least two unpopular teams in an election year.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ISP sending a message to Rep. Slaughter… ![]() * Sun-Times…
* Crain’s…
* Spring is coming early… ![]() * Heh… * Here’s the rest… * Daily Herald | Cavern excavation completed for Fermilab-based neutrino experiment: The three caverns, located a mile below the surface, are the core of a new research facility that spans an underground area about the size of eight soccer fields. Two caverns will house the detectors; the third will house utilities. Neutrinos will be sent from Fermilab in Batavia 800 miles west to liquid argon-filled detectors at the Sanford Underground Research Facility in Lead, South Dakota. The goal is to have the first detector operating by the end of 2028. * Sun-Times | CTU President Stacy Davis Gates was using ‘metaphor’ when she told teachers to ‘punch their principal in the face,’ union says: Hozian and Davis Gates did not respond to requests for comment, but a CTU spokesperson told the Sun-Times Thursday the case was closed and the report was marked as non-criminal. “We believe that this police report was filed in reference to a figurative comment made by President Davis Gates during impromptu remarks to union members … while talking about using the contract to challenge principals who bully our members,” an email sent out to CTU members said. * STL Today | Illinois congressional contest reflects broader split in GOP: Rep. Mike Bost, R-Murphysboro, explains why his experience makes him worth keeping in Congress. Darren Bailey says it’s exactly why he needs to go. * Crain’s | Illinois getting share of $500 million opioid settlements: Illinois will receive $11.4 million of a $350 million national settlement with New York-based marketing and communications firm Publicis Health, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office announced Feb. 1. Meanwhile, Illinois will collect a slice of a $150 million multistate settlement with London-based opioid manufacturer Hikma Pharmaceuticals. The exact amount expected to come to Illinois was not disclosed. * Block Club | Magnificent Mile Association Hopes To Bring New Businesses Downtown With Storefront Grant: Separately, the Magnificent Mile Association received two storefront grants from the city to activate two vacant stores. One was used in 2022 to bring in a four-month exhibition by Kavi Gupta Gallery at a vacant retail spot at 535 N. Michigan Ave. The other was used in 2021 to open Colores Mexicanos, an artisan Mexican gift shop, for a one-month stint at an empty store at 605 N. Michigan Ave, along Chicago’s high-end shopping corridor. * Daily Herald | To combat climate change, Glen Ellyn couple helps fund solar projects: The couple has now supported 18 projects across the country, the majority in Illinois. With four still in progress, Jens estimates by the end of 2024, the developments will produce a total of 1,100,000 kW. The projects span a variety of groups, from churches to government organizations. * WICS | Police clear Springfield High School from bomb threat: After investigating and searching the grounds, the SHS administration and Springfield Police and the Secretary of State Police who operate our security dogs have deemed the building clear and students are returning to the building to continue the school day as usual. Out of an abundance of caution we are also having all students re-enter the building through our metal detectors with law enforcement overseeing the return. Students will return to their second hour and then will begin the lunch shifts before continuing with their schedule. * Sun-Times | Ex-Chicago gang leader’s third chance gets him an invitation to the White House: CeaseFire was launched in Chicago more than two decades ago on the West Side to address the city’s rampant gun killings. The concept — to treat violence like a curable disease — has since spread to New York, New Orleans, Baltimore and cities abroad. Many agencies have adopted the strategy. * Block Club | Southwest Siders Call On Federal Agency To Preserve Damen Silos From Demolition: The permit process with the Army Corps of Engineers is needed because the site is positioned along the south branch of the Chicago River, and demolition could affect the “course, condition or capacity” of the water, Colin Smalley, a regulatory project manager with the agency, said at a Thursday meeting where neighbors voiced support for saving the silos. * Tribune | University of Illinois police knew details about Terrence Shannon Jr. investigation but didn’t share with school officials, records show: Shortly after Lawrence police began their investigation in September and continuing throughout the fall, Whitman said the school’s Division of Intercollegiate Athletics knew little about the allegations against Shannon. Any information relayed from Lawrence investigators to athletics officials via the University of Illinois Police Department was “verbal, unsubstantiated and vague,” he would later say in a court filing, and “not sufficient to trigger” a student-athlete discipline policy. * WGN | The Great Migration: How a Chicago newspaper helped shape the nation: But in the nearly 100 years between the signing of the 13th Amendment and the signing of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, something happened that would go on to shape the nation. At the beginning of the 20th Century, 90% of the African American population lived in the South, under conditions that can really only be described as oppressive. * News-Sun | Lake County to accept potentially harmful, hard-to-recycle items; ‘Waste haulers do not want to take them’: Properly disposing of paint, tanks, fire extinguishers and even no longer-needed children’s car seats can prevent environmental damage, and the Solid Waste Agency of Lake County (SWALCO) has a program to make it easier in a sustainable way. * Press Release | Illinois Pork Producers Association Honors Retiring Directors: Jill Brokaw is a third-generation pig farmer and grew up on her family farm in Joy, Ill. Over the years she has had many industry experiences, including working with her family’s farrow to finish swine operation, management of their feeding and nutrition system and feed mill, as well as row crop farming. She is currently co-owner of Biddle Gilts, LLC., with her father, continuing their decades of partnership with PIC genetics in the sale of female breeding stock throughout the Midwest. * CNBC | U.S. economy added 353,000 jobs in January, much better than expected: Wage growth also showed strength, as average hourly earnings increased 0.6%, double the monthly estimate. On a year-over-year basis, wages jumped 4.5%, well above the 4.1% forecast. The wage gains came amid a decline in average hours worked, down to 34.1, or 0.2 hour lower for the month. * WBEZ | New indoor pickleball complex in Lincoln Park blends sport with beach resort vibes: Pickleball in paradise. It’s not a Jimmy Buffett song — it’s the concept behind the newly opened indoor pickleball facility in Lincoln Park where palm fronds and cabanas flank eight indoor courts. * The Triibe | The settlement that DuSable built: Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable’s settlement at the mouth of the Chicago River is the heart from which the city of Chicago was built. As time passed, and ownership of the land changed, its history has been smudged, so much so that most people had no idea he lived there until the mid 20th century. DuSable, Kitihawa and their children first showed up in future Chicago during the 1780s. They built a five-bedroom home, a horse mill, a bake house, a dairy, a smokehouse, a poultry house, a workshop, a stable, a barn, an orchard, and huts for DuSable’s employees. The family lived and worked on this land for at least a decade. It is unclear why DuSable moved his family to St. Charles, Missouri, where he ended up living a modest life as a ferry operator. * Alyssa Rosenberg | Opinion I’m pro-choice, but I’m grateful for what pro-life groups did this week: In today’s fractious political world, it’s important to extend credit where it’s due. And so, as a pro-choice liberal, I want to thank a group of pro-life organizations that spoke up this week in support of a congressional deal to improve the child tax credit. Antiabortion Americans United for Life hailed the bill, which will primarily help lower-income families and families with a larger number of children, as “a core part of an American pro-life and pro-family future.” Pro-choice Center for American Progress President Patrick Gaspard described the legislation as “an unmissable opportunity to reduce poverty among low-income children and families.” * Newsweek | Texas Border Convoy Descends into Antisemitism: The video shows Michael Yon making false claims regarding so-called “terrorists coming across the border being funded by Jewish money.” * Sun-Times | A list of every known Illinois resident charged in the U.S. Capitol breach: More than 1,200 people have been arrested in connection with the attack in almost all 50 states. That includes Illinois, where at least 46 residents face federal charges. They come from all around the state and include a onetime CEO, a Chicago police officer and a member of the Proud Boys. * NYT | Trump’s Tariffs Hurt U.S. Jobs but Swayed American Voters, Study Says: The findings contradict Trump’s claims that his tariffs helped to reverse some of the damage done by competition from China and bring back U.S. manufacturing jobs that had gone overseas. The economists conclude that the aggregate effect on U.S. jobs of the three measures — the original tariffs, retaliatory tariffs and subsidies granted to farmers — were “at best a wash, and it may have been mildly negative.” * SJ-R | The IHSA basketball state finals host contracts are expiring. Here’s what could be next: The format of four enrollment class state finals spread across a three-day weekend, Thursdays through Saturdays, was first played two years ago. Previously, the boys and girls final fours were held over four consecutive weekends, on Fridays and Saturdays, in Peoria and Normal, respectively. [IHSA’s Matt Troha] says the overall anecdotal feedback has been positive on the single weekends. He anticipates the IHSA will continue with that format moving forward. The IHSA still wants to give the IHSA basketball advisory committee and its board of directors a chance to formally review and discuss, according to Troha. * Sun-Times | Groundhog Day Chicago — ‘Woodstock Willie’ does not see his shadow, heralding an early spring: On hand for the festivities was beloved WGN chief meteorologist Tom Skilling, attending his very first Woodstock Groundhog Day event, according to the television station’s report. Skilling will be retiring from his longtime weather post at the station on Feb. 28. To honor Skilling, Woodstock Mayor Mike Turner officially declared Friday as “Tom Skilling Day” in addition to “Groundhog Day.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates (Updated)
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Judge denies protest permit for day before DNC
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * WGN earlier this week…
* CBS 2…
They lost their court battle. The full decision is here. * From Crain’s…
* The group does appear to have another agenda as well. From a Sun-Times story on the coalition last month…
Gonna get interesting.
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Fox News asks about migrants: ‘How much time do we have before there’s utter chaos in Chicago?’
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Fox News put dramatic music behind an interview of perennial Democratic candidate and Paul Vallas supporter Andre Smith…
Seems like an argument for keeping the shelters open. But, hey, at least Fox has moved on (for now) from its hysterical stories about Chicago murders. * This Pontiac Daily Leader story reminds me of the recurring rural-area freakouts when false rumors rapidly spread that BLM protesters were heading to town to cause trouble…
Good on the Daily Leader for debunking that nonsense. * Charlotte Alvarez, the Executive Director of The Immigration Project, explained on the 21st Show what’s going on in her part of Downstate…
* More from Isabel… * WBBM | Pritzker gives update on state effort to fund migrant shelters in Chicago, suggests it’s the city’s move: Gov. JB Pritzker says state government remains willing to fund new city-run migrant shelters in Chicago but is waiting for guidance from Mayor Johnson’s administration. […] Both said their administrations talk daily about the migrant crisis. But the city has put a hold on opening any new shelters. * Sun-Times | Ald. Greg Mitchell accused of threatening building owner who housed migrants: That’s where a “screaming” Mitchell “threatened my life, threatened to terminate a Chicago Housing Authority contract my company, Manage Chicago Inc., has … and threatened” to block “a potential zoning change” Amatore had discussed with a deputy buildings commissioner. * The Southern | Southern Illinois cities talk about the ability to care for an influx of illegal immigrants: In Marion, Communications and Market Director Rachel Stroud confirmed there is no policy or procedure in place for handling an influx of illegal immigrants. Stroud suggested The Southern Illinoisan contact the Williamson County Emergency Managment Agency (EMA), saying the agency might have a plan. When asked what Williamson County would do if buses of illegal immigrants were to start arriving in the county, with immigrants needing resources, the EMA Director Brian Burgess said, “The county believes this is more of a municipal issue.” * WSJ | The American City With a Message for Migrants: We Want You: While many American cities are struggling with large numbers of newly arrived migrants, Topeka is inviting anyone and everyone with permission to work in the U.S. to come its way. Like a lot of smaller cities, the Kansas capital is grappling with near-stagnant population growth and an unemployment rate well below the national average, according to city and economic-development officials. Finding people to fill its roughly 6,600 open jobs has been a struggle, they say. * Portland Press Herald | Feds deny request to accelerate work permits for Maine asylum seekers: Lawmakers last year passed a bill sponsored by Sen. Eric Brakey, R-Auburn, directing the Maine Department of Labor Commissioner to request a waiver, even though there is no waiver provision in federal law and no state has ever received one. Department of Labor Commissioner Laura Fortman submitted the request in October and received a response on Jan. 30. That response was forwarded to the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Labor and Housing on Wednesday. * AP | Massachusetts turns recreational plex into shelter for homeless families, including migrants: [Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey] said about 75 individuals were expected to arrive at the Cass Recreational Complex, located in the city’s Roxbury neighborhood, before the end of the day. The complex can provide temporary shelter for up to 400 people, or about 100-125 families, as the state continues to grapple with an influx of homeless migrants. * 9 News | Denver tells migrants you don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here: Next week, the city of Denver will start discharging hundreds of migrant families from its shelters again. Advocates for migrants worry that means many of those families will end up homeless on the streets. At a city council meeting Thursday, Evan Dreyer, the deputy chief of staff for Mayor Mike Johnston’s office, said the city doesn’t have enough room or money to house migrants indefinitely. * AP | Biden is left with few choices as immigration takes center stage in American politics: The influx has strained social services in cities including New York, Chicago and Denver, which are struggling to shelter thousands of asylum seekers without housing or work authorization. Images of migrants with nowhere to go camping out in public have dominated local newscasts. Nine Democratic governors from all across the country sent a letter last week to Biden and congressional leaders pleading for action from Washington “to solve what has become a humanitarian crisis.”
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A glimpse into the news future?
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Associated Press headline…
First line of that AP story…
SIU is not hosting UIC. It’s the other way around. The game is in Chicago. Also, the SIU player named “Johnson” is never once identified beyond his last name. * Now scroll to the end…
Data Skrive website…
Sportradar website…
AI and a sports betting-related company creating sub-par stories for the AP that wouldn’t be approved by a high school newspaper editor. Lovely.
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It’s just a bill
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * HB4681 from Rep. Cyril Nichols…
* HB4706 from Rep. Jenn Ladisch Douglass…
* WAND…
* Rep. Janet Yang Rohr filed HB4708 today…
* HB4709 from Rep. Maura Hirschauer…
* Rep. Tim Ozinga filed HB4690 yesterday…
* Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid…..
* Rep. Debbie Meyers-Martin filed HB4704…
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Open thread
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We made it to Friday! What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI:Ambitious plan aims to raise $400 million to halve Chicago shootings, homicides in 5 years. Sun-Times…
- The target of 50% fewer murders from last year would put the city at less than 400 * Related stories… ∙ WBEZ: Shootings of Chicago students prompts push for anti-violence workers in high schools ∙ Crain’s: Pritzker dismisses significance of city’s cease-fire resolution * Isabel’s top picks… * Sun-Times | In Illinois politics, remaps keep the powerful in power: The Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and the University of Chicago are examining the challenges to American democracy as part of the Democracy Solutions Project. The state’s redistricting ritual — largely carried out behind closed doors — most recently led two downstate districts to elect more extreme candidates while protecting and enhancing Democratic powers in other areas of the state. And while the dust settles on the last remap, there are already advocates plotting the 2030 map and pushing for reform. * WAND | Illinois lawmakers could cap monthly inhaler costs this spring: “We estimate that about 1.4 million people in Illinois have chronic lung disease, so asthma and COPD,” said Kristina Hamilton, Illinois advocacy director for the American Lung Association. The bill could cap the monthly cost of prescription inhalers at $25. People needing multiple inhalers per month would only pay $50. This change will not prevent health plans that already allow people to pay much lower co-pays. * CNI | Democratic leaders poised to revisit Biometric Information Privacy Act after court rulings: State Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, a high-ranking member of the Senate, said the proposal he filed this week strikes a balance between business groups’ concerns over the law and its original intent. “We think that the security restrictions embedded in (the law) are very important and we want to keep them in place, but we do want to address the way liability accrues so that businesses are not unfairly punished for technical violations of the act,” he said. * Cast your votes…
* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * Sun-Times | Eileen O’Neill Burke would lose $211,000 yearly pension if elected Cook County state’s attorney. Here’s why: The law doesn’t let officeholders collect pensions based even in part on past work for the same government agency. So O’Neill Burke would have to give up her pension for as long as she’d be in that office. * Sun-Times | Illinois incumbents in Congress have fundraising advantage over rivals heading into March primary: Once again — and this has been the case for years — the champion fundraiser among House members from Illinois is U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., who collected $5,529,137 in 2023 and who has a balance of $15,360,692. He’s one of the top fundraisers in the entire Congress. As I’ve reported previously, Krishnamoorthi is stockpiling cash for a potential Senate run. Krishnamoorthi faces no primary Democratic opponent in his northwest suburban 8th Congressional District. * Block Club | The Strokes Playing Chicago Show To Benefit Kina Collins Campaign: The Grammy Award-winning rock band is performing March 8 at the University of Illinois at Chicago’s Credit Union 1 Arena with local indie band Beach Bunny and musician NNAMDI, according to a news release. Tickets go on sale 10 a.m. Friday. * Illinois Times | Doing more for the homeless: The police department “wants to be part of the solution,” said Newman, the department’s homeless outreach team coordinator. “We don’t want to criminalize homelessness.”Newman and Allen said much more needs to be done. For example, Newman said there needs to be two or three more homeless outreach officers and more social workers such as Allen so all shifts can be staffed. * Lake and McHenry County Scanner | 150 Lake County Jail inmates now housed in McHenry County Jail under new agreement amid staffing shortage: With current employee vacancies, staff on leave for medical and family reasons and other absences, the Lake County Sheriff’s Corrections Division is down nearly 40% of its normal staffing levels. * Sun-Times | Johnson’s clout on the line with Bring Chicago Home referendum: The stakes are high for Johnson. He campaigned on a promise to create a dedicated funding source to help 68,000 unhoused Chicagoans. It’s something his predecessor promised, but failed to deliver. That broken promise by Lori Lightfoot alienated her progressive political base, contributing to her defeat last year. * Sun-Times | Ald. Greg Mitchell accused of threatening building owner who housed migrants: A finger-pointing Mitchell then “threw papers off his desk and stood up and looked down on me and screamed at the top of his lungs. [He said], `You better watch your f—-ing ass walking around my ward because you are no longer safe.’ Then, he said, `You have a f—ing CHA contract, don’t you? Consider that terminated. After I make one phone call, you can kiss that s–t goodbye.” * Crain’s | 180 laid off from University of Chicago Medical Center: In a statement to Crain’s, University of Chicago Medicine, the operator of the hospital, confirmed the cuts, which represent about 1% of the organization’s total workforce. The health system declined to disclose specific roles affected but said the majority are not direct patient facing. * Crain’s | Judge denies abortion-rights group’s protest permit ahead of DNC: Last month, the grassroots organizations filed for a parade permit to march downtown on Michigan Avenue on Aug. 18, the day before the DNC convention kicks off. The city denied that permit request, arguing the proposed route would interfere with traffic, and suggested an alternative route on Columbus Drive between Roosevelt Road and Jackson Drive. Coalition members balked at the city’s proposal, which they believed gave protesters little visibility to the convention’s delegates, and appealed the decision. * AP | Indiana legislation could hold back thousands of third graders who can’t read: Republicans have balked at those who have labeled the measure a “retention bill,” saying students need the intervention now. “Retention is the absolute last resort if we’ve exhausted all other methods to help struggling readers,” the bill’s author, state Sen. Linda Rogers, told lawmakers. * SJ-R | ‘Doc’ Temple at 100: Still writing, Lincoln historian is ‘a phenomenon’: Temple, one of the preeminent Lincoln historians, turns 100 on Monday. He will celebrate with a party his fellow Masons and some historians are throwing for him. A sought-after lecturer, Temple has written more than 20 books, mostly on Lincoln covering everything from his military service to his religious beliefs. Pulitzer Prize-winning Lincoln biographer, the late David Herbert Donald, called Temple’s “Abraham Lincoln: From Skeptic to Prophet” the “best book ever written about Lincoln’s religious views.” * WGN | WGN names Demetrius Ivory as chief meteorologist: “I’m so excited for Demetrius,” commented Tom Skilling, current Chief Meteorologist, WGN-TV. “Through weather stormy, sunny, and everything in between, Demetrius has delivered accurate, compelling forecasts. He has a huge rapport with the audience. I’ve been honored to have him by my side during severe breaking weather coverage over this past decade. I wish him my sincerest congratulations. He will be fantastic!” * KFVS | World Shooting Complex in Sparta to host Grand American through 2036: “I’m thrilled we were able to extend this contract for another decade,” IDNR Director Natalie Phelps Finnie said in a release. “The ATA Grand is a premier event and an important economic driver for Randolph County and southern Illinois. It’s a privilege to host the Grand at the World Shooting Complex, and we look forward to continuing our strong partnership with the ATA.” The Grand American is the largest and oldest shooting event of its kind. According to a release from the IDNR, it features more than 20 events and brings in more than 5,000 competitors and spectators from around the world. * AP | Puppy Bowl turns 20: Puppy Bowl, the original and longest running call-to-adoption television event, is turning 20 and this year it will feature 131 puppies, 73 shelters and rescues across 36 states and territories.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Feb 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Bost v. Bailey fundraising update… ![]() * That’s a lot of money… * Tribune reporters are on the picket line today, here’s some coverage from X…
* NBC Chicago…
Governor Pritzker was asked about that during today’s press conference…
Meanwhile, the village of Thayer, south of Springfield, has had at least five water main breaks in the last two weeks. * Here’s the rest…
* BND | 3 issues that may threaten student safety, according to metro-east educators and law enforcement: The presentations that followed focused on mental health, substance abuse, online exploitation and grooming. Donna Nahlik, director of prevention and community education at Chestnut Health Systems, spoke about substance use and how it affects students and schools as well as the myriad programs Chestnut provides for youth, which includes prevention curriculum in partnership with local districts. * Bloomberg | Chicago’s wealthiest raise $66 million for fight against crime: Donors including the Crown and Pritzker family foundations contributed just over 30% of the $200 million the business community will need for an initiative to reduce gun violence. The fundrasing effort is being led by the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, which includes senior leaders from companies including McDonald’s, Ulta Beauty and Morningstar. * WTTW | CPS Proposes Delaying First Day of 2024-25 School Year With Democratic National Convention Coming to Chicago: “This shift not only accommodates the city’s logistical needs as they relate to the influx of Conventiongoers, but it also allows time for students to attend, volunteer, and participate in the civic process of hosting the Convention,” the district said in a statement. * ABC Chicago | Former administrator sues suburban school district over alleged racial discriminationi: Administrators and teachers took photos with the doll, which appears to be based on rapper Snoop Dogg, with fake money and drug paraphernalia attached. […] Gibson alleges he complained and the administrator who actually brought the doll into the office was put in charge of Gibson’s review which led to the district not renewing Gibson’s contract. * WBEZ | A new FAFSA setback means many college financial aid offers won’t come until April: This new, four-to-six-week delay puts schools in a difficult bind as colleges can’t determine what financial aid students should get until they receive the government’s FAFSA data. There is some good news: One big reason for the delay is that the department is fixing a $1.8 billion mistake in the FAFSA that could have especially hurt lower-income students. Proceeding without a fix would have, at best, confused many lower-income borrowers. At worst, it would have taken money out of their pockets and likely discouraged some from enrolling in college. * Shaw Local | GOP congressional candidates in 11th District differ on immigration, gun control : The U.S. should end chain migration for families and eliminate the green card lottery, which formally is called the diversity immigrant visa program. Mercado said he also opposes amnesty “as a mass cure for this.” As for gun control, Mercado said he supports universal background checks for would-be firearms buyers. * Sun-Times | Ventra app crashes on first day of new Metra fares, closed ticket windows: In the meantime, riders can show their frozen app to Metra employees in order to get on the train. “Basically we’re telling customers to show their screen, show that it’s frozen and letting them ride,” Reile said. “Our conductors are aware.” * Crain’s | Chicago museums remove Native American items following new rules from feds: On Jan. 10, the Field Museum announced it had covered up several display cases that featured Native American cultural items. The Art Institute of Chicago told Crain’s that it will be removing “several” Native American archaeological artifacts currently on display in its galleries. The Museum of Science & Industry said it will not be affected by the new regulations. * Daily Dot | Mark Cuban says X is ‘impossible’ to use, shares barrage of daily antisemitism his account gets: Cuban in recent weeks has drawn the ire of conservatives and far-right activists due to his support for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), a set of policies that aim to promote the representation and participation of different groups of individuals in business regardless of factors such as age, race, or ethnicity. Cuban told the Daily Dot that the reposts represented only a small fraction of the hateful content he’s received on X, “the only platform” where he says he has experienced anti-Semitism.
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Pritzker remains noncommittal on $300 million state child tax credit
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * CNN reporting from Washington, DC…
Some issues remain in the US Senate, however. * Press release from Economic Security Project Action…
* As we’ve already discussed, the $300 million price tag is worrying the governor because the state is looking at a significant deficit in the coming fiscal year. So, I asked the governor’s office for comment about the above press release…
Your thoughts?
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Migrant shelter population drops almost 7 percent since late December
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Block Club Chicago…
There’s more, so click here. * Echelon Insights does polling for the Illinois Policy Institute and its affiliates. It scores a 2.6 out of 3 in FiveThirtyEight’s ratings system, ranking 27th. Its latest poll is skewed White. 40 percent of respondents were White, compared to 31 who were Black and 22 who were Latino. Then again, turnout in Black and Latino wards last year was very soft. * With all that in mind, here’s the IPI…
Toplines are here, crosstabs are here. * The benefit of the House Speaker creating a “working group” to address the migrant issue is that members can point to that group when approached by the news media…
* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about new shelters and whether they should be in Chicago…
* More from Isabel…
* Sun-Times | 16-year-old asylum-seeker missing from West Loop found safe: CPD: A spokesperson with the police department didn’t disclose where Chiquinquira Iwa-Ruiz was found or who she was found by, but said she was “located safely.” Iwa-Ruiz was previously last seen on a CTA bus at Ashland Avenue near West Lake Street on Saturday. * News-Gazette | Ford County Board to vote on ‘no-migrant’ declaration: Ann Ihrke, chair of the county’s zoning committee, said the measure was sent to State’s Attorney Andrew Killian to examine the wording. “If there are suggestions (for rewording of the declaration), it will go back to the full committee and from there to the full county board,” Ihrke said. * NPR | For Chicago’s new migrants, informal support groups help ease the pain and trauma: Interviews with more than 30 people reveal the emotional toll migrants face, and the efforts of individuals and organizations that are trying to fill the gaps of a frayed mental health system. […] For many, their journeys here were terrifying. A young girl who fell into a river, her pregnant mother struggling to hold her small hand, so the current wouldn’t whisk her away. Women who were forced to have sex with gang members to get from country to country. People who walked over the dead in the jungle, or are wracked with guilt over the sick and injured left behind.
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Pritzker says he still hasn’t been briefed on White Sox ballpark plan
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
* From House Speaker Welch’s office…
* From Senate President Harmon’s office…
* Gov. Pritzker was asked about the potential project today…
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Teamsters on IDOT contract talks: ‘We are nearing the breaking-point and may be left with no other choice than to strike this winter’
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Shaw Local…
* WLPO Radio…
* WBBM Radio…
* Teamsters Joint Council 25…
* From the governor’s office…
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * HB4668 from Rep. Daniel Didech…
* SB2971 from Sen. Robert Peters…
* WGLT…
* Rep. Martin Moylan filed HB4655 yesterday…
* HB4658 from Rep. Curtis Tarver…
* SB2932 filed by Sen. Steve Stadelman…
* Sen. Stadelman also filed SB2935…
* SB2938 from Sen. Laura Fine…
* Sen. Tom Bennett filed SB2972…
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Open thread
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: The Chicago Tribune’s unionized newsroom staff are on strike. Sun-Times…
- It’s believed to be a first in Chicago newspaper history * Isabel’s top picks… * Sun-Times | Developers eyeing new White Sox stadium at The 78 meet with state Democratic leaders: Developers did not ask for state money, but instead said they want the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority to rearrange existing bonds. They were also aware of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s disdain for using taxpayer funds for sports stadiums — which is viewed as politically unpopular despite its prevalence in other cities. * Crain’s | New effort aims to advance trauma-informed care in Illinois: The Jan. 30 launch of the Illinois Healing-Centered Task Force by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton has been a long time coming and provides much-needed legislative support to a concept that began in Illinois some 20 years ago by “five or six innovative organizations,” said Colleen Cicchetti, executive director of the Center for Childhood Resilience at Lurie Children’s Hospital. * Good news… ![]() Governor Pritzker will be at the South Shore Cultural Center in Chicago at 11 am to unveil an anti-violence initiative. Click here to watch. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…
* Daily Herald | Suburban library adds political scientist to help patrons through 2024 elections: The Vernon Area Public Library in Lincolnshire has brought in an expert to serve as a political scientist in residence for the election cycle. Alexandra Filindra, an associate professor of political science and psychology at the University of Illinois Chicago, will lead discussions with patrons, write articles for the library newsletter and recommend reading material concerning the election and important issues. * In these times | The UAW Strike Saved Their Shuttered Plant, But the Fight Is Just Beginning: The revival of the Stellantis plant is a stunning reversal of fortunes for Belvidere, Ill. But workers say they won’t rest until they see the concrete being poured. * Crain’s | Interim CEO of National Association of Realtors to new competitor: Bring it on: The video landed a little over a week after two real estate agents launched a competitor to the 108-year-old Chicago-based Realtors group and amidst a bevy of lawsuits nationwide targeting the association’s alleged collusion to keep agent commissions high. * Farm Week | Legislation introduced to change Illinois estate tax: Supported by Illinois Farm Bureau, Senate Bill 2921, introduced by State Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, and House Bill 4600, introduced by State Rep. Sharon Chung, D-Bloomington, are identical bills that if passed would change the state’s estate tax, specific to farms. “Illinois Farm Bureau is proud to support the Family Farm Preservation Act because our policy supports the preservation of family farms and this is a bipartisan effort to keep farm families on the family farm,” said Brian Duncan, IFB president. “We are grateful and excited to see members from all four caucuses (lend their support for the legislation).” * WTTW | CPS Principal Files Police Report Saying Chicago Teachers Union President Made ‘Very Concerning’ Comments: According to a copy of the Jan. 26 police report obtained by WTTW News, William Hozian, principal of Stevenson Elementary School at 8040 S. Kostner Ave., reported that Davis-Gates spoke to attendees at a union meeting and said, “In talking to my Stevenson brothers and sisters, I told them they should punch their principal in the face.” * Sun-Times | Judge halts all proceedings before Chicago Police Board after City Council again delays vote on what cases can be heard in private: During Wednesday’s City Council meeting, Mayor Johnson’s allies used a parliamentary maneuver to push back a vote on whether cops facing dismissal or suspensions over one year can choose to have their cases heard by an arbitrator instead of the police board. * WBEZ | A Pilsen medical center that treats migrants is furloughing workers: “No services have changed or hours changed,” Rivera emphasized. She added that no one has been laid off, but also confirmed some employees have quit over the furloughs. She would not say how many total people have been furloughed, but said Alivio still has about 250 employees across seven clinics. * Crain’s | CPD chief aims to calm an anxious Chicago business crowd: Still, the LaSalle Street contingent remains unsettled by a continued spate of carjackings and robberies in Chicago. Just last week, masked gunmen shot and killed two high school students in the Loop at Washington Street and Wabash Avenue. Asked why Deputy Police Chief Jon Hein spoke to the media after the brazen incident and not the superintendent, Snelling explained that he wanted to report the facts as soon as possible in order to reduce the public’s fear that the shooting was a random act. * CNN | House passes bipartisan tax bill that expands child tax credit: The deal would provide a larger credit in the first year to the low-income families of roughly 16 million children, or more than 80% of those who currently don’t receive the full credit because their families earn too little, according to the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The package would lift at least half a million children out of poverty and improve the financial situation of about 5 million more children who would remain below the poverty line, once the proposal is fully in effect in 2025, according to the center. * Jam Base | The Music Won’t Stop: Dead & Company Teases Return At Vegas Sphere: The confirmation of the band’s upcoming return comes on the heels of a New York Post report published earlier today indicating Dead & Company will perform a 14-show residency at the Vegas Sphere. Sources told the New York Post the run will begin in May with an announcement due this week. Meanwhile, Rolling Stone reports the publication has confirmation Dead & Co. “will play at least 15 shows at the Sphere.” * WTVO | Rockford Medal of Honor recipient on a mission to prevent veteran suicide: “Making sure that that are the values, that we fought for and that our buddies died for and were wounded for, stay our values. That’s our mission in life, to make sure that our friends did not die in vain. And we have to be here to do that,” he said. * CBS | Five years ago this week: Lows plunge below -20 during Chicago’s polar vortex cold snap: Surface temps fell to minus 23 – and then we got snow! We endured 52 hours of below zero temperatures, the fourth-longest such deep freeze ever recorded in Chicago. It was so cold, that experts warned people that they shouldn’t talk too much—or breathe deeply outside “to protect your lungs from severely cold air.”
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Live coverage
Thursday, Feb 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Copays and co-insurance to be imposed on undocumented immigrant healthcare starting tomorrow
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
*** UPDATE *** Healthy Illinois Campaign…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rick Pearson… ![]() * Illinois Realtors are about to drop a $1 million campaign against Bring Chicago Home, says Crain’s…
* Meanwhile… supporters of the referendum on a graduated real estate transfer tax reported a $200,000 contribution today from the Chicago Teachers Union. The committee, End Homelessness, supporting Bring Chicago Home, ended the fourth quarter with about $744K in the bank and has so far reported raising about $245K this calendar year.” * Press release…
* Press release…
* Here’s the rest…
* WTTW | Effort to Remove Donald Trump From the Illinois Primary Ballot Continues in State Court: The case was filed Tuesday afternoon, hours after the Trump objectors’ initial attempt to knock the former president from the ballot failed. The Trump objectors, working in concert with the group Free Speech for People, had asked members of the Illinois State Board of Election to ban him from running for president in Illinois. * AP | Some Republican leaders are pushing back against the conservative Freedom Caucus in statehouses: In state capitols around the country, Republican legislative leaders are pushing back against a growing network of conservative lawmakers attempting to pull the party further to the right with aggressive tactics aimed not at Democrats but at members of their own party. The infighting has put a spotlight on Republican fissures heading into the November elections, even as former President Donald Trump has been consolidating party support. * Fox 32 | IDOT workers rally in Schaumburg to demand fair contract: Teamsters Local 700 President Ramon Williams emphasized the significance of these essential workers, stating, “These hardworking, essential workers help keep our roads safe and our economy moving, especially during the pandemic. They deserve a fair contract that recognizes the value of their work.” Williams continued, urging the State of Illinois to return to the bargaining table with a fair offer that compensates these members without compromising their health and welfare benefits. * SJ-R | ‘Important effort’: Illinois Underground Railroad Task Force works to connect projects: “When I see people experiencing through tears and stuff, I see them identifying with what we go through, and I also see them identifying with their own loss of not knowing this (story),” said Wilson, the museum’s founding executive director. “We have people in Jacksonville who didn’t know (the Underground Railroad) was here and we advertise all the time. * Tribune | Ex-city official gets 18 months in prison for role concealing multimillion-dollar embezzlement scheme that led to Bridgeport bank collapse: William Mahon, 57, pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to falsify bank records to deceive federal regulators and hide millions in collateral-free loans authorized by then-bank President John Gembara that had essentially turned Washington Federal into a piggy bank for insiders and friends. * Sun-Times | 3 charged in scheme directing migrants to shoplift in exchange for fake IDs, sheriff says: Three Mexican nationals had directed recent Venezuelan migrants to steal items from Magnificent Mile stores in exchange for identity cards that would allow them to get jobs, Sheriff Tom Dart said Tuesday. Police discovered the pattern after speaking to dozens of migrants with nearly identical stories, Dart said. * Tribune | Video shows educators at University of Chicago charter school mock special education student, call him ‘dumb’: The incident, which was recorded on another student’s cellphone, took place at the UC Charter School’s Woodlawn campus in December 2022. The Tribune reviewed the minute-long video, which offered a troubling glimpse inside the publicly funded high school overseen by the prestigious university. * Daily Herald | Additional schools could see relief from O’Hare airplane racket with soundproofing subsidies: It’s been about 10 years since the last of 124 schools near O’Hare was soundproofed. But in 2022, the Federal Aviation Administration approved the city’s Terminal Area Plan which includes a new terminal and concourses, and resulted in an updated noise contour around O’Hare. * Crain’s | Boeing CEO says ‘we caused the problem’ in Alaska Air blowout: “While we often use this time of year to share or update our financial and operational objectives, now is not the time for that,” [Boeing Chief Executive Officer Dave Calhoun] told employees in a memo. “We will simply focus on every next airplane while doing everything possible to support our customers, follow the lead of our regulator and ensure the highest standard of safety and quality in all that we do.” * Crain’s | Boeing’s move to Chicago was a win for the city. But was it good for Boeing?: The ensuing decades have seen the once-lauded aerospace firm humbled by a string of disasters, the latest a blowout of a cabin panel in midflight. The Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 landed safely, and no lives were lost — in contrast to the 346 who died in two 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019. Since then, Boeing has struggled with head-spinning public relations problems, red ink and added costs, settlements and penalties exceeding $20 billion. Its stock, off about 20% since the Jan. 5 Alaska Airlines fiasco, trades at less than half of what it did before the last 737 crash. * NYT | The Most Powerful Person in Publishing Doesn’t Like to Talk About Himself: Mr. Malaviya’s primary goal is growth. After the collapse of the Simon & Schuster deal, it became clear Penguin Random House could not buy its way out of the decline, so much of its growth will have to come organically — by selling more books. Mr. Malaviya said that, hopefully, A.I. will help, making it easier to publish more titles without hiring ever more employees. The company has continued to acquire smaller publishers, like Hay House in the United States and Roca Editorial in Spain. * AP | Science sleuths are using technology to find fakery and plagiarism in published research: Allegations of research fakery at a leading cancer center have turned a spotlight on scientific integrity and the amateur sleuths uncovering image manipulation in published research. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, a Harvard Medical School affiliate, announced Jan. 22 it’s requesting retractions and corrections of scientific papers after a British blogger flagged problems in early January. * Block Club | Chance The Rapper Playing Bridgeport’s Revived Ramova Theatre: Chance is the first major touring act to take to the stage at the Ramova, the long-closed former movie house that reopened late last year as a concert venue, brewery and diner. Chance is among the investors and co-owners of the historical theater alongside fellow South Side musicians Jennifer Hudson and Quincy Jones.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Interesting… ![]() What I’m proposing here is an advisory-only referendum because I wanted to get your thoughts, but I am reserving the right to make the final decision myself. * The Question: Should CapitolFax.com honor the Chicago Tribune Guild’s picket line tomorrow and not post any stories from the paper? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please. Thanks. ![]() …Adding… The poll is now closed.
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Sen. Cunningham tries again to limit BIPA’s scope
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. Press release…
I’ll update if I hear back from business groups.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign update (Updated x2)
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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After backlash, Rep. Slaughter says he won’t move controversial traffic stop bill, but wants conversation
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Rep. Justin Slaughter (D-Chicago) told me today that he’s been getting pummeled on social media and in his emails about his bill…
Pretty cringey. * Law enforcement’s reaction has also been overwhelmingly negative…
* “This was more of a conversation starter,” Rep. Slaughter told me by phone today. “We won’t be moving it,” he said of his bill. More of what he told me…
Please pardon any transcription errors. * He also pointed to these 2023 WBEZ stories as the reason why the conversation must be had…
* Black drivers are pulled over by police more, mostly for non-moving violations: Joshua Levin, an attorney with the ACLU of Illinois, said these encounters are rife for potential “pretextual stops” in which minor traffic violations are used as an excuse to make contact with drivers — at the expense of their civil rights — in an effort to identify more serious crimes. Amid a recent surge in traffic stops by the Chicago Police Department, the ACLU filed a lawsuit earlier this year, saying the department’s practices racially profile, harass and demean law-abiding citizens. The data also show a fivefold increase in the number of Black drivers stopped for non-moving violations and let go with a warning. Latino drivers experienced a fourfold increase since the state began collecting the data. White drivers have seen little change in the number of non-moving stops resulting in a warning. * Chicago’s Black, Latino drivers targets of racially biased traffic stops, ACLU lawsuit alleges: Black drivers in Chicago are four to seven times more likely to be pulled over by police than whites, while Latino drivers are stopped twice as often, according to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois claiming a racially biased pattern in how Chicago police enforce traffic laws.
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Considering the circumstances, how is this a bad thing?
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * ABC7…
Seems to me, if migrants want to leave for another state, it makes fiscal sense to help them get there. A one-way ticket is a whole lot cheaper than shelter, food and medical care. Not to mention that it’s the right thing to do. The state’s tab so far is $638 million. That means $850,000 would be 0.13 percent of the total. Again, this makes fiscal sense. * This also isn’t a “secret.” From a November 2023 press release…
And this is from the governor’s remarks the same day…
* Back to ABC7…
So, maybe it’s working? I dunno. * ABC7 also reports that many those who are leaving are heading to New York, Florida and Georgia. “And some are going back to Texas.”
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * HB4644 from Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid…
* Rep. Anna Moeller filed HB4627 yesterday…
* HB4630 from Rep. Wayne Rosenthal…
* Rep. Kam Buckner filed HB4638…
* HB4619 from Rep. Harry Benton…
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s goin’ on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: The Illinois Election Board votes to keep Trump and Biden on the March Primary Ballot. WTTW…
- The board voted to dismiss the Trump objection on the basis that the board lacks jurisdiction on a constitutional question. - Trump’s candidacy in Illinois could face another challenge, as a lawsuit over the board’s decision is expected. * Related stories… ∙ WGEM: Illinois State Board of Elections rules both Trump and Biden can remain on March primary ballot ∙ CNN: Biden says it’s fine for Trump to stay on 2024 ballots ∙ SJ-R: Illinois State Board of Elections votes unanimously to keep Biden, Trump on primary ballot * Isabel’s top picks… * WGN | Fine dining, first class travel costing taxpayers in south suburbs: Credit card records from Thornton Township show Henyard and other officials spent nearly $67,000 on trips to Portland, Austin, Atlanta and New York City in recent months. In Atlanta, the group stayed at the Four Seasons Hotel and brought home a bill of $9,347. In New York, they stayed at the Mariott Marquis in Times Square where the hotel charged the group $13,098. Airline records show everyone in the group frequently flies first class. * Fox 2 Now | Illinois bill could mean fewer traffic stops for speeding, other offenses: The bill would prohibit Illinois law enforcement officers from stopping drivers for several traffic offenses. That includes speeding and improper lane usage, unless either happens to the extent of a misdemeanor or felony offense. According to Illinois’ state laws, drivers commit a Class B misdemeanor offense when they are traveling at least 26 miles per hour above an applicable speed limit or a class A misdemeanor offense when they are traveling at least 35 miles per hour above limit. * Crain’s | Illinois Realtors plans $1 million campaign against transfer-tax increase: “We’re going to tell Chicago voters that it will harm the city if you create another real estate tax in a city where we’re already overly burdened with real estate taxes,” Jeff Baker, CEO of Springfield-based Illinois Realtors, said in a meeting with several Crain’s reporters on Jan. 30. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * WLPO | IDOT Workers Plan To Picket Outside Ottawa Office: According to longtime IDOT employee Anderson Klump, fellow IDOT employees plan to picket in front of the District 3 office in Ottawa Wednesday at noon. The IDOT worker says he and others have been working without a union contract for almost 9 months. This despite many non-union executive staff receiving large pay raises last year. * WLDS | Budzinski’s Fight for a Bi-Partisan Farm Bill: 13th District Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski says the ongoing budget fight in Washington is standing in the way of a bipartisan compromise on a new Farm Bill being passed. The government’s funding is on a continuing resolution until early March. The country is still operating under the 2018 Farm Bill, and will operate under its continued resolution until September 30th. The 2018 bill expired this past September, but had to be extended because of Congress’ continued gridlock. * CNI | Chicago org to receive federal funding to help launch regional water sustainability industry: The U.S. National Science Foundation awarded the grant to Current Innovation NFP, a nonprofit “innovation hub” whose mission is to “solve pressing water challenges caused by climate change and pollution.” It will receive one of 10 inaugural NSF Engine awards aimed at using science and technology to drive regional economies. * Streetsblog | “We’re all equally in danger”: Ride Illinois launches statewide bike fatality awareness campaign: Bicycle advocacy organization Ride Illinois recently announced the “Our Response to Fatal Crashes” campaign, an effort to raise awareness of the crisis statewide—especially in areas outside Chicagoland, which have few to no local bike advocacy groups. Ride Illinois recently added a map to their website—inspired, according to the announcement, by Streetsblog Chicago’s map of bike fatalities—tracking all fatal crashes in the state since 2018. We spoke with Dave Simmons, executive director of Ride Illinois about the campaign, and the threats bicyclists face on roadways across the Land of Lincoln. * Sun-Times | Marriott, Hyatt hotels at McCormick Place to be official Democratic convention headquarters: The United Center will host the evening sessions with the delegates and speakers at the convention, to run Aug. 19-22, but the hotels will serve as the base of operations for the Biden for President campaign, the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic National Convention Committee plus media and other groups. * WGN | Bumpy rollout of updated Circuit Court online system as clerk prepares for election: While the case management system gets off the ground, Martinez has been working on a re-election campaign. She says, “it takes more than one term to really change the outcome or the change of the office.” Like her predecessor Dorothy Brown – Martinez has also faced criticism. Late last year – a story generated some headlines accusing her of “pay to play” politics with her campaign receiving donations from employees. * Tribune | Chicago aldermen focus on migrant work authorizations rather than shelter conditions: City officials did give the first public glimpse into the grievance system available for residents and staff to use for shelter problems. On average over the past three months, residents have filed 37 grievances per week. In January, an average of 55 resident grievances were filed per week. . City officials did not detail what grievances focused on. * Block Quote | Abortion Rights Advocates Warn Edgewater’s New Crisis Pregnancy Center Could Mislead Patients: Aid For Women advertises free pregnancy tests and counseling to help visitors make a “fully informed decision,” but the religious nonprofit doesn’t provide referrals for abortion care under any circumstances, according to its website. * Check CU | Yorkville BOE Book Ban Closed Meeting Recording Released – Illinois: The matter that was closed to the public on August 7th, 2023, was a discussion about prohibiting the use of the book Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by attorney Bryan Stevenson from being used in the curriculum. The book focuses on injustices in the United States judicial system and documents Stevenson’s efforts to overturn the wrongful conviction of Walter McMillian, a black Alabama man who was convicted of murder in 1988 and spent six years on death row before an appeals court finally overturned his conviction. * WBBM | Local civil rights group calls for accountability after Muslim student attacked at Glendale Heights school: In a video posted to social media, a boy grabs a seventh-grade girl wearing a hajib in the hallway of Glenside Middle School around the neck and throws her to the floor. Maggie Slavin with CAIR Chicago told CBS 2 the girl was targeted for wearing a headscarf. * Daily Herald | What could be Schaumburg’s last subdivision nears halfway point: The village has issued building permits for 93 of the homes so far, with 70 approved for occupancy. “This project has really done everything we expected,” Mayor Tom Dailly said. “The number of homes being sold has just skyrocketed. They estimated it would take five years. I’ll be surprised if it takes five years.” * Fox Chicago | Dixmoor residents sound off after yet another water main break: Last year, the village received $2.2 million to repair the pipeline on the north part of town. There was also $14 million announced in grant money to update the infrastructure, but Mayor Fitzgerald Roberts says they haven’t received the cash yet. * AP | Elon Musk cannot keep Tesla compensation package worth more than $55 billion, judge rules: McCormick concluded that the only suitable remedy was for Musk’s compensation package to be rescinded. “In the final analysis, Musk launched a self-driving process, recalibrating the speed and direction along the way as he saw fit,” she wrote. “The process arrived at an unfair price. And through this litigation, the plaintiff requests a recall.” * The Atlantic | Should Teens Have Access to Disappearing Messages?: The stories are hauntingly similar: A teenager, their whole life ahead of them, buys a pill from someone on Snapchat. They think it’s OxyContin or Percocet, but it actually contains a lethal amount of fentanyl. They take it; they die. Their bereaved parents are left grasping for an explanation. * The Atlantic | The rise of techno-authoritarianism: Facebook (now Meta) has become an avatar of all that is wrong with Silicon Valley. Its self-interested role in spreading global disinformation is an ongoing crisis. Recall, too, the company’s secret mood-manipulation experiment in 2012, which deliberately tinkered with what users saw in their News Feed in order to measure how Facebook could influence people’s emotional states without their knowledge. Or its participation in inciting genocide in Myanmar in 2017. Or its use as a clubhouse for planning and executing the January 6, 2021, insurrection. (In Facebook’s early days, Zuckerberg listed “revolutions” among his interests. This was around the time that he had a business card printed with i’m ceo, bitch.) * Chicago Mag | Illinois Route 1 Is a Must-Drive Trek to See the State: The first essential stop on Route 1 is St. Anne, a population-1,200 hamlet in Kankakee County. The village was settled in the 1850s by French Canadians, who named it for Mary’s mother, a saint venerated in Quebec. They built St. Anne’s Church, a Gothic structure that rises stone by stone from the prairie, then lifts a weathered copper belfry toward heaven. It’s a rare remnant of French Illinois, which predated the arrival of the English here by nearly a century. Anne is the patron saint of grandmothers, so since 1886 the church has held a festival for grandparents on her feast day, July 26.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jan 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news because, as I initially suspected, the widget we’ve been using didn’t last long.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller ![]() * Politico…
* House Republican Organization…
* And… ![]() * Here’s the rest… * Crain’s | Study shows how much of a boon Illinois’ film tax credit has been: The top-line numbers are eye-popping: The state averaged $404 million in direct production expenditure by Hollywood studios from 2012 to 2022, billions in additional economic benefits over that time and a $6.81 return on investment for every dollar the state spends on the tax incentive. * Peoples Fabric | Financial Wizardry: Paul Vallas Sues to Reveal Fraudster, Finds Another Campaign Error: Two days after last year’s mayoral election, Vallas’ campaign wired $58,001.80 to an account number at Chase Bank. The recipient’s account name entered on his team’s wire transfer was “Vallas for Mayor.” Vallas initiated a lawsuit against Chase to ascertain the identity “of the individual and/or entities that may be responsible in damages related to the April 6, 2023 wire transfer,” as Vallas had “never authorized the transfer.” … It appears the money was transferred to the correct account number, but accidentally listed the wrong accountholder name. Vallas’ campaign had paid $160,260 to the same company just a few days before the wire transfer in question. Since the beginning of the year, Vallas has filed ten amendments to correct previous campaign disclosures of various errors. … In November, a currency exchange filed a lawsuit against Vallas over a campaign check they had cashed for a third party, only for Vallas to later stop payment on the check and refuse to honor it. * Hyde Park Herald | 14 Parish gets $57M contract to supply meals for city’s migrant shelters: Hyde Park’s Caribbean fusion eatery 14 Parish received a $57 million contract with the city to supply meals to more than 7,000 migrants living in temporary shelters across the South and West sides. 14 Parish and Seventy-Seven Communities, a suburban caterer, will take over meal distribution for the city’s 28 shelters, according to a Wednesday press release. In it, the city cited a need to reduce the cost of its meal program and improve food quality as its reasons for choosing new vendors. * Tribune | Niles, Lincolnwood, Norridge pass ordinances to curb unscheduled bus drop-offs of migrants: The ordinances generally have the same language, giving administrative fines to companies that make unscheduled stops and drop off more than 10 people in the village’s boundaries. The three villages don’t have a Metra connection to the city of Chicago but border the city at multiple points and have Pace and CTA bus routes that connect them to the city. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s top cop halting initiative that has sent ‘scarecrow’ police cars downtown: But in an interview, Snelling raised alarms about the overtime spending and the strategy of placing cops at fixed posts. “When we’re putting overtime out there and there’s an overtime initiative, we want to make sure that we’re getting the most effective work from our officers with these overtime initiatives,” he said. “I don’t believe in the scarecrow policing, where it’s just serving as a deterrent. * Sun-Times | Chicago police officer charged with DUI in deadly crash outside House of Blues: Tangie Brown, 40, faces counts of aggravated driving under the influence, unlawful use of communication device, reckless driving and other charges in the Dec. 7 crash. Prosecutors said Brown’s blood alcohol level was .093 when she was tested about two hours after the crash. The legal limit in Illinois is .08. * WTTW | Native Mollusks Are Key to Freshwater Ecosystems. Here’s How One Group is Helping Build Mussel Mass on the Chicago River: Anyone who thinks of science as a sterile occupation should spend a morning hunting for freshwater mussels in the Chicago River. […] So why would anyone sign up for the job? To play a small role in the revival of Chicago’s once thriving waterway, which is still recovering from decades of abuse. * Daily Herald | Waived during the pandemic, student fees reinstated in districts 211 and 214: District 214 will charge $350 per student — less than the pre-pandemic $420 fee recommended for reinstatement by administrators — while District 211 will charge $75, which is less than the $170 amount students paid years ago. * Crain’s | Chicago and Detroit wealth management firms merge: Both firms are part of New York City-based Focus Financial Partners and are forming the second “hub” within the wealth management giant that went private last year in an all-cash, $7 billion-plus deal with private equity firm CD&R. Focus has invested in more than 90 firms across the United States. * Tribune | Chicago man arrested in massive $400 million ‘SIM swap’ scheme allegedly targeting company’s cryptocurrency accounts: SIM swapping is a technique in which attackers gain control of a telephone number by having it reassigned to a new device. Such attacks represent a growing security threat for government agencies and corporations because they can target not only finances but manipulate social media accounts to spread misinformation, authorities have said. * Politico | The anti-abortion plan ready for Trump on Day One: Many of the policies they advocate are ones Trump implemented in his first term and President Joe Biden rescinded — rules that would have a far greater impact in a post-Roe landscape. Other items on the wish list are new, ranging from efforts to undo state and federal programs promoting access to abortion to a de facto national ban. But all have one thing in common: They don’t require congressional approval. * WaPo | Want safer streets? Paint them: Asphalt art projects — collaborations between cities, community groups and artists — have taken off in the past decade, thanks to early-adopting cities such as New York, Seattle and Portland, Ore., with help from the National Association of City Transportation Officials and “tactical urbanism” firms such as Street Plans. They provide street designs that cue drivers to slow down, provide people on foot more interesting places to walk and create new local landmarks. They can even be used to widen sidewalks without digging up streets, giving space back to the public and making the whole street safer. To provide a road map for the increasing municipal interest, in 2019 Bloomberg Philanthropies produced the Asphalt Art Guide and launched the Asphalt Art Initiative (AAI), distributing grants to 90 projects in cities across the United States and around the world to produce and assess their own eye-catching street design projects. * Daily Herald | Got transponder fatigue? New tollway stickers are now at customer service centers, coming to Jewel and online in February: The upgrade is free and totally optional, officials noted. The tollway is gradually phasing in the new devices and I-PASS customers will not be required to switch if they have a working transponder. The stickers will work in other states that are part of the E-ZPASS coalition, which the tollway belongs to. * WCIA | Historic Lincoln Tree topples in Virden, damaging Civil War Era home: The tree towered over the home. It was planted nearly 160 years ago. Town historians say the woman who first lived in the house took the acorn from Oakridge Cemetery in Springfield on the day of Abraham Lincoln’s Funeral. * Chicago Mag | How a U. of C. Professor Wound Up a Prisoner of Iran: When he opened the door, the leader of the group pulled out papers bearing the stamp of Iran’s attorney general and thrust them at Alizadeh, as if presenting the search warrant were a mere formality and not a necessary legal procedure. As Alizadeh scanned the document, a single line stood out to him: He was being charged with espionage, a capital offense in a country rife with subterfuge surrounding its clandestine nuclear weapons program. * NYT | UPS to Cut 12,000 Jobs as Wages Rise and Package Volumes Fall: Carol Tomé, the chief executive of UPS, told analysts on an earnings call Tuesday that it had been a “difficult and disappointing year.” Revenue fell more than 9 percent last year, and profit dropped by a third. Ms. Tomé said most of the job cuts would be made in the first half of the year, reducing expenses by about $1 billion. UPS employs nearly 500,000 people. * NBC | Fake news YouTube creators target Black celebrities with AI-generated misinformation: YouTube videos using a mix of artificial intelligence-generated and manipulated media to create fake content have flooded the platform with salacious disinformation about dozens of Black celebrities, including rapper and record executive Sean “Diddy” Combs, TV host Steve Harvey, actor Denzel Washington and Bishop T.D. Jakes.
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Another area of disagreement between the governor and Chicago’s mayor
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune last week…
* Gov. Pritzker was asked yesterday about the city council resolution and the mayor’s support of it…
Pritzker then went on to say that the resolution will have “no effect on the foreign policy of the United States.” Asked why he believed that, particularly with the Democratic National Convention coming in August, the governor said…
Please pardon all transcription errors, and take like five deep breaths before commenting on this one. Thanks.
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Bears want Arlington Heights site taxed as residential property, push for 62.5 percent appraisal reduction
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
Thoughts?
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Mapes asks for leniency, feds want him to serve 5 years
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * WTTW…
* There’s no doubt in my mind that Mapes lied under oath. The feds had him, he undoubtedly knew they had him, and yet he still lied. Why? The prosecutors’ theory…
* From the defense…
Meh. From the prosecutors…
Also, the prosecution has a different version of Mapes’ immunity…
* Back to the defense…
* More coverage…
* Sun-Times | Madigan’s ex-chief of staff should get up to 5 years in prison for lies ‘calculated to thwart’ probe into former boss, feds say: Defense attorneys Andrew Porter and Katie Hill argued that, between Mapes’ prosecution and his 2018 dismissal by Madigan, “the last five years have constituted a half decade of misery for Tim and his family.” They pointed to more than 130 letters of support and insisted that “sending this nearly 70-year-old man to prison would achieve nothing more than to inflict undue additional suffering and hardship on Tim, his family, and his community.”
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Sounds like a sit-down is in order here
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * January 24…
* Yesterday…
The mayor has been saying lately that the state can build shelters anywhere it wants, including in other towns. * I asked the governor’s spokesperson why there’s been a delay…
The governor has often said the state doesn’t control any facilities that it can use, so it needs the city to choose locations. * Meanwhile, the mayor said yesterday that the influx was costing the city $1.5 million a day, and he reminded reporters that he budgeted $150 million. So, Isabel asked Gov. Pritzker today what he hopes the city will do in April when its appropriation runs out…
* More from Isabel… * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson postpones shelter eviction dates until March: Migrants who originally had an exit date between Jan. 16 and Feb. 29 will be given a 60-day extension starting from their original exit date, according to Brandie Knazze, head of the city’s Department of Family and Support Services. If an individual was scheduled to leave Jan. 16, for example, their new exit date is March 16. There are 5,673 people who fall into that category. The 2,119 individuals who were scheduled to exit between Mar. 1 and Mar. 28 will receive a 30-day extension. Anyone who enters the shelter system starting today will receive the standard 60-day notice. The 5,910 new arrivals who entered the shelter system between Aug. 1 and Nov. 16, 2023, will also receive their 60-day notice starting Feb. 1. Those individuals are eligible for the state’s three-month rental assistance program. * ABC Chicago | City Council committee to meet on conditions of Chicago migrant shelters: A City Council committee will meet Tuesday morning to discuss conditions at migrant shelters across the city. The meeting comes as Mayor Brandon Johnson has extended the deadline once again for evicting Chicago migrants from city-run shelters. * Center Square | Chicago provides 300,000 meals a week to non-citizen migrants, among other services: The taxpayer cost to care for the migrants is about $1.5 million per day. Johnson said that money has gone to housing, health care and meals. “In response, my administration and our city have stepped up to meet this moment,” Johnson said. “We have stood up 28 temporary emergency shelters, and we have done this across the entire city of Chicago. We have provided over 300,000 meals per week.” * Sen. John Curran | Gov. J.B. Pritzker invited, then mismanaged Illinois’ migrant crisis: This isn’t an argument about the value of immigration and the role it has played in building the United States of America. It’s a question of reality, of management and of what our already overtaxed residents can afford. The people of Illinois cannot afford the misplaced priorities, radical policies and grandiose promises of a governor seeking attention on the national stage. * Austin American-Statesman | Texas paid at least $135,000 to fly migrants from El Paso to Chicago, records show: The $135,000 figure represents a portion of the total cost of flying migrants since the initial Dec. 19 flight. Since then, the state has flown nearly 900 passengers out of the state, said Wes Rapaport, a TDEM spokesperson, in a statement.
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Illinois State Board of Elections bows to precedent, punts on Trump ballot status
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune… ![]() * Background from Rick’s earlier story…
* From the 14th Amendment…
But there’s also Section 5…
Deep breaths, please.
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Jason Isbell will perform at the Illinois State Fair
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
Very, very cool. * From the new album…
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Justin Slaughter filed HB4603 yesterday…
* HB4621 from Rep. Justin Slaughter…
* HB4613 from Rep. Maura Hirschauer…
* Rep. Bradley Fritts introduced HB4612…
* HB4602 from Rep. Marcus Evans…
* HB4622 from Rep. Daniel Didech…
* HB4626 from Rep. Janet Yang Rohr…
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Johnson extends shelter stays for migrants for third time. Crain’s…
- People who were expected to leave between January and the end of February -roughly 5,700 people- will now receive a 60-day extension. - As of Monday, more than 14,100 people were staying across 28 city shelters, with a little over 180 staying at O’Hare Airport as they waited for a shelter bed. * Related stories… ∙ WTTW: Chicago Won’t Evict Migrants Until At Least Mid-March, Mayor Brandon Johnson Announces ∙ Tribune: Mayor Brandon Johnson will delay enforcing migrant shelter evictions policy, acknowledges pause on opening new sites ∙ CNI: Pritzker says migrant response should focus on Chicago * Isabel’s top picks… * Sun-Times | Madigan’s ex-chief of staff should get up to 5 years in prison for lies ‘calculated to thwart’ probe into former boss, feds say: [Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Schwartz] also wrote that Mapes “still refuses to accept responsibility” and “instead blames the government” for not giving him enough information when he appeared before the grand jury. * Daily Southtown | As Kankakee River water levels decrease after ice jam flash flooding, Will County assesses damage: It was the third-highest level recorded on the Kankakee River and the highest since 1887, according to the Will County Emergency Management Agency. On Sunday morning, water levels were recorded at 5.7 feet. Though the flood warnings have expired, local officials are still monitoring water levels and have advised residents that river conditions can change rapidly. * CNI | Panel of experts suggest legislative measures to reverse journalism decline: Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, said he plans to introduce a bill this session including some of the task force’s suggestions. The policies recommended by the task force are a mix of strategies intended to increase funding, mitigate high operational costs and keep newsrooms local. Many of the recommendations have been implemented or introduced in other states. At 9 am Governor Pritzker will announce the National Science Foundation grant award. Click here to watch. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * STL Today | Holleman: To get things done, Illinois’ Nikki Budzinski says she ignores ‘political noise’: Nikki Budzinski didn’t arrive on time for an interview. In fact, she was early. Should Budzinski, a Democrat who just finished her first year representing part of the Metro East area in the U.S. House, be aiming to position herself as unique among politicians, punctuality is a solid start. * WTTW | Rep. Delia Ramirez on Immigration Policy, Congressional Conflict Over Bipartisan Border Deal: Ramirez: I have felt the urgency to pass immigration reform since the moment my mother crossed the Rio Grande pregnant with me. This isn’t simply an election-year issue to our immigrant communities, it is a 365/24/7 issue. I’ve presented 17 ideas to my colleagues about how we could take concrete action to reform our immigration system rather than waste time and congressional resources on baseless impeachment. * Sun-Times | Brent Manning, former director of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, dies at age 70: John Schmitt, the first executive director of the Illinois Conservation Foundation, rattled off an impressive list of accomplishments during Mr. Manning’s time as director: “Conservation Congress, Habitat Stamp, Conservation Reserve Plan, the additions of [Jim Edgar/Panther Creek State Fish and Wildlife Area] and other sites, the World Shooting site Downstate, Illinois Conservation Foundation that I worked for Brent and we raised over $16 million for the IDNR, new IDNR headquarters … the list goes on and on…He was an outstanding mentor and friend.” * Tribune | Support staff at Crystal Lake D47 file unfair labor practice charge after district hires staffing firm: Crystal Lake Association of Support Staff, or CLASS, the union representing Chaix and more than 100 paraprofessionals across 12 schools in District 47, filed an unfair labor practice charge with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board in October after district administrators retained a recruiting firm to hire temporary employees. The union said the move was made illegally and without giving them notice. * STL Today | Miscommunication between lawyer, police caused fugitive label for former Town and Country cop: The issues with Fowle’s arrest began when, in an unusual move, before Fowle was in custody, Lozano filed a motion to reduce Fowle’s bond. A hearing was scheduled and approved by a judge even though Fowle had not surrendered. “The timing was just not good,” Lozano said Monday. “Which was my fault. I was out of state … so I scheduled with the court a bond hearing for this morning.” * The Center Square | Illinois partners with Google for AI-driven child behavioral health portal: Gov. J.B. Pritzker was at Google Chicago Monday to announce the creation of BEACON, or the Behavioral Health Care and Ongoing Navigation, a service access portal for Illinois families to access behavioral and mental health resources for children. The plan will incorporate artificial intelligence and create an online portal that provides families with access to behavioral and mental health resources. * Sun-Times | Cook County treasurer mails nearly 2 million first installment property tax bills: Property taxes are mailed twice a year in Cook County. This first installment is equal to 55% of last year’s total. Residents wanting to use exemptions, which reduce their total property taxes, can apply those to the second installment. * WBEZ | Illinois election officials are ramping up efforts to recruit election judges for March primary: “We need help, real help, to prop up democracy. Because if we don’t get the election judges there, it allows these other factors to win,” Ed Michalowski, the Cook County deputy clerk of elections said. “When good people could serve as election judges, and they don’t, it allows for some of that negativity to creep in, and some of those false statements and some of those false expressions on the internet.” * Decatur Tribune | FOP State Lodge endorses Regan Deering in race for 88th District Illinois House: “Regan Deering listens to the concerns of the law enforcement officers who protect our communities, and will fight for the men and women who put their lives on the line every day to keep our citizens safe,” said Illinois FOP State Lodge President Chris Southwood. “Regan feels that it’s the heroes in blue, and not the perpetrators in the shadows, that should be backed by state government, and that is why she has our support in this election.” * Sun-Times | Formula One in Chicago? Series applies for race trademarks: There is some indication the city has held initial talks with F1 about a possible Chicago race, downtown Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) says. “I’m told that F1 typically requires a 10-year minimum deal. And that appears to be non-negotiable. The conversation [with the city] did not get much past that,” Hopkins said. * Crain’s | Baseball commish gives thumbs-up to ‘game changer’ Sox stadium plan: Manfred said what’s particularly solid about the proposal is the “proximity to downtown” it would bring a team that now plays several miles to the south in a neighborhood that pretty much shuts down after dark. “Baseball has always worked well close to downtown,” which offers not only other entertainment options but good transit and highway access. * Sun-Times | State Street Macy’s shutters basement candy department — but vows ‘we will always sell Frango’s chocolates’: Now one floor above, there’s a new in-store bulk candy shop called It’Sugar, which opened in November last year. It’Sugar also has locations on the Magnificent Mile and Navy Pier. The store offers an array of sugary treats, including vintage candies, giant gummy bears and Japanese sodas, said Megan Peterson, a supervisor at It’Sugar. * Crain’s | Weed sales boom in Dry January as people drink less: Revenues at Curaleaf, Green Thumb Industries Inc., Verano Holdings Corp., Tilray and Canopy Growth Corp. are set to grow about 6% on average in the first quarter. At the state level, Oregon’s cannabis sales have jumped 19% on average in January since 2018 versus 12% on average in other months. In Colorado, cannabis sales grow the fastest in January on average.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A big campaign update
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jan 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news because, as I initially suspected, the widget we had been using didn’t last long.
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