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Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Talk to y’all on Monday! Get outside and enjoy the weekend



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Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell announces his retirement (Updated x3)

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SJ-R Reporter Patrick Keck

* Sheriff Campbell’s full statement…

I was first elected Sheriff in 2018. I embraced that role, to lead SCSO, but I always saw myself as a cop, not a politician. And for over thirty years, my career has been dedicated to improving and protecting our community. As Sheriff, I have committed my life to advancing our capabilities and effectiveness, implementing new policies and practices to ensure we serve the community with the highest standards of integrity and professionalism. All this was done with the idea of creating a safer Sangamon County.

The tragic death of Sonya Massey has been a heartbreaking event for our community. My deepest condolences go out to her family and friends. Since the incident, I have been proactive and transparent, working tirelessly to present all of the facts to the public. I have committed to making changes to our standards and collaborating with other units of government on ways to prevent incidents like this in the future. The one person truly responsible for this act is in jail, and I believe justice will be served through the legal process.

Despite these efforts, some in our community want me to pay the price for that person’s actions, even threatening that I pay that price with my life, my family’s lives, or the lives of my Deputies. We will only persevere together as a community if we turn down the temperature and resolve to do better. We must honor the life of Sonya Massey by ensuring that no one else falls victim to such tragic and senseless action. That has been my sincere mission since that fateful day. But it has become clear that the current political climate has made it nearly impossible for me to continue effectively in my role. Some individuals would rather see our community divided and in turmoil, than allow me to continue serving as Sheriff. The health of me and my family, the Sheriff’s Office, and our community has to be my priority.

As elected leaders, we must always put the overall good of the community above ourselves; and I will not risk the community that I swore to protect. For this reason, I am announcing my retirement as Sheriff of Sangamon County, effective no later than August 31st.

While it is painful to say goodbye, I do so knowing I have fulfilled my duties and served to the best of my ability. I want to express my deepest gratitude to the citizens who have supported me throughout the years. I am forever grateful for the opportunity I had, for the people I met and for this Office that I love.

…Adding… WAND reporter Caryn Eisert

…Adding… Governor’s office…

The Governor hopes a fresh start with new leadership will usher in a new era of reform and rebuild the trust lost between the Sangamon County community and the Sheriff’s Office.

* WCIA

Famed civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Sonya Massey’s family, has issued a statement on Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell’s resignation.

“The retirement of Sheriff Jack Campbell marks a turning point in the ongoing pursuit of justice for Sonya Massey,” Crump said. “Although the pain of her loss is still fresh, Sonya’s family is willing to work with the outgoing sheriff for the remainder of his tenure to help heal the community and achieve full justice for Sonya. The Massey family also hopes to work with Sangamon County’s next sheriff to examine how this tragedy happened and to ensure that a tragedy like this never happens again in this community.”

  19 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor JB Pritzker…

Governor JB Pritzker today signed into law Senate Bill 3463, an amendment to the Juvenile Court Act, which creates a clear process for implementation of already existing juvenile expungement laws. ​

“It is no secret that the procedures of our court system can be difficult to navigate. People deserve to know what resources and rights are available to them,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “By cutting red tape and creating a process where expungement is more accessible, we can create more opportunities for more people who perhaps made a mistake when they were young, as we all have. This is a step in the right direction and I am proud to sign this legislation.” […]

SB 3463 is intended to automatically schedule expungement hearing date for juveniles. Additionally, eligible juvenile records can now be expunged two years after a sentence ends, to allow the court to schedule the expungement date when the sentence ends or when a young person is sent to the Department of Juvenile Justice. This will allow both greater flexibility and more accuracy, so that the judge has the most up to date information about the young person’s future eligibility upon setting a court date. This will reduce the likelihood of multiple court dates having to be scheduled.

Under current law, courts are required to automatically order expungement in certain juvenile cases, but statute does not require that the order is automatically put on the call, meaning that the juvenile must proactively follow a complicated process two years after their case has been adjudicated. After a case had been adjudicated and the sentence completed, the juvenile may not know or remember to seek expungement. As a result, they may no longer have representation. It is also possible that the individual may get a job that is not impacted by the adjudicated delinquent status and move forward. However, later in life, if they lose that job or seek to transition to another opportunity, that status may resurface as an issue.

Illinois now joins 22 other states with laws that automatically seal or expunge juvenile records in certain circumstances. This will help those juveniles who forget to seek expungement after their adjudication.

SB 3463 is effective January 1, 2025.

* Federal Communications Commission

Federal Communications Commission today proposed new consumer protections against AI-generated robocalls and robotexts. The proposal seeks comment on the definition of AI-generated calls, requiring callers to disclose their use of AI- generated calls and text messages, supporting technologies that alert and protect consumers from unwanted and illegal AI robocalls, and protecting positive uses of AI to help people with disabilities utilize the telephone networks.

The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking adopted today proposes to define AI-generated calls and to require callers when obtaining prior express consent to disclose that the caller intends to use AI- generated calls and text messages. In addition, callers would need to disclose to consumers on each call when they receive an AI-generated call. This provides consumers with an opportunity to identify and avoid those calls or texts that contain an enhanced risk of fraud and other scams.

This item also proposes protections to ensure that positive uses of AI that already help people with disabilities use the telephone network can thrive without threat of Telephone Consumer Protection Act liability. In a Notice of Inquiry, the Commission seeks additional comment and information on developing technologies that can alert consumers to AI-generated unwanted and illegal calls and texts.

These proposed robocall rules are the latest in a series of actions taken by the Commission to protect consumers from AI-generated scams that mislead consumers and misinform the public, empowering consumers to make informed decisions. The Commission proposed new transparency standards that would require disclosure when AI technology is used in political ads on radio and television. The Commission recently adopted a Declaratory Ruling which made clear that voice cloning technology used in common robocall scams targeting consumers is illegal absent the prior express consent of the called party or an exemption. It also proposed significant fines related to apparently illegal robocalls made using deepfake, AI-generated voice cloning technology and caller ID spoofing to spread election misinformation to potential New Hampshire voters prior to the January 2024 primary.

Action by the Commission August 7, 2024 by Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (FCC 24-84). Chairwoman Rosenworcel, Commissioners Carr, Starks, and Gomez approving. Commissioner Simington approving in part and concurring in part. Chairwoman Rosenworcel, Commissioners Carr, Starks, Simington, and Gomez issuing separate statements.

* NBC Chicago political reporter Mary Ann Ahern

* Another victory


*** Statewide ***

* WBBM | Illinois salon professionals training to recognize signs of domestic violence: In order to get or renew their licenses, Illinois law requires cosmetologists to receive one hour of training on how to recognize when their clients might have suffered domestic violence. “We teach them how to identify victims or potential victims and then [provide] them with the resources they can share,” Alcorn-Catena said. “We want to have a cosmetologist pass along to their client information about our agency so that that victim can make educated choices about how to seek help safely.”

* Capitol News Illinois | State now has blueprint for K-12 schools to teach dangers of overdose: The Illinois State Board of Education published the resource guides in accordance with a law passed in 2023. While a school’s use of any of the state’s resource guides is voluntary, some public health advocates consider the creation of the guides a step in the right direction. Administrators and educators can download age-appropriate presentations, lesson plans or fact sheets.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Why isn’t Chicago housing hotline working?: A taxpayer-funded Chicago nonprofit oversees a housing hotline to help people like Nayra. Homeless. In crisis. Needing help to navigate government and get on a waiting list for subsidized housing. And, because of her age, she should be able to get a spot on a priority list to get that housing through the Chicago Housing Authority and other government agencies. But, since the end of June, the hotline that’s been aiding hundreds of people in Chicago every month has been down. And it’s unclear when it might be back, leaving some of the city’s most vulnerable residents on their own.

* Crain’s | Kathy Byrne, mayor’s daughter and plaintiffs’ attorney, dies: Byrne focused on asbestos and mass tort litigation at Cooney & Conway, a plaintiffs’ law firm, where she spent her entire career. Soon after beginning as a clerk in the late 1980s during law school at Loyola University Chicago, her interest in asbestos and its connection to the cancer mesothelioma was stirred by a book based on a series of articles in The New Yorker about the asbestos industry’s legal exposure.

* Crain’s | Ford’s Chicago plant has withstood recessions and a pandemic. Can it survive what’s next?: No other factory in Ford’s portfolio has been in continuous operation longer than the one on Torrence Avenue at 126th Street. Along the way, the plant has produced everything from the Gran Torino and the Granada to the Thunderbird and the Taurus. “There aren’t very many (plants) that make it to this age,” says Kristen Dziczek, a veteran auto industry researcher who is a policy adviser to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. “They’ve continued to invest in that plant. There are a lot of plants in the 60- to 80-year-old range . . . and a handful that are over 80.”

* WTTW | Transportation Officials Tout Massive Overhaul of North DuSable Lake Shore Drive – But Some Lawmakers, Advocates Aren’t Sold: Asked for their take on pushback from an array of elected officials – as well as advocacy groups like Active Transportation Alliance, Better Streets Chicago, Metropolitan Planning Council, Sierra Club and more – Redefine the Drive planners said Thursday’s meeting was an opportunity to address their concerns. “This is part of why we’re here today is to listen more and to gather feedback,” said CDOT’s Dave Miller. “We’ve been briefing a lot of the folks we’ve been hearing from, trying to help (them) understand — there’s a lot of counterintuitive aspects of this project. There’s a lot of non-intuitive things.”

* Block Club | Block Club Chicago Is Hosting Its First Block Party, With Live Music, Local Vendors And More: Our nonprofit newsroom is hosting a huge block party noon-8 p.m. Sept. 7 just off The 606 at the McCormick YMCA, 1834 N. Lawndale Ave. in Logan Square — and you’re invited. The block party will have all the elements of a classic Chicago block party or street festival, with live music, food, beer, local vendors, kids’ activities, games and more fun.

* Tribune | Got milkweed? Field Museum study shows how Chicago gardeners can help monarch butterflies: “The biggest thing is if you can, plant native milkweed species — ideally pesticide free,” said Karen Klinger, a geographic information systems analyst at the Field Museum and the study’s lead author. “The Illinois Native Plant Society has a great list of nurseries and plant sales. But also, very important too, is the range of blooming flowers that are blooming throughout the season. That will help monarchs as well as other pollinators.”

* Sun-Times | Alex Nunes, Eagle Scout who loved helping others, dies at 28: “He was quiet, thoughtful, way smarter than he would ever let on, a good kid, the kind of kid who you could always count on to help, like the old joke about finding out who your friends are when you ask them to help you move,” his father said. Mr. Nunes was a member of the National Honor Society while attending Notre Dame College Prep in Niles.

* Block Club | In The Cockpit With One Of Chicago Air And Water Show’s Newest Aerobatic Pilots: New participants in the annual air show include the Trojan Phlyers, “a group of aviation professionals dedicated to preserving the rich history of the North American Aviation Company’s T28 Trojan,” according to the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County officials planning how to spend millions in opioid-abuse funds; ‘This is a very complicated issue’: With $3.4 million in hand and another $5.6 million anticipated from agreements reached, Liz Nelson, the county’s opioid coordinator, said data is being collected to help guide the development of a strategic plan. Along with the money going to the county, cities with more than 30,000 people in the county — Waukegan, Gurnee, Buffalo Grove and Mundelein — will also receive funds to help victims of unintended or intentional opioid use.

* Tribune | Former state revenue auditor latest charged in alleged PPP fraud: A Will County woman became the latest public employee charged in a sweeping investigation targeting Paycheck Protection Program fraud that has rocked several state agencies. The Illinois attorney general’s office announced the numerous felony charges against Shepale Hicks, of Monee, on Thursday, the same day she pleaded not guilty to multiple charges, including money laundering, financial institution fraud, wire fraud and forgery. […] Authorities said that Hicks, who was then a revenue auditor for the state Department of Revenue, applied for two pandemic-era PPP loans meant to support struggling businesses, claiming she owned two businesses. She received payments in August 2020 and May 2021, totaling $41,665.

* Daily Herald | Park district outlines plan for closing down Palatine Stables: Based on its review of the Structural Condition Assessment Supplemental Report, the park board stands by its decision to cease operations at the stables, located near Northwest Highway and Dundee Road, by Nov. 30. The park district’s release also contains a timeline for phasing out activities at the stables, which the park district has owned for nearly 40 years.

*** Downstate ***

* Western Illinois University | An Update on WIU’s Financially Sustainable Future: As part of the cost-containment strategy, 57 faculty (40 Unit A and 17 Unit B) and 32 staff positions will be eliminated, affecting a range of departments and roles. With a focus on maintaining high-quality academic programs, excellent services and engaging on-campus experiences, the University has made every effort to minimize the impact on students.

* Illinois Federation of Teachers | Union Criticizes WIU’s “Plan” to Lay Off Nearly 90 More Faculty and Staff: Merrill Cole, president of the WIU Chapter of the University Professionals of Illinois (UPI Local 4100), issued the following statement.

 “We are angry and deeply disappointed by this administration’s decision. Despite their lofty goals and compassionate rhetoric at Tuesday’s Board of Trustees meeting, Interim President Mindrup and her team have chosen to devastate futures, families, and communities rather than devise a real solution to address WIU’s fiscal challenges.

* NBC Chicago | Jail video shows ex-deputy charged with Sonya Massey’s murder making comments about charges: The new jail booking video, obtained by NBC 5 Investigates through a Freedom of Information Act request, was recorded on July 17 as Grayson is being booked into the Menard County jail, one day before his first court appearance on charges related to the fatal shooting. Nearly 90 minutes into the video, Grayson is talking with a Menard County deputy about the jail’s low inmate population – which is currently only 5 inmates – when he says: “Well, this whole SAFE-T Act bullsh*t … that’s why hopefully I’ll be out tomorrow,” referring to his initial appearance on July 18. Grayson has remained in custody.

* WCIA | Rantoul native turned NASA engineer speaks on Artemis mission: The Champaign-Urbana Astronomical Society welcomed NASA engineer Ken Jacobs back to Central Illinois. […] Artemis One, which launched in 2022, is just one of the things Jacobs talked about. He used it to explain future plans down the road at NASA. The plan with Artemis is to eventually put the first woman and person of color on the surface of the moon. And eventually, put mankind on Mars.

* The 21st Show | Inside the Illinois State Fair: A conversation with manager Rebecca Clark: In the past few days, the State Fair got underway for another year. Today, we are talking with some of the leading forces behind the fair. The fair manager joined our host, Brian Mackey, to talk about what is new at the fair this year.

* Capitol City Now | The Mobile Museum of Tolerance is back at the Illinois State Fair: Director of the Mobile Museum of Tolerance (MMOT) Jacqueline Carroll talks with Joey McLaughlin about the MMOT’s appearance at the Illinois State Fair. The MMOT is the brainchild of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which fights hatred and intolerance globally.

* BND | Will Illinois get a permanent black bear population? Here’s what experts say: Illinois does not have a plan to reintroduce black bears to its wilderness, a state conservation police officer said, but he expects there will be a breeding population in the state “a considerable ways down the road” when female bears migrate to Illinois. For now, there are just lone males roaming southern Illinois like the bear seen in the metro-east this week and another one in southern Illinois in July, according to Illinois Conservation Police Officer Don Schachner..



*** National ***

* Powell Tribune | After getting caught fabricating quotes, Cody reporter resigns: A reporter at the Cody Enterprise resigned on Friday, after the Powell Tribune confronted him with evidence indicating that he’d fabricated some of the quotes that appeared in several of his stories. In an interview just prior to his resignation, Aaron Pelczar conceded that the quotes may have been made up by an artificial intelligence tool he was using to help write his articles. To date, seven people — ranging from Gov. Mark Gordon to the victim of an alleged crime — have indicated to the Tribune that they didn’t make the statements Pelczar quoted them as making. The Tribune also found a number of other quotes that were altered in some way or attributed to the wrong person.

* The American Prospect | Florida Invests in Catastrophe: As flooding persists with regularity and warming waters facilitate increasingly severe hurricanes, the state has pursued a deregulatory approach to resuscitate its death-spiraling property insurance market. Not only have carriers fled Florida in droves, but numerous others have become insolvent amid climate catastrophe. In a bid to entice insurers to continue providing property insurance coverage, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida legislature have implemented a series of reforms aimed at protecting consumers and reducing insured losses by clamping down on social inflation, the name the industry gives to perceived cultural factors that drive increases in monetary awards in litigation.

  9 Comments      


The cicadapocalypse continues: Illinois Liquor Control Commission fines brewery for cicada-infused Malört

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Hospitality Business Association of Chicago


* Chicago Eater

The state has fined a suburban brewery an undisclosed amount after they served a special infusion of Jeppson’s Malört with cicadas, celebrating the insects’ 2024 emergence. Noon Whistle Brewing Co. in Lombard made headlines in May for combining Chicago’s infamous liquor with bugs foraged from a neighboring park.

The Illinois Liquor Control Commission’s March report includes a blurb that does not mention Noon Whistle, but it refers to a licensee selling an infusion containing cicadas: “The licensee was cited for the violation and was provided education on the issue.” A message to an ILCC rep wasn’t immediately returned. Noon Whistle’s co-founder Mike Condon confirmed the fine over email and wrote he preferred not to share more info.

In May, Noon Whistle compared its cicada-infused malört to tequilas bottles with worms. They charged $5 per shot, and it was available for a limited time. Malört infusions are all the rage, as neighborhood bars are mixing ingredients like pumpkin spice and candy cane into the liquor. Even outside of Chicago, bartenders are unveiling sinister concoctions with the bitter spirit. The liquor is so storied that former Chicago Tribune beer writer Josh Noel has written a book, Malort: The Redemption of a Revered & Reviled Spirit, that will be released on September 3.

Local authorities have long held concerns about spirit infusions made at taverns and restaurants, worried that bartenders would ignore the science and allow bacteria to grow while waiting for flavors to develop. Plenty has changed over the years in terms of information available to the general public. For example, the Illinois Liquor Control Act of 1934 wasn’t written to take into account homebrewers; the Internet has helped better educate folks. The act does include a 14-day limit for infusions and bottles have to be clearly labeled with the start and end dates and listed the ingredients used. The state law also defines infusions as using “ingredients, including, but not limited to, fruits, spices, or nuts, are added to naturally infuse flavor into the spirit.”

I’ve reached out to the Liquor Control Commission for more information. I’ll let you all know if I hear back.

  19 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois

More than 100 people congregated in the parking lot of Rise Community Market on its opening day a little over a year ago. As they listened to celebratory speeches, the audience erupted into joyful exclamations: “Mercy!” “Wonderful!” “Wow!” “All right!” Colorful homemade signs raised by local leaders beckoned the crowd to join in: “We!” “Are!” “No!” “Longer!” “A!” “Food!” “Desert!” […]

Many stores that receive subsidies shutter their doors soon after opening or fail to open at all. Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica examined 24 stores across 18 states, each of them either newly established, preparing to open or less than five years old when they received funding through the federal USDA Healthy Food Financing Initiative in 2020 and 2021. As of June, five of these stores had already ceased operations; another six have yet to open, citing a variety of challenges including difficulties finding a suitable location and limited access to capital.

Illinois’ record is similarly disappointing. In 2018, Illinois officials highlighted the opening of six grocery stores that had received startup funds over several years from a $13.5 million grocery initiative of former Gov. Pat Quinn’s. Four of them have closed. […]

“The main concern with them is prices,” said Dossie, explaining why some Cairo residents haven’t done much shopping at Rise. The 32-year-old mother of five was unemployed before she became one of the store’s first employees. She shops there to support Rise and because she doesn’t have a car, but she wishes it could offer discounts like chain grocers. “I know, me personally, I have a big family and I need to be able to get bulk for a cheaper amount.” […]

State Rep. Mary Beth Canty, who lives near Chicago and sponsored the bill that became Illinois’ grocery initiative, has seen evidence that the investment might not be effective on its own. Last year, to research solutions to food deserts, Canty visited a small supermarket in the tiny town of Winchester, about 50 miles west of the state capital in Springfield, that had been hailed as a success story.

John Paul Coonrod, the store’s board president and chair, said he told Canty during her visit that the state’s initiative amounted to a “drop in the bucket” for what small grocers need to survive.

Great Scott! Community Market did well at first, but it later lost customers to a Walmart and then a new Dollar General that included a grocery market. It was hard to compete, and the store closed just a few months after Canty’s visit — five years after it opened.

Go read the rest.

  17 Comments      


News coverage roundup: Lightfoot’s Dolton investigation reveals a 3.6 million spending deficit

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* CBS Chicago

The Village of Dolton is more than $3.5 million in the hole, an investigation into Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard’s misuse of village funds has found.

Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is leading the investigation into Henyard. Lightfoot, a former federal prosecutor, in April, agreed to investigate the claims about the misuse of public funds—which Henyard has repeatedly denied.

A community packed a special village meeting to hear firsthand what Lightfoot uncovered. The crowd gasped when the revelations were announced—and many were left furious, and further questioning where their tax dollars are going. […]

A limited examination of the books revealed that as of May 31, 2024, the Dolton Village General Fund had a negative balance of $3.65 million. Folks shook their heads in disbelief as Lightfoot—the special investigator hired by village trustees—showed there are simply no checks and balances with the records she found.

* FOX 32


* Daily Southtown

Lightfoot said the village’s general fund, used for paying most village expenses, had gone from a healthy multimillion-dollar surplus a couple of years ago to deficits.

Revenue for the general fund was $24.6 million in fiscal year 2024, which ended April 30 of this year, and expenses were $30 million, she said. […]

Lightfoot said village vendors who have performed services or other work for Dolton are awaiting payment, and that 589 checks totaling more than $6 million have been approved but not sent to vendors because the village lacks the cash.

Lightfoot said she plans to do more work, including looking into spending by village officials for travel.

* WGN

One of the biggest reactions tonight came when Lightfoot presented an example of police overtime. In a PowerPoint presentation, Lightfoot showed two officers made more in overtime than their base salaries, totaling $192,000 for one officer, and $227,000 for another in the last fiscal year.

The acting police chief Lewis Lacey, who we learned tonight has been terminated, isn’t even eligible for overtime, and yet, he’s gotten more than $200,000 in overtime over the last four fiscal years.

* NBC Chicago

Multiple purchases made by the village are under investigation, including $40,000 worth in purchases from Amazon. The Dolton Village Board recently approved a change to the village’s credit card policy.

Lightfoot said that Henyard, the subject of numerous lawsuits and investigations, did not cooperate with her investigation. […]

The Village Board also said locks at Village Hall have been changed for a third time, leaving multiple elected officials without access.

  27 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘Worker Freedom of Speech Act’ hit with lawsuit from libertarian group. Capitol News Illinois

The Chicago-based Illinois Policy Institute on Thursday sued the Illinois Department of Labor in federal court, claiming the “Worker Freedom of Speech Act” violates employers’ First Amendment rights. The law, which goes into effect on Jan. 1, makes it illegal for companies to punish their workers for opting out of a meeting in which they’d be subjected to the employer’s views on religious or political matters, or rewarded for attending. […]

During negotiations over the Worker Freedom of Speech Act this spring, advocacy groups like the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois worried the law would prevent nonprofit organizations from being able to communicate about the nature of their work. As a result, advocacy organizations like the ACLU – a 501(c)4 – as well as labor organizations designated as 501(c)5s and trade associations with 501(c)6 status were exempted from the law.

But traditional charities and churches with 501(c)3 designations were not exempted. The Illinois Policy Institute sued in its capacity as a 501(c)3, claiming the law “bans the Institute from communicating with its employees during mandatory meetings” about policy proposals despite policy being “one of the principal purposes of the Institute.”

Absent from the lawsuit, however, is any acknowledgement of the IPI’s twin organization, Illinois Policy, which is organized as a 501(c)4 and shares leadership, staff, facilities, and a website with the IPI and has an identical board of directors. After its offshoot launch a decade ago, Illinois Policy became the entity under which IPI’s lobbyists were registered, while both groups expanded their overall footprint under the same branding.

* Related stories…

At 2:30 pm Governor Pritzker will be at Navy Pier to give remarks at Chicago Navy Week. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WICS | No hearings held for reported police misconduct, over 300 Illinois officers affected: In 2023, over 300 officers were placed on the Officer Professional Conduct Database by law enforcement agencies. ILETSB told me they haven’t held any hearings on any of reported officers. They told me staffing isn’t in place to hold hearings. […] ILETSB told me the hearings were part of several changes required by the Safe-T Act’s passage in 2022. They plan to start holding hearings officers reported to the database by the Fall of 2024 and are currently looking for a qualified staff and lawyers at this time, needing two more people, said ILETSB.

* Belt Mag | America’s Largest Inland Port is Running Out of Water: The booming city of Joliet is running out of water. For one hundred and fifty years, the city has been among the handful of other municipalities across the Chicagoland region that has extracted water from an underground aquifer system connected to Lake Michigan. Water is stored deep underground between layers of bedrock that can reach hundreds of feet deep. To retrieve the water, a drilling system is used to press down on the sandstone aquifer, releasing the pressure and forcing water up into a well — much like the act of squeezing a sponge. More than a century ago, the aquifer system was reportedly so full that water would shoot up above ground without even having to be drilled and pumped. But for the last hundred years, Chicagoland cities have been extracting way more water than has been naturally replenished.

* Capitol News Illinois | With new federal waiver, Illinois expanding Medicaid to nonmedical services: The new waiver adds three new categories of services that will be covered under the Illinois Medicaid program for individuals who qualify. But state officials estimate it will take at least a year to get the new services up and running. The first and most far-reaching of those covers “health-related social needs,” or HRSN services. That includes such things as housing and food assistance for Medicaid enrollees who either have or are at risk of developing costly chronic health conditions and who have a documented need for such services.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTTW | Advocates Hope New Illinois Law Helps Lower Maternal Mortality Rate for Black Women: Last Monday, Gov. J.B. Prtizker signed the Birth Equity Act that will require Illinois-based health insurance to cover abortion care without co-pays and deductibles, including coverage of abortion medications. And it will cover services such as doulas, lactation consultants and midwives. “This bill was about equity. It was about saving lives and righting the wrongs of history of the high numbers of African American who were dying at the table, or their babies were dying, or families choosing who to live during a moment you should feel safe,” said state Sen. Lakesia Collins (D-Chicago).

* SJ-R | Pritzker signs 3 bills to enhance abortion protections in Illinois. What you need to know: The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case against Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, or EMTALA in June, which permits doctors to provide abortion services during medical emergencies. Democratic lawmakers pushed the legislation that would codify the federal law in case the nation’s high court overturned EMTALA. With Pritzker’s signature, the state is now prepared if the challenge was heard by the Supreme Court at a later date.

* Center Square | Illinois expanding the Film Production Services Tax Credit: Illinois Production Alliance Executive Director Christine Dudley said an economic impact study shows that the film tax credit is paying off. “For every dollar spent on the tax credit, seven dollars is generated into the economy, so that is a return on investment and really speaks to the success of the program,” said Dudley. Dudley said approximately 94% of current film and television production in Illinois is a byproduct of the film tax credit.

*** State Fair ***

* WAND | Pritzker, state leaders cut ribbon for 2024 Illinois State Fair: “From the 800 seat big top circus in Happy Hollow to the Ninja Warrior obstacle course just outside the coliseum, or the brand new Fairytales on Ice performance in the air-conditioned Orr Building, the Illinois State Fair is your home to family friendly entertainment,” said State Fair Manager Rebecca Clark.

* Capitol City Now | Let the fair begin!: A question-and-answer between reporters and the governor, noting that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, which state – Illinois or Minnesota – has a better state fair. “First of all, we have the better state,” answered Pritzker. “I have to say that we have been working hard to make our state fair the best state fair in the country, and I want to make sure we have the attendance of any state fair in the country. I haven’t looked at the numbers for Minnesota, but don’t miss this state fair!”

* WJBC | Twilight Parade wraps up day one of Illinois State Fair: Illinois 4-Hers are the grand marshals of the 2024 Illinois State Fair. Avani Rai, who is about to be a sophomore at Harvard, says 4-H has kept her busy, and the organization is not exclusively about farming. “This past year, I got to serve as one of four national spokespeople for the organization,” said Rai. “As a youth advocacy member, I was able to really, really get involved with the fact that 4-H is a beautiful intersection of so many different things, from STEM to healthy living to agriculture to civic engagement. And that’s what 4-H is all about: giving youth as many opportunities as possible to find their passion in whatever they’re interested in.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | With Democratic National Convention imminent, groups exchange barbs over planned pro-Palestinian protests: The USPCN is among four groups that have been in protracted discussions with the city over a proposed protest route. Together they sued the city in federal court in an effort to secure protest routes within “sight and sound” of the convention. A protest is planned as early as hours before the gavel drops to open the convention. Discussions about the route have apparently hit an impasse; protesters have said that the city’s proposed route onto side streets would cause logjams, while the city said protesters’ request to march along Washington Boulevard is untenable — it would take them through an intersection that is set to be blocked by a security checkpoint.

* Tribune | On eve of DNC, a summit that centers racial equity will bring together elected officials and community leaders: For years, the Journey for Justice Alliance has been pushing its Equity or Else quality of life campaign, a platform centered on addressing basic needs for those living in poverty and in marginalized communities through policy initiatives. From listening sessions to town halls and news conferences on the steps of Congress, J4J’s national network of grassroots community organizations worked locally and nationally to secure anti-racist legislation and policies in dozens of cities. J4J’s two-day summit in Chicago will start with a luncheon for Black mayors and grassroots leaders, immediately followed by the National Racial Equity Summit convocation on Aug. 18. On Aug. 19, J4J will host the Education Justice Study Tour, a visit to sustainable community schools.

* Sun-Times | Views from the front lines of Chicago’s 1968 DNC protests; Grant Park ‘free-for-all’: The 1968 Democratic National Convention helped sway public opinion of the Vietnam War and the draft, highlighted the need for police reform, forced journalists to rethink their trust in government sources and ushered in a new era in social and political activism.

* WBEZ | A wealthy family backed out of its scholarship commitments. Now a mutual aid network is filling in the gap: Without that money, South Side native Marcus Jackson worried his parents would have to sacrifice even more than they do already to help him pay for his junior year at Lawrence University in Wisconsin. He was planning to take on a third job. Now Jackson said he doesn’t have to do that, thanks to a mutual aid network set up on Instagram by former Schuler staffers to connect students with members of the public who can provide financial assistance. Students can submit requests for help, which counselors verify and post to the Instagram page, along with where students are attending college, what they are studying, their unmet financial need — and how to send them money. Some of the posts include notes from students explaining why they need help.

* WBEZ | South Shore residents are fed up with garbage on their streets: An analysis by WBEZ found that over the past five years, South Shore racked up more reports of sanitation code violations than any other South Side community. Citywide, only Austin, West Town and Lincoln Park have had more complaints lodged. Despite the group’s best efforts, the litter won’t go away and it’s unclear who can help. The violations are recorded through calls to 311, the city’s nonemergency hotline. Last year there were 350 violations reported in South Shore alone. In 2021, there were as many as 651 violations reported. Compare that to the Loop, which this year has only recorded 26 complaints. Other South Side communities such as Avalon Park, Hegewisch, Hyde Park, Kenwood and Woodlawn have reported less than 100 sanitation complaints per year since at least 2019.

* Sun-Times | Last piping plover at Montrose Beach — all alone after its siblings died and parents left — flies south for winter: They grow up so fast, don’t they? Nagamo, the lone surviving piping plover chick at Montrose Beach, headed south for the winter Thursday, according to the Chicago Piping Plovers, a volunteer group dedicated to protecting the birds. Its parents Imani and Searocket flew south days ago, leaving Nagamo, whose sex is still unknown, to survive on its own while it learned to fly and spent nights alone lullabied by the lapping waters of Lake Michigan.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County political leaders differ on permanent vote-by-mail ballots; ‘There’s tremendous concern for fraud’: County Clerk Anthony Vega said the number of people voting by mail has continued to increase with each election cycle, and he anticipates the trend to continue with the Nov. 5 election. “It’s super-convenient,” Vega said. “People can do their research at their leisure, and return the ballot several ways — in person, in a drop box and by mail.” Keith Brin, the Lake County Republican Central Committee chair, said allowing people to permanently request a mail ballot creates the potential for fraud. For example, he said, someone could move, another individual could make the residence their home and get a ballot not intended for them.

* Daily Herald | Police, Woodfield remain tight-lipped as bold jewelry heist remains unsolved: Schaumburg police said the overnight crime Aug. 1 involved at least six people and was perpetrated by cutting through drywall in another occupied unit, then through a vacant unit in between, which allowed entry into the jewelry store itself. A construction worker entering the vacant unit at 9:30 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 2, saw and reported the damaged drywall.

* Daily Herald | Volunteers help children pick out clothes during back-to-school shopping event in Elgin: While many groups in the community do “great things” with back-to-school backpacks, Reigner said the Elgin Corps wanted to do something else. “This allows us to be a little more personal and work with 25 kids and really help impact their back-to-school experience,” he said.

* Daily Herald | ‘That’s my lucky puck!’: Trash or lost treasure? Sylvan Lake reveals curiosities and memories: With Sylvan Lake drawn down, curiosities of all kind have surfaced on the exposed shoreline and in some cases set out for all to see. “A lot of people have been walking around the lake,” said Dan Trahan, president of the Sylvan Lake Improvement Association and a lakefront resident. “We now walk the shoreline instead of on the street.”

*** Downstate ***

* Axios | Precision fermentation bubbles up in Illinois: Right now about 30% of all Illinois corn — about 274 million bushels a year — is sold by farmers for ethanol production, but that’s expected to drop as EV use increases. The Illinois Fermentation and Agriculture Biomanufacturing Tech Hub (iFAB), run by U of I, could help those farmers by creating new markets for their crops.

* WCIA | Mosquitos test positive for West Nile virus in Ford County: The Ford County Public Health Department has found the area’s first mosquito to test positive for West Nile virus (WNV) in 2024. A batch of mosquitos from Piper City were tested on Thursday. Though no human cases have been reported in Ford County so far this year, the mosquitos were confirmed to have WNV.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Summer covid surge hits at least 84 countries and continues to climb: Disease trackers sounded alarms that diminished testing and low vaccination rates could provide fertile terrain for more dangerous viral variants to take hold. “Covid-19 is still very much with us,” Maria Van Kerkhove, a WHO epidemiologist, said at a news briefing Tuesday.

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

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Aug 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for background if you need it. Rep. Ann Williams

The full letter is here.

* Sun-Times

The CTA last week released its revised plan for its All Stations Accessibility Program, or ASAP, which would make it the first legacy transit system more than a century old to be 100% accessible.

But the plan is anything but “ASAP.”

Five years into that plan, the CTA hasn’t added a single elevator, and its estimated price tag has more than doubled to $4.9 billion. […]

The new, $4.98 billion price tag marks an eye-popping 137% increase in the cost of making all of the CTA’s stations fully accessible. The original estimate of $2.1 billion was released in 2018. […]

In a follow-up email to the Sun-Times, [CTA spokesperson Catherine Hosinski] acknowledged that “funding has been and remains the biggest challenge.” The CTA is seeking state and federal resources, she said, and needs the City Council’s support to address “an outdated funding formula supported by stagnant, less-viable funding sources.”

* Illinois State Police

The Illinois State Police (ISP) has earned Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) Law Enforcement Accreditation for the 11th time.

“Integrity, Service, and Pride are at the core of ISP. ​ They’re not just words, they’re an attitude, a lifestyle, the foundation upon which our officers build everyday as they serve their communities,” said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. ​ “This accreditation affirms our continued commitment to ​ excellence and we will use all available resources, including technology and training, to better our people and serve and protect the citizens of Illinois.”

CALEA is often referred to as the “Gold Standard for Public Safety Agencies.” ​ In 1986, ISP became the first state law enforcement agency to be accredited. ​ There are 40 CALEA accredited law enforcement agencies in Illinois. ​ To become accredited, law enforcement agencies must complete a comprehensive two-to-three-year self-assessment, including the review and revision of polices, directives, and training standards. ​ Agencies must also pass a CALEA site-based compliance check and attend a review committee hearing. ​ Reaccreditation requires on-going quality performance reviews and maintenance of agency information and statistical data. ​

Transparency and accountability are two areas of focus for CALEA accreditation. ​ In its ongoing efforts for transparency and accountability, ISP shares its departmental policies, its Officer Involved Investigations Dashboard, and its Expressway Shooting Dashboard, publicly on its website. ​ ISP has also simplified its civilian complaint process, allowing citizens to report their grievances against ISP officers, as well as elected officials, through Quick Links on the ISP website. ​ ISP’s continued efforts in these areas have improved community trust and engagement, but have also improved the work environment for the men and women of ISP. ​ In excess of the CALEA requirements and long before they became a CALEA category, ISP expanded its mental health services for its employees. ​ ISP created a full-time Peer Support team with dedicated staff to support both police and civilian employees around the State. ​

* Small victories


* Brenden Moore


*** Statewide ***

* Brownfield AG News | Illinois soybean crop showing regional differences: The director of agronomy with the Illinois Soybean Association (ISA) says the state’s soybean crop is showing some regional differences. Abigail Peterson says the western part of the state seems to be leading the way. […] She tells Brownfield central Illinois has seen some challenges. “Kind of a mixed bag. We saw some good planting dates, but then some later.” She says, “Some diseases are popping up cause we had those rain flushes and now we’re getting hot and humid. Japanese beetles are out there, but nothing hitting too many thresholds at the moment.”

* WCIA | New IHSA rule limits baseball, softball players’ participation in All-Star games: The IHSA bylaws now limit high school baseball and softball players from playing in state All-Star games. The rule states that high school athletes can compete after their senior season ends. Previously, the rule only impacted high school athletes in football, basketball and volleyball. However, the change on July 1st now includes baseball and softball in the participation bylaw.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Judge reverses courthouse ban of exoneree turned clerk after long cell phone squabble: A Cook County judge on Thursday rescinded an order that for more than nine months banned a Chicago exoneree who now works as a law clerk from the Leighton Criminal Court Building following a squabble over cell phone use in the courtroom. In a terse, one-sentence ruling, Judge Peggy Chiampas called up the docketed case for Robert Almodovar and said from the bench that she was rescinding the order and taking the matter off her call.

* Jewish Insider | Pro-Israel group struggling to gain permit to rally at DNC — while pro-Palestinian groups got green light: The Israeli American Council, a nonprofit organization representing Israeli-Americans that seeks to strengthen ties between the U.S. and Israel, filed two applications with Chicago’s Department of Transportation at the beginning of July, according to Aya Schechter, the group’s chief programming officer. But with just under two weeks remaining until the convention, the IAC has yet to receive an answer from the city, despite following up via phone and email. The group had also submitted an application in mid-June for a stationary demonstration within “sight and sound” of the convention, which will be held at the United Center on Chicago’s West Side. That request was denied, according to a rejection letter, which said the proposed rally “would be a direct interference with a previously planned permitted activity or public assembly and would create public safety issues.”

* Borderless Mag | City Officials Attempt To Allay Residents’ Fears As Partial Demolition Looms In Pilsen: During a recent community meeting at Dvorak Park, city officials from the Chicago Department of Buildings and Chicago Department of Public Health laid out plans to remove a structure at the Fisk Station, located in Pilsen’s Industrial Corridor. Under the demolition plan, city officials and contractors assured residents no implosion would be carried out at the coal plant that was retired amid pressure and health concerns from activists in 2012. […] Public Health Commissioner Olusimbo Ige and other panelists assured residents there would be no implosion. The city labeled the demolition of the structure as “environmentally complex” due to its proximity to the Chicago River and the facility’s prior use, coal power generation, she said.

* Tribune | Chicago White Sox fire manager Pedro Grifol — who had an 89-190 record — and 3 other coaches: “As we all recognize, our team’s performance this season has been disappointing on many levels,” said Chris Getz, White Sox senior vice president/general manager, in a statement. […] Grady Sizemore, 42, will serve as the interim manager; the team said the next manager will be announced at the end of the 2024 season. Sizemore, previously a major league coach with the Sox, was the a minor-league instructor with the Cleveland Guardians and coach with the Arizona Complex League Diamondbacks last year.

* Block Club | Bridgeport Skaters Built Their Own Park. Will The Man Let Them Keep It?: The skaters took it upon themselves to pour thousands of dollars’ worth of concrete in a secluded Stevenson Expressway underpass owned by the Illinois Department of Transportation. The underpass intersecting with South Loomis Street in Bridgeport — once filled with mounds of empty beer bottles and other trash — has been cleaned up and decked out with a series of handmade skate obstacles for neighbors to ride at their own risk, the skaters-turned-guerilla-architects said. The unofficial skate park is called Irish Banks.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Dolton deputy police chief reports to work one day after village board places him on leave: The village board voted Monday night to place the Dolton’s top cop on administrative leave only for him to defiantly return to work on Tuesday. The gray clouds over Dolton Village Hall Tuesday evening seemed fitting after Trustee Brittney Norwood described the financial woes that loom over Dolton, resulting in the board to vote Monday night to place Dolton Deputy Police Chief Lewis Lacey on administrative leave and lay off eight village employees.

* Daily Southtown | Calumet City Mayor Thaddeus Jones says overpayments cover his property tax backlog: Jones said Tuesday he planned to pay all of what he owes within the next 30 days. He said he believes he has adequate overpayments to cover those delinquencies, blaming his bank for the error from past years. Treasurers’ records show consistent overpayments between 2006 and 2022 totaling about $9,240. They also indicate he qualifies for at least $1,330 in refunds due to the overpayments made in the 2020, 2009 and 2007 tax years.

* Crain’s | Chicago investment firm picks up Vernon Hills apartments for $28M: The deal appears to be a win for seller FPA Multifamily, a San Francisco firm that has been a major buyer of Chicago-area apartment buildings in recent months. FPA paid almost $24.6 million for the property in 2018, property records show. An FPA executive didn’t respond to a request for comment.

* Crain’s | Shaq wants to open 6 new restaurants around Chicago: NBA Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal’s fast-casual chicken chain plans to open six new restaurants in the Chicago area. Big Chicken, founded in 2018, opened its first Illinois storefront in 2023 in Rosemont. The chain announced in July it would soon open a second Illinois location in Arlington Heights. Today, a Big Chicken representative told Crain’s plans are in place to bring the chain’s total Chicago-area location count to seven by the end of 2025.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Business forced to close after Adams Street fire nears reopening at new location: On July 15, the INB Benefit for the Businesses Affected by the Adams Family Fire fund distributed $15,750 in donations to seven businesses and 12 residents. The funds were collectively donated by community members, and a second round of donation checks will be distributed later in August.

* Journal Courier | Study fuels ambitious Grafton Ferry expansion plans to boost tourism: Grafton Mayor Mike Morrow and resident George Andres, commander of a ferry task force, are mobilizing with the Missouri Department of Transportation and the Illinois Department of Transportation to move forward on next steps to expand Grafton Ferry service in the region. Morrow said one of his campaign promises was to support the Grafton Ferry to operate more hours and seven days a week. Grafton Ferry operates 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday through Sunday from April to November. Andres will oversee the implementation of recommendations from the state’s transportation needs assessment study.

* SIU | $345K SIU study focuses on how to keep farmed largemouth bass from eating their own: In Southern Illinois, the market is growing, generating at least $3 million a year for local fish farmers with room for more, said Jim Garvey, director of the Center for Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aquatic Sciences at SIU and a co-leader of the study along with Habibollah Fakhraei, assistant professor of environmental engineering. The acceptance of largemouth bass as a food fish in live markets is relatively new, and raising them in high densities to maximize production in small ponds has presented challenges. […] With the fish living in such conditions, cannibalism can certainly take a bite out of the bottom line. Discouraging this behavior in largemouth bass is a challenge, Zaczek said. “Well, that’s something easier said than done,” he said. “The hope is the confined space and higher fish density will cause the fish to take to the feed better and eat more similarly, which also would encourage similar growth rates. They are less likely to eat each other if they are the same size.”

* WICS | Visit the Piglets on Parade at the Illinois State Fair: The Birthing Center, which is sponsored by the Illinois Pork Producers Association (IPPA), allows fairgoers to see newborn piglets up close. Children will enjoy free goodies and paper pig ears as a memento of their visit.

*** National ***

* Tribune | Costco to crack down on membership card-sharing: The major wholesale retailer will soon require shoppers to scan their membership cards via scanning devices at the entrance of each store, Costco said in a news release. Many Costco membership cards include a photo of the shopper, but for those that don’t, the store will require a valid photo ID along with the membership card. Those without a photo on their Costco membership card can also have a photo taken at the membership counter, according to the company.

* AP | Third person dies in listeria outbreak tied to Boar’s Head deli meat: Three people have now died in a listeria food poisoning outbreak linked to Boar’s Head deli meats, federal food safety officials announced Thursday, and the overall number of people sickened rose to 43. The additional death happened in Virginia, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a news release Thursday. The other two deaths were in New Jersey and Illinois. The CDC also said nine more cases were reported since a July 31 release about the outbreak, which started in late May.

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The beatings will continue until morale improves

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I tested positive for COVID this week (mild symptoms other than fatigue), but I wanted to do a quick post about this

The White Sox have fired manager Pedro Grifol.

The first-time manager lasted less than two seasons, going 89-190. The Sox were 61-101 in a bitterly disappointing 2023. This season was far worse, with the team at 28-89 and on pace to challenge the 1962 Mets (40-120) for the major leagues’ worst record of the modern era (beginning in 1900).

Coach Grady Sizemore will be the interim manager, the Sox said.

Bench coach Charlie Montoyo, coach Eddie Rodriguez and assistant hitting coach Mike Tosar were also fired, sources told the Sun-Times, and additional coaches may have been dismissed Thursday.

Some observers felt dismissing Grifol was long overdue. Other asked: What was the point? And there were others who thought Grifol should have to finish the season just so the abysmal results would go on his record and not on someone else’s.

In government, you can’t just “blow everything up” and start all over because lots of people depend on government. What are DCFS kids supposed to do during a rebuilding? We learned these lessons the hard way during the Rauner years.

* But nobody’s gonna die if Jerry Reinsdorf sells the White Sox to someone who cares. Rick Morrissey wrote a heck of a column this week about how horrible Reinsdorf has been

Now, you might think that we already have a pretty good measure of this team. The White Sox won a game Tuesday night, putting an end to an American League record-tying 21-game losing streak. They’re well on their way to breaking the modern-era record for most losses in a season, 120, set by the 1962 Mets. By any yardstick, that speaks of a terrible club.

But numbers can’t capture the absurdity involved here.

What a peculiar franchise Jerry Reinsdorf’s Sox are. Built on resentment, weaned on stubbornness, fermented by inanity, the organization seems to enjoy thumbing its nose at fans. That the Sox don’t care what the fan base thinks is apparent in almost everything they do.

It’s one thing to be bad. It’s another to do nothing about it. And still another to say, “Fire? What fire?’’ Even as the flames engulf the building.

Go read the rest.

The general manager needs to go, and the disastrous play-by-play announcer John Schriffen definitely needs to go. But nothing will really improve until ownership sells the team.

Your own thoughts?

  26 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker invited Lee Enterprise Reporter Brenden Moore up for a “peace offering” after officially opening the Illinois State Fair

This is a peace offering to those who like ketchup on their corn dogs as as wrong as you may be, but as Brenden Moore often says, this is about freedom of choice, so you may make your own choice.

* Moore chose ketchup…

* Moore is infamous for his love of ketchup

The Question: What’s your favorite food at the State Fair?

  45 Comments      


It’s showtime: 2024 butter cow unveiled

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SJ-R

Reflecting the Illinois State Fair’s theme of “It’s Showtime!” the Butter Cow got an unveiling in the Dairy Building on Wednesday with a special guest: a little girl pulling a seven-scoop ice cream cone out of her magician’s hat.

This is the eighth time Sarah Pratt of West Des Moines, Iowa, has sculpted the 800-pound bovine made from recycled and unsalted butter.

“(The unveiling) truly embarks the start of the Illinois State Fair,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “It is absolutely iconic in the state of Illinois.”

The butter is slathered over a frame of wire and wood. The cow and its human playmate rotate inside a refrigerated display case over the course of the fair, Aug. 8-18. […]

As in years past, 13 hearts have been hidden between the two displays to signify the 13 essential nutrients found naturally in milk.

* Capitol News Illinois


* More butter cow react from the ap formally known as Twitter…

* Capitol News Illinois

The Illinois dignitaries unveiled the butter cow – the 103rd in the state’s history, according to Pritzker, in the Dairy Building on the fairgrounds. […]

The fair opens Thursday and will run through Sunday, Aug. 18.

This year’s new attractions include a daily circus at Happy Hollow and a ninja obstacle course called the Neutron Ninja Warrior Experience outside the Colosseum. For families with young children, there will be a Fairytales on Ice show at the Orr Building the last weekend of the fair.

An old favorite is returning this year as well: A free tram service will run all eleven days of the fair to help guests get around.

* More…

    * Illinois Times | A new and improved Illinois State Fair: The $31.5 million state-funded Coliseum renovation is the most prominent of the numerous construction projects totaling $85.3 million that will improve the fair experience, according to Illinois Department of Agriculture director Jerry Costello.

    * Center Square | Illinois commodity groups to address agricultural issues during state fair: “Ag Day is a really special day for us because we get the opportunity to interact with people who aren’t living on the farm and are really interested in learning more about food production and the economic impact of farming in Illinois,” said Lindsey Croke, director of Communications with the Illinois Corn Growers Association.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  22 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker formally calls on sheriff to resign following Sonya Massey shooting. SJ-R

    - Gov. JB Pritzker and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton are formally calling for Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell to resign, expressing frustration with how the sheriff has responded following the Sonya Massey fatal shooting.
    - The sheriff once again stated his intent to stay on the force.
    - Three Sangamon County Board members, all Democrats, asked Campbell, a Republican, to resign last week.

* Sangamon County Democratic Chair Bill Houlihan…

“As a vital first step towards reforming the tragically broken culture within the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department, the Sangamon County Democratic Party calls on Sheriff Jack Campbell and his senior leadership team to resign effective immediately. For decades the unspoken practice of “legacy hires” and “go along to get along” have permeated throughout the County Building. Jack Campbell’s resignation would only be a bandaid on the deep cut the Sheriff’s Department has inflicted upon our community. Only with entirely new leadership can the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department begin the essential work of restoring the public’s trust and serving all members of our community.”

* Brenden Moore



* Related stories…

The governor has three events on his public schedule today:

    10 am: Pritzker celebrates the opening of 2023 Illinois State Fair with ribbon cutting and then proceed to opening of tents
    11:15 am: The governor will open Illinois State Fair Conservation World
    11:45 am: The Governor will attend and give remarks at County Fair Luncheon.

Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Let’s pause to consider just how bizarre Jerry Reinsdorf’s White Sox are: What a peculiar franchise Jerry Reinsdorf’s Sox are. Built on resentment, weaned on stubbornness, fermented by inanity, the organization seems to enjoy thumbing its nose at fans. That the Sox don’t care what the fan base thinks is apparent in almost everything they do.

* Oil Price | Exxon restarts Illinois refinery: Exxon has begun to restart some units at its refinery in Joliet, Illinois, after a three-week outage. The 251,800-bpd facility was shut down in the middle of July following a power outage caused by a storm. The refinery produces about 9 million gallons daily of gasoline and diesel.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs measures expanding reproductive health care protections: The latest laws add onto existing abortion rights in Illinois in three ways: protecting abortion patients from housing, workplace and other types of discrimination; shielding out-of-state patients from investigations launched beyond Illinois’ borders; and protecting patients who need emergency abortion care in the event that federal protection weakens.

* Daily Herald | Senate transit forum Friday in DuPage lets riders share vision for trains, buses: Friday’s meeting is the third in a series of Transportation Committee forums across the region this summer. The topic is “the state of transit and how it supports community quality of life.” The meeting comes with a $730 million transit funding shortfall anticipated in 2026 when COVID-19 federal funding runs out. Ridership tanked during the pandemic and has not fully recovered.

* NCSL | NCSL Welcomes New Executive Officers Elected at Annual Legislative Summit: Other newly elected officers: Illinois Rep. Marcus C. Evans Jr. (D), president-elect: Elected to the House in 2012, Evans serves as assistant majority leader and chairman of the Labor and Commerce Committee under House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch. He has been actively involved with NCSL since 2016, serving on the Executive Committee, the Task Force on State and Local Taxation, the Task Force on Energy Supply and numerous others.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | What to eat, see and do while attending the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago: When in Chicago, eating well is practically required. Start with this list of classic summertime treats — ice creams galore, a negroni slushy — perfect for cooling off in August. If you try only one thing, we recommend the signature stack from Original Rainbow Cone (locations in Streeterville and in Wicker Park, a 10 minute drive from the United Center). For late night bites after a long day of talking shop, check out Lilac Tiger or Quartino. Early risers should get one of the best breakfast sandwiches in town from Spinning J or Kasama.

* Sun-Times | Cook County to open Bronzeville health center near old Michael Reese Hospital site: “This is a particularly poignant moment — we’re located here on 31st Street in the shadows of the old Michael Reese Hospital campus to announce a new investment in the health of residents on the South Side of Chicago,” Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said at a news conference Wednesday. Cook County Health and the Cook County Bureau of Asset Management will invest $10 million in the new 26,000-square-foot facility, Preckwinkle said. Once completed, the center will have 44 exam rooms and a gym for therapy services.

* Sun-Times | Chicago could fill food desert with three-store network of city-owned grocery stores, consultant says: The new 200-page report from HR&A concludes Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to open a city-owned grocery store is “necessary, feasible and implementable.” Necessary because volatility in the grocery market has led to a wave of consolidations and store closings concentrated in South and West Side neighborhoods.

* US Bets | Bally’s Chicago Casino Revenue Flat For July: The Illinois Gaming Board reported Bally’s temporary casino in downtown Chicago generated $10.4 million in adjusted gross revenue for July, practically unchanged from June as statewide numbers showed a slight month-over-month decline. The $135.8 million in operator winnings from the state’s 15 casinos was down 1.8% from June’s total of $138.3 million. Unadjusted revenue was up 1.9% from July 2023 but down 7.9% when excluding first-year venues, Bally’s Chicago and Walker’s Bluff.

* Block Club | Steve Albini’s Electrical Audio Recording Studio Looks To Future After Iconic Owner’s Death: “We want to honor Steve’s legacy and keep his vision alive,” said Taylor Hales, Electrical Audio studio manager. “Steve and Electrical cast a big shadow, and I know that this place means so much to so many people that have made records here. All of us just love working here at this studio that Steve made, and we want to continue on this journey.”

* Tribune | Chicago Bears training camp report: Coaches on Caleb Williams’ progress, a D’Andre Swift highlight and a kicker thinking about tackling: The Bears defense, which was missing five starters in practice, continues to look like it’s keeping the offense and rookie quarterback Caleb Williams in check during practices. The Bears had a handful of completed passes and not many explosive plays in full-team periods. But offensive coordinator Shane Waldron said there are signs of progress from Williams that make the Bears think he’s moving closer to putting it all together.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | League of Women Voters — Not for women only! Wheaton chapter elects its first male president: Maury Goodman of Warrenville was elected as president of the Wheaton chapter, which serves Carol Stream, Warrenville, West Chicago, Wheaton and Winfield, this summer. He will lead the chapter’s efforts to register and educate voters and encourage people to vote in the 2024 General Election and the 2025 Consolidated Election. Goodman is an emeritus scientist at Argonne National Lab and a retired U.S. Army Captain. He earned a Ph.D. in physics at the University of Illinois and a B.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His extensive public service resume includes five terms as an alderman in the City of Warrenville, 12 years volunteering as a troop leader with the Girl Scouts, and mentoring students from the Illinois Math and Science Academy.

* ABC Chicago | Lori Lightfoot to release findings from investigation into Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard: Lightfoot will speak at a public meeting Thursday night following Monday’s chaotic board meeting. […] This all started back in March, when three former employees filed a lawsuit against Mayor Henyard, alleging they were wrongfully fired for refusing to do political work for Henyard. Lightfoot was then hired by village trustees to independently investigate her administration’s spending, including a lavish village-funded trip to Las Vegas last year.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | Former Peoria Township Supervisor Frank Abdnour is running for the office once again: After losing reelection, Abdnour became a source of controversy after it was discovered that he had collected federal and state unemployment benefits after losing office. This is not allowed. […] Abdnour maintained it was an “honest mistake” and he did not know that public officials did not qualify for unemployment benefits after losing office.

* WCIA | Arcola Broom Palace making progress: The mayor said the community is moving in the right direction for revitalizing the downtown area. Officials are hoping the Broom Palace will help bring in thousands of tourists each year. […] The outside of the Broom Palace is scheduled to be finished by the Arcola Broomcorn Festival on Sept. 6 – 8. The building is estimated to be done by the end of the year.

* WSIL | Cobden Lions Club finishes prep for Peach Festival:: The Lions Club sent pictures to News 3 of its team working on a new pavilion that will house its “Spin to Win” game at this year’s festival. The pavilion features a large covering in case of weather and highlights a hand-made peach sculpture crafted by local artist Jackson Forge (Jack Nawrot) or Cobden.

* WCIA | Burglar steals 35 guns, 10,000 rounds from Springfield storage unit: It happened on July 27 at Mansa Mini Storage, located at 2171 South 9th Street. Stolen firearms included AK-47s, handguns and shotguns. Detectives revisited the area on July 29 to continue the investigation, when they located a white man with shaggy brown hair. They said he looked to be in his late 20s or early 30s. Upon seeing the police, the man ran away.

*** National ***

* AP | 2024 Olympics: What to know about the closing ceremony in Paris: The women’s basketball gold medal game is the last event before the closing ceremony. It’s scheduled to tip off at 8:30 a.m. CST at Bercy Arena. The closing ceremony is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. CST on Sunday at Stade de France just north of Paris. It’s expected to last until 4:15 p.m. CST.

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Live coverage

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Aug 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What are y’all’s food recs for the DNC?



* Journal Courier

The Redneck Fishing Tournament, an annual quest to have fun while ridding the Illinois River of an invasive species, is ready for another run this summer.

The tournament, hosted by the 279 residents of Bath, takes place along the Illinois River, which forms the western border of the village. This year’s event will be Aug 1-3. Activities on the first day are dominated by a kids’ fishing tournament.

The tournament is a blend of fun and a serious mission. The fun is the festivities and the fishing. The serious part is fundraising and trying to reduce the number of copi, formerly known as Asian carp, in the Illinois River.

“Ugly fish, cold beer, good causes and great times. If you haven’t experienced the Redneck Fishing Tournament, you owe it to yourself to check it out,” said tournament organizer Nikki Gregerson.

* The top copi catchers



If you’re curious you can try copi during the State Fair at Conservation World.

*** DNC***

* Sun-Times | Where Chicago DNC hosts will get the parties started: The Chicago 2024 Host Committee on Wednesday announced the locations of the three giant parties it is throwing to kick off the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The convention runs Aug. 19-22, with thousands of delegates and journalists expected to begin arriving the weekend before.

* The Triibe | Chicago Police to get the bulk of $75 million in DNC security funds: The document states that $26.7 million of the DOJ funds will be spent on personnel. Of that, more than $17.6 million is allocated to CPD for personnel, including operations and training, as well as regular and overtime pay. The Fire Department will get $4.7 million for operational and personnel costs. The OEMC will receive nearly $800,000 for the event. Another $3.7 million is going toward “Asset Protection Personnel,” according to the budget document. In an emailed statement, the OBM said the Asset Protection Program “is typically a term used to describe strategies and measures implemented by governments to safeguard valuable assets from risks or loss.” However, OBM could not disclose whether the program is part of another agency or a standalone entity.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago’s DNC Organizers Hosting Virtual Community Impact Meetings For Residents: These meetings come after neighbors who live near the United Center have said they’re concerned about the effect of all the tight security restrictions and large crowds. Police and the Secret Service addressed just those concerns. In July, officials unveiled the security perimeters around both the United Center and McCormick Place during the DNC. The secure areas for the convention are divided into a vehicle-screening perimeter and a pedestrian-restricted perimeter.

* Tribune | Chicago business owners unsure if they’ll see DNC business boost: Owner Rick Cheng speculated that diners might be trying to avoid the area during the Democratic National Convention. The Oyster House, at 1933 S. Indiana Ave., is located within the security perimeter outside of McCormick Place. […] Cheng said that typically people booking private parties during other large conventions book reservations months in advance. For the DNC, during which Chicago expects 50,000 visitors to descend upon the city, Cheng said, “We got nada.”

* Block Club Chicago | Illinois Black Panther Party Honored In New Exhibit Ahead Of DNC: When the Democratic National Convention came to Chicago in 1968, the Illinois Black Panther Party was just beginning. That August 56 years ago, Bobby Rush, Bob Brown and Fred Hampton came together to found the party’s Chicago chapter. Now — ahead of another Democratic National Convention in the Windy City — the Epiphany Center for the Arts, 201 S. Ashland Ave., and the Historical Preservation Society of the Illinois Chapter of the Black Panther Party are honoring the Illinois chapter’s history of Black political struggle in a new exhibit.

*** Chicago ***

* Injustice Watch | Rising rents, unlivable apartments leave tenants desperate, confused, and often helpless: An Injustice Watch investigation found thousands of lower-income renters in Chicago are trapped in unsafe buildings, forced to pay rising rents, even as many landlords are allowed to shirk their responsibilities to keep buildings safe, warm, and free of rats.

* People’s Fabric | “Y’all jump out on us every day”—Tactical team that killed Dexter Reed was involved in a shooting 24 hours earlier: The new videos from March 20 show the squad who killed Reed rolling through the same West Side neighborhood with another unmarked police SUV. Nine plainclothes tactical officers stop and hop out of their vehicle to search a man sitting in a chair on the sidewalk, citing a “large bulge” in his waistband on their investigatory stop report. Cops ultimately found nothing. Within seconds, however, the encounter turned fatal—not for a human, but somebody’s pet. Body-worn camera videos activated after the fact capture, without audio, officer Michael Ambrose pumping multiple rounds into a gray pit bull who approached him excitedly.

* Crain’s | Climate change is slowing moves from the Snow Belt to Sun Belt: The implications for Chicago and other cold-climate cities are obvious in a study that says “the U.S. population is starting to move away from areas increasingly exposed to extreme heat days toward historically colder areas, which are becoming more attractive as extreme cold days become increasingly rare.”

* Crain’s | American Bar Association names new president: Thompson Coburn partner Bill Bay has been tapped as the next president of the Chicago-based American Bar Association. Having served as chair of the ABA house of delegates and chair of the ABA section on litigation, Bay brings experience to the role, which he assumed yesterday following the close of the ABA house of delegates meeting in Chicago. He replaces Mary Smith.

* Block Club | Cellphone Thefts Ruin Lollapalooza For Some, But Fest Arrests Down: The music festival, which ran Thursday-Sunday in Grant Park, saw arrests drop to a five-year low, with nine arrests made and seven citations issued, according to the Office of Emergency Management and Communications. There were 63 ambulance transports made over the course of the fest. […] But cellphone thefts remain a stubborn problem at Lollapalooza.

* NBC Chicago | Meet ‘Oscar from Chicago,’ Lollapalooza fan plucked from crowd to drum with The Killers: NBC Chicago caught up with the lucky fan, 20-year-old Oscar Reza Bautista, on Monday. “I had seen people play the drums with them before, and I said, ‘I want to be one of them,’” Reza Bautista said. “Brandon starts looking at my sign and pointing at it, and everything starts shaking.”

* Tribune | ‘Hot Ones’ live event coming to Chicago on Aug. 28: Stella Artois will host the event Aug. 28 at Moonlight Studios from 6-9 p.m. as part of Stella Artois’ Let’s Do Dinner Summer Series. The series will also have stops in Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Atlanta and New York City. More than 300 contestants at the event will take part in the “Wings of Death” in an eat-along experience with 10 mouth-watering hot sauces. Evans will be joined by a special celebrity guest, who will be announced the week before the event.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Capitol News Illinois | South suburban airport could bring over $1B in economic activity, per report: A study from the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a think tank with ties to organized labor, found that building a cargo-focused airport in the south suburbs would create around 6,300 total jobs. […] The Illinois General Assembly has recently taken several steps to advance progress on the long-delayed south suburban airport. In 2023, state legislators passed a law requiring the Illinois Department of Transportation to develop a process for requesting contractors and other developers to submit plans.

* Daily Herald | Jury orders city of Naperville to pay $22.5M in damages connected to wrongful conviction in arson, murder: A federal jury awarded the damages to William Amor’s estate, the Chicago Tribune reported Tuesday. […] He spent 22 years in prison before a judge ruled that advances in fire science proved descriptions in his confession were impossible. The judge later acquitted him. Amor filed a federal lawsuit against the city in 2018. He died last year before the case went to trial.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville police make 21st gun-related arrest in Topgolf parking lot since August 2023: Officers approached Altman-McCray and another person after they retuned to the vehicle and found that while Altman-McCray possessed a valid Firearm Owner’s Identification card and Concealed Carry License, he had improperly stowed the weapon and was in possession of the firearm while allegedly intoxicated, Munch said. […] Naperville police also have been making arrests on drug-related charges outside the facility in recent weeks.

* Daily Herald | ‘Everything was gone’: Burglars tunnel through stores to steal $1.5M in jewelry from Woodfield: Schaumburg police said the crime was discovered by a construction worker who entered a vacant store adjacent to Marquise Jewelry at about 9:30 a.m. Monday and reported a hole in the drywall. Police said they found the suspects covered one of the surveillance cameras to avoid detection. More disturbing was how the burglars gained access to their store. The couple found a small hole in the wall, and later learned from police the burglars cut through the walls of three other businesses to get to their jewelry store.

* Patch | Will County Brewing Company Closes Channahon Bar For Good: About a year and a half after Will County Brewing Company opened their second location, taking over the shuttered River Hawk Brewery along Route 6, the owners of the Shorewood-based microbrewery have decided that enough is enough, it’s time to close the Channahon location forever.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Pork Patio serves up family favorites at Illinois State Fair: The menu will feature budget friendly classics, including chop on-a-stick, pork twister, pork burgers, pork chops, and BBQ pulled pork sandwiches. JBS, Smithfield, Tyson, and Rantoul Foods have generously donated pork for the patio. Illinois pig farmers, industry organizations, sports teams, and other volunteers graciously spend time working shifts at the fair to serve customers and make the patio a success.

* WPSD | Southern Illinois sinkhole causes apartment building to ‘fall into the earth’: A sinkhole forced three families to evacuate Sunday, Aug. 4, after shifting an apartment building 23 inches, according to Carrier Mills Police Chief Scott Isaacs. […] The sinkhole was discovered Sunday morning when a spouse of a city street department employee was traveling on Russell Street and noticed the road had buckled, according to Isaacs.

* River Bender | Southern Illinois University Carbondale Faculty Secure New Contract: The agreement not only provides salary adjustments for faculty but also reforms office hour policies to encourage more comprehensive student engagement, and it provides support for program directors and coordinators who work to recruit and grow students in programs across campus.

* WSIL | Carterville’s National Night Out helps the community meet their local police officers: Officer Travis Morgan hopes these events help remove any divides between the police and the people they serve. “But I’m big on the personal relationship between the police and the community. Especially since becoming a school resource officer and seeing the kids recognize you,” Morgan says. “So tonight it’s a good time. It’s great for the kids and the families.”

*** National ***

* AP | NASA delays next crew launch to buy more time at the space station for Boeing’s troubled capsule: Tuesday marked the two-month point at the space station for Starliner’s test pilots, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who should have been back by mid-June. NASA is weighing all its options for returning the two veteran astronauts, including a ride home in a SpaceX capsule. “NASA and Boeing continue to evaluate the spacecraft’s readiness, and no decisions have been made regarding Starliner’s return,” NASA said in a statement. Further details were expected at a news conference set for Wednesday.

  23 Comments      


Your moment of zen

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Thousands of rubber ducks were dumped in the Chicago River today to benefit Special Olympics Illinois. Photo from Colin Boyle, one of my favorite Chicago photojournalists

* WGN

The Ducky Derby will raise more than $300,000 for Special Olympics Illinois athletes. Ducks can still be purchased for $10 each right up until the massive dump truck of rubber ducks is poured off the Columbus Bridge and into the river.

Ashley Jones, this year’s Special Olympics Illinois Ambassador, will race down and pluck the lucky duck that wins the race out of the river.

“I’m so excited,” said Jones, a 13-time Special Olympian with gold medals in gymnastics several years in a row. […]

“I’ve been able to see her make a lot of friends, grow a lot of leadership skills,” Tatiana Jones, Ashley’s sister, says. “She’s had an opportunity to travel, have fun, participate in a lot of sports, and have once-in-a-lifetime experiences like this.”

You can watch the Ducky Derby live by clicking here.

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Pritzker calls for Sangamon County Sheriff Campbell’s resignation (Updated x3)

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Governor Pritzker at an unrelated news conference this morning

Amanda Vinicky: Could speak about you why are you calling for the resignation of the Sangamon County Sheriff? And also, I believe, you committed to the Massey family that you would sign a bill in her name?

Governor Pritzker: That’s a little inaccurate. We had a conversation about it. There wasn’t a bill. There were some ideas that were discussed when I visited with the Massey family.

But let me just begin by reminding everybody of this terrible tragedy and something that never should happen anywhere in the United States, let alone in the state of Illinois or in Sangamon County. Where a woman who called police to get help, asked them to protect her was instead killed by the deputy sheriff. And if you watch the video, in a horrific fashion.

I can’t get past the idea that we have to do more to protect people. We’ve done a lot, and I want to credit the Illinois State Police, who did the investigation in a very short 10 days. That’s hard to do, to do an investigation, because you’ve got to do a lot of interviews. It’s a, you know, I think a fulsome endeavor and came to the state’s attorney, who immediately was able to get a grand jury to file charges. So it happened in a quick fashion as it can. But it never should have happened in the first place.

And I talked to one of the Black elected leaders in Illinois just after it happened, to get her perspective and she shared with me because I was so upset about it. She shared with me that even though, yeah, we haven’t made enough progress. She said to me that, you know, in years past, there never would have been an investigation. There wouldn’t have been a body cam. No one would have known what really happened. And maybe the silver lining, if there is a silver lining in this, is that someone is being held accountable. And yet we have much more to do.

So, yes, I sat with the Massey family and promised them that we would look at every avenue to determine how we might prevent this from happening to anyone ever again.

And I called for the Sheriff’s resignation, because the sheriff has failed. He has failed to explain how he ended up hiring this deputy sheriff who has been fired from other departments. He failed to put forward reforms that clearly need to be made, training and other reforms.

And [Campbell] still has failed to meet with the Massey family. That seems to me, I’m not saying that’s a fireable offense to not meet with them. But that just seems outrageous to me. At a minimum, listen to them, hear them and then, hopefully, take action.

So that’s why I called, and the Lieutenant Governor and I did that together, just to be clear, called for his resignation.

…Adding… WAND reporter Caryn Eisert has Sheriff Campbell’s response

I was overwhelmingly elected to lead the Sheriff’s Office through both good times and bad. I am fully prepared to continue leading my office and serving the residents of Sangamon County through this difficult period, ensuring we learn from this tragedy and work toward a better future.

* Campbell’s full statement…

The Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office continues to grieve for Sonya Massey and her family. While our grief cannot compare to the pain of the family, our office is trying to heal from within; All employees of the Sheriff’s Office feel betrayed by one of their own.
 
On four separate occasions, I have requested to meet with the Massey family through intermediaries designated by the family. My requests have been rejected or not accepted. I am still willing to meet with the family.

The Sheriff’s Office is willing to modify our hiring practices in order to prevent an incident like this from occurring again. However, before changes can be made, it is important to identify the problem. We have used a process that we believe was consistent with statewide standards. If these standards are deficient, we would advocate a change at all necessary levels. 

We are working diligently to gather all the facts in order to make intelligent decisions and to avoid making changes that are unlikely to lead to meaningful results. I agree with the Governor’s comments from yesterday, there are still questions. I have worked tirelessly to make all the facts available to the public as swiftly and transparently as possible.

I am committed to working with our community and elected leaders to improve not only the Sheriff’s Office but also hiring standards on a statewide level to prevent a state agency from certifying a similar law enforcement officer six different times in the future. 

We need to unite and heal. The one responsible is in jail and will never work in law enforcement again. Calls for my resignation are nothing more than political maneuvering during a tragic event and only hurt the good citizens of Sangamon County.

I was overwhelmingly elected to lead the Sheriff’s Office through both good times and bad. I am fully prepared to continue leading my office and serving the residents of Sangamon County through this difficult period, ensuring we learn from this tragedy and work toward a better future.
 

…Adding… The governor pushed back on Campbell’s statement during his second press conference of the day

It’s been a month. It’s been a month. We should have seen already a meeting with the Massey family. If he’s reached out, he hasn’t done a very good job, because the Massey family hasn’t had the meeting that they’ve asked for.

Second, as you know, the deputy sheriff resigned from every position. [Sean Grayson] held positions for less than a year, sometimes for just a few months, six times resigned. And I ask the question simply, and I think people have for a month now, what did the sheriff know about his background? Why didn’t he do more work on his background before hiring him? And a month has gone by again. A lot could have been said about that over the course of this month.

And the final thing is, this isn’t about politics. It’s about bringing people together in Sangamon County and making people feel safe. It’s the sheriff’s job to make people feel safe, and he’s done the opposite of that by not answering questions, by going to a church and beginning his remarks by saying, I’m not resigning, like as if that’s the first thing people want to hear. And then there are signs that have been put up about saving him, not doing something about the murder of Sonia Massey, but about saving his political career. So I think he’s the one that’s played politics. It’s time for him to go.

  60 Comments      


Pritzker signs three abortion-related bills

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP

Abortion was slightly more common across the U.S. in the first three months of this year than it was before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and cleared the way for states to implement bans, a report released Wednesday found.

A major reason for the increase is that some Democratic-controlled states enacted laws to protect doctors who use telemedicine to see patients in places that have abortion bans, according to the quarterly #WeCount report for the Society of Family Planning, which supports abortion access. […]

Fallout from the Supreme Court’s June 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization has remade the way abortion works across the country. The #WeCount data, which has been collected in a monthly survey since April 2022, shows how those providing and seeking abortion have adapted to changing laws.

The survey found that the number of abortions fell to nearly zero in states that ban abortion in all stages of pregnancy and declined by about half in places that ban it after six weeks of pregnancy, before many women know they are pregnant. Fourteen states are enforcing bans on abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with some exceptions, and four others bar it after about six weeks of pregnancy. [.,.]

Numbers went up in places where abortion remains legal until further into pregnancy — and especially in states such as Illinois, Kansas and New Mexico, which border states with bans.

* From the report

During the period of January-March 2024, states that provided the largest average number of abortions per month included California (16,217), New York (9,660), Illinois (8,243), Florida (7,470), and New Jersey (4,983)

In June, WTTW reported 25% of Planned Parenthood of Illinois patients are from out of state — compared to about 4% pre-Dobbs.

* Governor JB Pritzker…

Today Governor JB Pritzker, joined by legislators, civil rights leaders, and activists, signed multiple bills designed to further protect reproductive rights in Illinois. The package of bills signed includes HB581, which ensures that pregnant women can access needed emergency medical care, HB5239, which expands Illinois’ shield laws, and HB4867, which clarifies and expands the Illinois Human Rights Act to prohibit discrimination based on reproductive health decisions.

“It is no longer enough to legislate for the current moment. We sadly have to anticipate a future when the Supreme Court and other bad actors further restrict and punish women seeking to exercise their medical rights and control over their bodies. ​ These new laws will ensure that women in Illinois and those travelling from out of state can avoid persecution and discrimination on every level,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “These laws work together alongside the legislation my administration has already put in place to ensure providers and patients alike can make the best decisions for themselves, their bodies, and their families without fear of retribution or legal liability from hostile states.”

“These bills ensure that medical decisions remain where they belong - in the hands of individuals and their doctors,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “Our state is committed to being a place where the full spectrum of reproductive healthcare is accessible and respected. The legislation signed today ensures that Illinois remains a beacon of hope and personal freedom.”

The Illinois response to EMTALA was passed due to concerns that the U.S. Supreme Court could overturn the federal EMTALA, which protects people’s right to stabilizing emergency care, including abortion when it is necessary to save the life or health of a patient. The passage of HB5239 ensures that doctors can continue to provide, and women can continue to receive, life and health saving reproductive care even if the federal legal standards change.

Illinois has passed legislation that shields both providers and patients who travel to Illinois from being punished by states with draconian abortion and gender affirming care restrictions. In January of 2023, Governor Pritzker enacted an interstate shield law protecting providers, patients, and those who assist patients in any way from licensure consequences and out of state legal actions. HB5239 further expands these protections. ​ Under the law, state and local jurisdictions cannot provide any information or expend any resources to help an out of state entity investigate legal healthcare, including abortions or gender affirming care, provided in Illinois.

HB4867 adds reproductive health decisions to the Illinois Human Rights Act. Reproductive health decisions include a broad continuum of personal decisions regarding abortion and birth control, fertility or sterilization care, miscarriage management care, assisted reproductive technologies such as in-vitro fertilization, and prenatal, intranatal, and postnatal care.

HB 4867 clarifies and extends existing anti-discrimination protections by ensuring Illinoisans have the right to engage in reproductive health decision-making without facing discrimination. It also complements existing protections found in the Reproductive Health Act, which protects Illinoisans from State of Illinois interference with the fundamental rights of individuals to make autonomous decisions about their reproductive health. The Reproductive Health Decisions bill further protects Illinoisans from discrimination based on those decisions.

The protections apply across all areas of the Act, including employment, housing and real estate, financial credit, and public accommodations. Under this amendment, it would be a civil rights violation for:

An employer to terminate an employee for seeking to start or expand their family with the assistance of in-vitro fertilization
A housing provider to refuse a prospective tenant an apartment rental because the person had an abortion
A bank or credit union to deny an applicant a loan or credit because it would be used for fertility treatments

“Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, states around the country have enacted draconian measures to restrict patients’ access to critical reproductive health care – at the expense of patients’ health and lives,” Attorney General Kwame Raoul said. “My office is proud to continue to partner with Gov. Pritzker’s administration to draft legislation and identify new avenues to ensure Illinois is a safe haven for patients to access comprehensive abortion and gender-affirming care. I am committed to using the authority of my office to continue to defend against legal challenges to our laws that preserve Illinois as an oasis of reproductive health care.”

“Illinois stands as a sanctuary for all who seek to make personal health care decisions in privacy and safety,” said Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park). “These new laws reflect our unwavering commitment to protecting and valuing the rights of every individual.”

“Regardless of what happens at the federal level, or any decisions made by an extremist Supreme Court, in Illinois we believe that equitable access to safe reproductive health care is a fundamental right,” said House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch. “In Illinois, people seeking health care won’t be criminalized, providers will never be forced to abandon their patients, and we will remain a safe haven for anyone in need of lifesaving care. I want to thank Reps. Cassidy, Moeller, Avelar, as well as the rest of our House Reproductive Health Working Group for their commitment to ensuring Illinois has the strongest protections possible.”

* Sen. Celina Villanueva…

A new law from State Senator Celina Villanueva will ensure reproductive health care records are not being improperly disclosed.

“As we navigate the war on reproductive rights, preventative laws like this are essential in counteracting restrictive and overarching laws of other states,” said Villanueva (D-Chicago). “As a safe haven state, it is our responsibility to reinforce state-level protections where federal protections have failed us.”

Last year Villanueva led House Bill 4664 – a law to shield out-of-state patients and in-state providers from legal action originating from other states regarding abortions performed here. To expand upon that measure and provide further protections, Villanueva championed House Bill 5239 this year.

The law will ensure that location information and health records for reproductive health care performed in Illinois will not be subject to the Freedom of Information Act. Further, it will ensure that units of local governments could not assist in imposing a civil or criminal liability against a person or provider who received reproductive or gender affirming care in Illinois.

“While federal protections are important, they have made it clear that state-level protections are crucial in safeguarding reproductive rights,” said Villanueva. “This law stands to uphold state autonomy as we continue to make reproductive healthcare a priority.”

House Bill 5239 was signed into law Wednesday and is effective immediately.

* Sen. Laura Fine…

o further safeguard patients from discriminatory practices based on their reproductive health decisions, State Senator Laura Fine spearheaded a law that adds additional protections under the Human Rights Act.

“Reproductive health and family planning decisions are personal and it is important that there are laws in place to ensure these rights are upheld in Illinois,” said Fine (D-Glenview). “These additions to the Human Rights Act will provide necessary protections.”

House Bill 4867 will protect against unlawful discrimination for individuals who exercise their reproductive health rights. The law adds “reproductive health decisions” as a vital protection under the Human Rights Act. This ensures an individual is not discriminated against in employment or housing for their reproductive health decisions, including the use of contraception, fertility or sterilization care, assisted reproductive technologies, miscarriage management care, health care related to the continuation or termination of pregnancy, and prenatal, intranatal and postnatal care.

“Illinois supports individuals making personal health care choices,” said Fine. “This law will help individuals feel protected.”

House Bill 4867 was signed into law Wednesday and goes into effect Jan. 1, 2025.

* Sen. Celina Villanueva…

State Senator Celina Villanueva championed a newly signed law to continue to support reproductive health care, as anti-choice action threatens to infringe on people’s rights.

“These persistent anti-choice attacks are intolerable and protections are absolutely necessary,” said Villanueva (D – Chicago). “Women throughout Illinois and beyond have a constitutional right to access vital life-saving care and medically necessary services.”

House Bill 581 protects Illinois patients from another pending Supreme Court rollback of reproductive rights by ensuring Illinois hospitals must provide any medically necessary services—including abortion services—to stabilize a patient at risk of severe injury or death.

Villanueva’s measure came as the Supreme Court heard Moyle v. Idaho. This case questioned whether Idaho’s total abortion ban is exempt from the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act. Idaho argued that it should be exempt, which would have undermined critical patient protections in cases of severe pregnancy complications. The Supreme Court dismissed the case – putting it back in the hands of Idaho’s Ninth Circuit Court. However, it is expected the case will once again be heard before SCOTUS in the future – further securing the need for Illinois to ensure these protections remain in place and impose civil penalties on hospitals that refuse to provide lifesaving abortion procedures through House Bill 581.

“Maintaining and reinforcing measures that ensure the well-being and inalienable rights of women in Illinois will always be a priority,” said Villanueva. “By strengthening our reproductive health care laws to support the delicate process of bringing life into this world we are able to protect women in a nation that is committed to denying our rights.”

House Bill 581 was signed into law Wednesday and is effective immediately.

* Rep. Dagmara Avelar…

Today, Governor Pritzker signed into law House Bill 581, sponsored by Representative Dagmara ‘Dee’ Avelar, D-Romeoville, which will proactively protect women’s right to life-saving care from being restricted by adverse rulings from the Supreme Court of the United States.

“Today, Illinois stands as a model of compassion and care, reaffirming our commitment to ensuring that no pregnant person facing a medical crisis is denied the care they need,” said Representative Dagmara ‘Dee’ Avelar, D-Romeoville. “Unfortunately, we are being forced to take action as the recent decisions by the anti-choice majority on the Supreme Court has put the lives and wellbeing of millions of women at risk. I am proud to stand with Governor Pritzker and my colleagues in the General Assembly to remove the possibility of a Supreme Court ruling restricting the ability of pregnant people to receive the unfettered professional care that is their right.”

Although currently protected by federal law, the Supreme Court’s anti-choice majority deferred a ruling in Moyle v Idaho, a case that would exempt Idaho’s total abortion ban from the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA). Idaho has presented the Court with an argument that, if accepted, would dismantle critical patient protections in cases involving severe pregnancy complications. The court’s decision has kept open the possibility that they may interfere with women’s ability to access lifesaving care on very short notice.

Should the Supreme Court again strike down federal protections for patient health, House Bill 581 would ensure these protections remain in place in Illinois and would impose civil penalties on hospitals that refuse to provide lifesaving abortion procedures.

With the passage of this bill into law, women, and all pregnant people, will not have to worry about accessing lifesaving treatment in Illinois.

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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In less than one year, a new law will create credit card chaos for millions of Illinois consumers, small business owners and workers who rely on tips. The law changes how your credit card is processed and has never been done anywhere in the world. The end result is windfall for corporate mega-stores paid for through costly operational hurdles for small businesses and a loss of convenience and privacy for consumers who could have to pay tax and gratuity with cash. There’s still time to protect Illinois small business owners, consumers and workers by repealing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act now! For more information, visit guardyourcard.com/Illinois.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker sees the writing on the Walz — calls Minnesota governor chosen for VP slot ‘kind and decent human being.’Sun-Times

Viewed by many as a dark horse candidate, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has not been selected to serve as Kamala Harris’ running mate.

Harris instead chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as the Democratic Party’s vice presidential candidate on Tuesday. Elected to Congress in 2007, he has served as the governor of Minnesota since 2019. Walz, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly were widely viewed as the final contenders. […]

Speaking at a bill-signing in Chicago on Tuesday, Pritzker said he was “torn” about being considered as a vice presidential candidate and called the vetting “a grueling, long process,” despite it being an abbreviated one. […]

Pritzker would not definitively say whether he is considering a third run for governor in 2026 or would consider taking over for Walz as chair of the governors association should the ticket win.

“At the moment, I’m just focused on the job that I’ve got,” he said. He also said that he has not contemplated a Cabinet position should Democrats win.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will sign bills expanding reproductive rights access at 10 am. Then, at 3 pm the governor will unveil the 2024 Illinois State Fair Butter Cow at the State Fairgrounds. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | The nightmare is over: Chicago White Sox snap historic 21-game losing streak with 5-1 win: It was the team’s first victory since the first game of a July 10 doubleheader against the Minnesota Twins at Guaranteed Rate Field. That was nearly a month ago. The skid ends with the Sox tied with the 1988 Baltimore Orioles for the second-longest losing streak in major-league history.


*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Johnson calls off plans for special meeting to confirm Sigcho-Lopez as Zoning chair: Unable to attract a quorum, Mayor Brandon Johnson has abandoned plans to interrupt the Chicago City Council’s summer recess to install Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) as Zoning Committee chair. “We never meet in August. August has traditionally has been the month off for all of the City Council. I know many of my colleagues are traveling. I’m getting ready to go to a family reunion,” said Finance Committee Chair Pat Dowell (3rd).

* Crain’s | Johnson under pressure as budget gap could reach nearly $1 billion: “All options are on the table” for Mayor Brandon Johnson as his administration prepares for a significantly larger budget gap in 2025 than the $538 million shortfall he closed after taking office last year, according to the city’s budget director. When the city announced the $538 million gap last year in its annual forecast, officials projected a $986 million gap for 2025 under a baseline economic outlook. Budget Director Annette Guzman has met with members of the City Council and department leaders in recent weeks to warn the outlook hasn’t changed much in the last year.

* Sun-Times | Before gunfight with Dexter Reed, Chicago cops made 50 traffic stops in just 3 days: In the wake of the shooting, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling has pushed to overhaul the department’s controversial traffic stop practices under an ongoing federal consent decree. Advocates and activists argue the pace of court-ordered reform is too slow to address a pressing issue that was brought into sharp focus when Reed was fatally shot. Many have called on the department to immediately disband its tactical units and to stop making traffic stops as an excuse to conduct searches.

* The Triibe | How Chicago’s young peacekeepers build up community to bring down violence: Through its summer Peacekeepers pilot program, GKMC is building on the heart of its mission, using healing, restorative justice practices and a holistic approach to violence prevention. This approach addresses the root causes of violence rather than taking a punitive approach, and the program makes space for “young people to be the peacekeepers and the changemakers,” said Carlil Pittman, executive director of GKMC, and brother of Carleeta Pittman.

* Sun-Times | Greyhound to be booted from West Loop station by mid-September, CEO says — so city must act now: Greyhound and other bus carriers are set to be evicted from their longtime station in the West Loop in mid-September. The city hasn’t offered a viable alternative with indoor accommodations. The bus lines’ mostly low-income riders may soon find themselves waiting outdoors with their belongings and without restrooms or protection from harsh weather.

* WBBM | Once vacant lot in Chicago’s South Side Bronzeville now a sanctuary: The new outdoor space at Martin Luther King Drive in East 47th Street in Bronzeville offers the community a green space to enjoy. The ribbon cutting ceremony for the South Side Sanctuary plaza featured an opening from the King College Prep High School marching band and included local vendors, selling food, drinks and merchandise.

* Block Club | Bea Lumpkin, Chicago Labor Legend, Marks 106th Birthday As She Keeps Up The Fight For Workers’ Rights: The labor organizer, who has been active since the ’30s, celebrated her birthday with retired steelworkers this week — but only after speaking on the presidential race, union contracts, intergenerational unity and other causes that have defined her life.

* Block Club | Christkindlmarket Will Not Return To Wrigleyville In 2024: Organizers of the popular Christkindlmarket announced the German-style outdoor market will not return to Wrigley Field’s Gallagher Way in 2024. “Due to the NHL Winter classic and additional programming, the Christkindlmarket will not take place in Wrigleyville at Gallagher Way this year,” the market’s organizers wrote in a statement. “(We) regret any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate the community’s understanding and we look forward to returning to Lakeview in future years.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | How Palatine plans to jump start development near Dundee Road and Route 53: While taxing bodies collect property taxes from the frozen value, dollars from new growth go into a fund that can be used to cover infrastructure costs in the project area. The new TIF district includes 17 parcels and 24 buildings on 44 acres.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Massey family holds vigil one month after her death: The vigil packed the small street. Her family, who is still processing it all, said the support has helped them a long these thirty days, but their path towards healing will go much longer. “The community has been awesome and great for us, with us being together, and not just the Massey family having to do this by ourselves,” [Shadia Massey, Sonya’s cousin] said.

* WGLT | An effort would let voters weigh in on the Sangamon County Sheriff’s job: Campbell’s term as sheriff won’t end until 2026. The ballot initiative would be non-binding, so Campbell, 60, would not be forced to leave no matter the outcome.

* WGEM | ‘That is fiscal insanity’: Western Illinois University board approves staff reduction: In a special board of trustees meeting early Tuesday morning, Western Illinois University administration unanimously received approval to proceed with more layoffs. This comes as Western is trying to balance a $20 million budget deficit. However, the question as to how many employees will be laid off still remains. Administrators would not release a number.

* SJ-R | Illinois State Fair, art showcase and more: 5 things to do around Springfield: The first week of the Illinois State Fair means fun for the whole family and enough sugary food to keep kids bouncing the entire day. But the fair isn’t the only thing going on this weekend. Here’s a look at five things to do in the Springfield area this weekend.

* Shaw Local | It’s (almost) showtime at the Illinois State Fair: The Illinois State Fair will kick off this week in Springfield with music, a parade and plenty of food. Illinois 4-H will serve as the grand marshals of this year’s Twilight Parade, celebrating youth involved in the state’s No. 1 industry.

* WCIA | Meet the traveling plumber representing Central Illinois in a national competition: Now, Hall is taking those traits to the next level. He won the Illinois Pipe Trades Plumbing Championship for Apprentices in the spring. […] Hall’s next stop is the national competition in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He’ll be competing against six others in the plumbing category.

*** National ***

* Reuters | US judge describes how Google built and defended illegal search monopoly: U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta on Monday ruled that Google had violated antitrust law by spending billions of dollars to secure exclusive agreements with developers, carriers and equipment makers to be the default search engine. […] “Sure, users can access Google’s rivals by switching the default search access point or by downloading a rival search app or browser. But the market reality is that users rarely do so.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Aug 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill on Tuesday that’s aimed at providing free identification cards to more people exiting correctional facilities in Illinois.

The state already provides identification cards to people leaving the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, but the new law expands the program to every county jail and federal prison in the state. It took effect upon Pritzker’s signature. […]

The new law also allows officials to verify a social security number through the Social Security Administration instead of being shown a physical card.

Pritzker said without identification, people returning to society from correctional facilities are deprived of a basic need.

“For returning citizens, at a time when they need the most support to get reestablished in society, the lack of identification often shuts them out,” he said. “They can’t pursue employment opportunities, they can’t pursue housing, social services, health care.”

* Illinois Answers reporter Alex Nitkin


* Illinois Times

It’s August – that means the Illinois State Fair and its must-see, iconic butter cow sculpture is back again.

And so is the annual miniature butter cow contest sponsored by Illinois Times and Prairie Farms Dairy. The contest, which started in 2020 when the fair was canceled because of the COIVD-19 pandemic, invites people to try their hand at sculpting their own butter cow creations. […]

This season, some notable young butter artists are honing their creative skills.
One of them is Giovanni Steele, 9, of Springfield.

Giovanni, who was in the contest last year with his mother, Abbey Caitlin Steele, asked his mother if they could compete again. Their summertime butter masterpiece, named “Moo Lincoln,” is a cow wearing the classic stovepipe hat Abraham Lincoln wore.

I give you “Moo Lincoln”



*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Kamala Harris picks Walz for VP — not Pritzker: Speaking at a bill signing in Chicago on Tuesday, Pritzker said he was “torn” about being considered as a vice presidential candidate and called the vetting “a grueling, long process,” despite it being an abbreviated one.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | National blood supply is running thin. Here’s how to help keep it from hurting local health care: Since July 1, the organization’s supply has fallen by more than 25%. Four blood drives in Illinois and more than 100 others nationwide had to be called off because of high temperatures, the Red Cross said. Other seasonal obstacles such as travel and summer activities also have meant fewer people donating. All those factors contributed to a shortfall of over 19,000 blood donations in July, the organization reported.

*** Illinois State Fair ***

* WSIU | IDPH to Offer Public Health Information, Services at Illinois State Fair: You will also find IDPH at Conservation World at the State Fair, with information about how to prevent “vector-borne” diseases carried by mosquitoes and ticks, along with information on safe consumption of fish from Illinois waterways.

* SJ-R | There’s nothing fair about these new food items at the 2024 Illinois State Fair: The flavor of the Illinois State Fair has been announced, and it’s about as close as you can get to healthy as far as fair foods go. Raspberry Crunch, a Prairie Farms original, features fresh raspberries frozen in vanilla ice cream with granola crunch topping. Midwest Dairy manager of farmers relations Kendra Anderson said the idea came to the team around six months ago, as a healthy follow up to last years’ theme of cookies and cream.

* Outdoor News | Illinois Mixed Bag: Conservation World returns to state fair: Among the offerings this year is DNR’s cicada art show, an Eagle’s nest photo opportunity, opportunities to catch a fish, try Copi (invasive carp), practice archery and BB shooting skills, ride in the Voyageur Canoe, dunk a conservation police officer, enjoy the Paul Bunyan Lumberjack Show, talk with DNR wildlife biologists and purchase hunting and fishing licenses.

*** DNC ***

* Sun-Times | Fed judge mulling whether to intervene in DNC dustup between City Hall, protest groups: A federal judge is expected to hand down a key ruling by early next week in a months-long dispute between City Hall and groups promising a massive protest during Chicago’s upcoming Democratic National Convention. U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood heard roughly two hours of arguments Monday while considering a request for her intervention in a conflict over where those protesters will be allowed to march during the convention, which begins Aug. 19.

* Tribune | City, protests groups still at odds over routes for DNC marches and demonstrations: Several pro-Palestinian groups who together sued the city in March in an effort to secure protest routes within “sight and sound” of the convention were in court again Monday to demand a more direct and longer route along Washington Boulevard for their “March on the DNC.” Their attorney, Chris Williams, said they were “blindsided” by the possibility that they might not be able to hold speeches in a park two blocks north of the United Center. […] “The way the city is doing this is take-it-or-leave-it, ‘you do what we say,’” Williams told U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood. “It’s not enough to say, ‘You have a route, you’re going to live with it.’ You’re going to have chaos.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Indiana businessman not guilty of bribing Cook County assessor officials with free golf, fed jury finds: A federal jury Tuesday cleared an Indiana businessman who had been accused of bribing officials at the Cook County assessor’s office with free golf in return for lowered property assessments — a rare loss for public corruption prosecutors at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse. The trial of businessman Robert Mitziga lasted roughly a week. It exposed jurors not just to the inner-workings of the assessor’s office but to the lure of posh, high-end golf clubs — particularly one in southwest Michigan, about 90 miles from Chicago.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s maternal care gap worsening, creating deserts in South and West sides: A joint report by the American Medical Association and the Sinai Urban Health Institute finds obstetric and gynecological closures, particularly since 2018, have had a significant negative effect on maternal and infant health in its analysis of maternal care by ZIP code. […] Since 2018, three OB-GYN facilities that were more convenient for residents of the South and West sides have closed and many ZIP codes have no access to OB-GYN physicians for childbearing female residents, the release said. These maternity deserts require expectant mothers to travel outside of their neighborhoods to receive routine or specialty OB-GYN care, the release noted.

* Block Club | Day Laborers Say They Are Being Beaten, Harassed Outside Home Depot By Off-Duty Cops: Five recently arrived migrants say criminal trespassing enforcement at a Southwest Side Home Depot has escalated to alleged physical assaults by security personnel, including multiple off-duty Chicago Police officers. The allegations are at the heart of a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday, which names two Chicago police officers, two Home Depot employees, and other unnamed security personnel and police officers, in addition to the city and Home Depot, as defendants. In the course of its six-month investigation into the treatment of migrant laborers, City Bureau learned of the pending suit.

* Tribune | Protesters in Daley Plaza rally decry reelection of Venezuelan president, claim voter fraud: The Venezuelan community in Chicago was disheartened in the days after the election. Many have family members in areas affected by protests and said they were worried their relatives might get imprisoned or even killed for having ties to the opposition. Human rights organizations in Venezuela have found the government’s solution to silence people’s discontent has been “through the disproportionate use of force” that has resulted in the deaths of protesters.

* Block Club | Divvy ‘Bike Sculpture’ On Oak Street Beach Made Entirely Of Bikes Dumped In The Lake: Members of the the group, the Alternative Anglers Association, pulled out 15 bikes from the lake in just a few hours Friday afternoon and built the bike sculpture over two days. Glenn Rischke, who created the group — formerly known as the Divvy Fishers Society — was shocked by how many bikes and how much construction material was on the floor of the lake, he said.

* Block Club | The Dave Matthews Band Chicago River Poop Incident, 20 Years Later: ‘Our Generation’s O’Leary’s Cow’: On the afternoon of Aug. 8, 2004, a charter bus belonging to the Dave Matthews Band drove across the Kinzie Street Bridge and emptied its septic tank over the Chicago River. The sewage ran through the metal grates of the bridge, and rather than landing in the water — itself a health hazard — it splattered onto more than 100 people on a sightseeing boat operated by the Chicago Architecture Foundation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Three Skokie parks renamed to honor Native American tribes: The name changes have been made online, but physical changes to the signs will take some time, said Michelle Tuft, executive director of the park district. […] The park district board unanimously voted in favor of the name changes at its July board meeting. In addition to the new signage, the park district will add QR codes with links to web pages about the history of the tribes and the pronunciation of the names, Tuft said.

* Daily Herald | DuPage Forest Preserve District moves to buy horse farm near Wheaton for $12 million: After several stalled attempts through the years, Danada’s owner — the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County — is now on track to buy the pastoral property to its east. On Tuesday, forest preserve commissioners authorized district leaders to negotiate and enter into a contract to acquire the Gladstone Ridge horse boarding center — also known as Bolger Farm — along Leask Lane. The cost is anticipated to be $12 million.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard says administrator fired, trustees OK handful of layoffs: Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard said Monday that Keith Freeman, the village’s administrator, has been fired, although trustees said the mayor lacked the legal authority to do so and did not move to support her decision. Trustees also voted to eliminate a handful of village jobs amid what they described as a “financial disaster” for the village and placed police Deputy Chief Lewis Lacey on administrative leave for an undefined period.

* WGN | Big Lots to close additional stores in Illinois: According to the company’s website, Burbank, Calumet City, Elgin and Oakbrook Terrace are Chicago-area stores on the chopping block. Centralia and Fairview Heights are two other Illinois locations set to close. Last month, the company announced Crest Hill, Lockport, and Niles will be shuttered.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | County board members pushing advisory referendum to voters to recall Campbell: Five Democrat Sangamon County Board members are pushing for an advisory referendum to give voters a say on the future of Sheriff Jack Campbell at the ballot box in November. The county board would have to pass the referendum at its Aug. 13 meeting for it to get on the ballot. Even if it passes the voters on Nov. 5, Campbell would not be bound to resign.

* WIFR | Former Rockford Speedway redevelopment off to the races: The former Rockford Speedway sits idly by, without so much as the roar of an engine or the cheer of a crowd. But not for much longer, according to Loves Park Mayor Greg Jury who says multiple businesses are on their way to fill in the empty space. Club Carwash and Belle Tire will start construction in just a few days as the only current businesses staking claim to the area. But Mayor Jury says this is just the beginning.

* VCF | Custard Cup Celebrates 75th Anniversary with Special Local Donations: These checks presented, representing $1,000 Custard Cup donations on top of funding donated by customers to their “Beneficiary of the Month;” included $2,126.77 to CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) of Vermilion County, $2,000 to Danville Youth Hockey, and $2,201.13 to the St, James United Methodist Church Food Pantry.

* WCIA | Communities across Central Illinois celebrating National Night Out: “National Night Out was started to bring neighbors and law enforcement together to establish relationships, and trust that it will do just that,” Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said in a news release. “Preventing crime in Illinois is one of my office’s top priorities, and I am proud that an increased number of volunteers from my office will participate in National Night Out events throughout the state. I encourage everyone to locate an event in their own community.”

*** National ***

* AP | Elon Musk’s X sues advertisers over alleged ‘massive advertiser boycott’ after Twitter takeover: The lawsuit’s allegations center on the early days of Musk’s Twitter takeover and not a more recent dispute with advertisers that came a year later. In November 2023, about a year after Musk bought the company, a number of advertisers began fleeing X over concerns about their ads showing up next to pro-Nazi content and hate speech on the site in general, with Musk inflaming tensions with his own posts endorsing an antisemitic conspiracy theory. Musk later said those fleeing advertisers were engaging in “blackmail” and, using a profanity, essentially told them to go away.

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ISP says it’s making progress

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

To help ensure those who are prohibited by law from having a firearm, and who pose a threat, do not have guns in their possession, the Illinois State Police (ISP) conducted numerous firearm enforcement details in counties across the state from June 24 through July 19, 2024. ​ The enforcement details focused on individuals who have become the subject of a Firearms Restraining Order or Clear and Present Danger, or received a criminal conviction, among other reasons. ​

“Firearms Restraining Orders and Clear and Present Danger reporting are two highly effective tools for getting firearms out of the hands of someone who poses a significant threat to themselves or others,” said Brendan F. Kelly. ​ “As the use of these tools increases, so does the need for law enforcement to be able to safely conduct these arduous, intensive enforcement details.”

From July 2023 through June 2024, ISP received approximately 11,300 Clear and Present Danger reports, of which more than 10,800 were affirmed. ​ While not all of those 10,800 individuals are out of compliance with state law, law enforcement is able to take action on those who are to bring them into compliance, thereby making communities safer.

During the recent ISP focused enforcement details, ISP officers completed 192 details and brought 673 people into compliance with state law. ​ As a result of these efforts, 318 individuals transferred firearms out of their possession. ​ ISP has been conducting firearm enforcement details since May 2019. ​ From that time through July 2024, ISP has conducted 2,303 details and placed 5,549 individuals into compliance with the law.

In addition to its own efforts, ISP provides grants to local law enforcement agencies to help protect the public by transferring firearms out of the possession of a person legally prohibited from having a firearm and who is a danger to themselves or others.

In Fiscal Year 2024, ISP awarded almost $1 million in firearm enforcement grants to 16 law enforcement agencies across the state. ​ During that time, local law enforcement agencies completed 7,048 compliance checks and brought 2,101 people into compliance with state law by transferring all firearms out of their possession and documenting that transfer with a Firearm Disposition Record. ISP awarded another $1.5 million in grants to 21 law enforcement agencies in Fiscal Year 2025.

* I followed up by asking how many firearms had been seized in Fiscal Year 2024, which ended June 30. ISP’s response…

A C&PD report is about homicidal or suicidal conduct. A firearm may or may not even be involved in the events that led to a report being submitted. An affirmation of the C&PD simply means that person is now prohibited from possessing a firearm, so if they attempt a purchase a firearm, they are denied. Some portion of the conduct could involve a firearm, but the subject may no longer possess any firearms after the C&PD report so there is nothing to seize or transfer.

Comparing the number of affirmed C&PD reports to the number of firearms transferred/seized does not provide an accurate picture of enforcement efforts related to C&PD reports.

In Fiscal Year 2024, ISP transferred or seized 812 firearms during its ISP blitz and quarterly ISP details. This does not include smaller details that occurred throughout the year. That firearm disposition data is not readily available.

In Fiscal Year 2024, law enforcement grantees seized or transferred 1,180 firearms during compliance checks. Other law enforcement agencies who have not applied for and received a firearm enforcement grant still conduct compliance checks. However, the number of firearms seized or transferred during those compliance checks is not reported to ISP.

To say there were 10,800 affirmed C&PD reports, but 1,992 firearms seized or transferred, without taking into account whether the subject of the C&PD report had a FOID or firearms, or may have already been in compliance, would be a misrepresentation of enforcement efforts. For example, of the affirmed reports, approximately 5,160 did not have a FOID card or application. A comprehensive analysis of the data has not been done at this time.

  7 Comments      


IDFPR will finally purchase online licensing system

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. This took way too long, but IDFPR looks to be on track. Implementation is key, however. So, we’ll just have to see…

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (“IDFPR”) announced today, in addition to modernizing outdated processes, it has reached an agreement to secure a new professional licensing system for individuals whose careers require a license to work in Illinois. Through an approximately $9 million investment over the next three years by the Pritzker Administration and the General Assembly, IDFPR will partner with NIC Licensing Solutions, LLC, an industry leading digital government service provider, to implement the new online system. […]

With a focus on increased government transparency, the new licensing system will feature a user-friendly interface with improved communications and creates a streamlined review of license applications and fees. Prospective licensees will be notified electronically when applications are received, reviewed, and licenses are issued by the Department. IDFPR will immediately begin implementation of the new solution and all Departmental licensees will be transitioned to the new licensing system in six phases, ensuring every application and fee payment will be available online.

“With health care workers coming to Illinois in record numbers, this long overdue modernization is a critical first step to ensure our state is fully equipped to meet our licensing demands with up-to-date and streamlined services,” said Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield). […]

NIC Licensing Solutions, LLC is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Tyler Technologies. Tyler currently provides Cloud-based solutions for more than 11,900 clients in all 50 states, including seven state agencies, 39 counties, and 67 local districts in Illinois. Additionally, Tyler provides the same services to several IDFPR sister-state agencies, including those in Alabama, Colorado, and Georgia.

IDFPR is responsible for the oversight and licensing of more than 1.2 million professionals in Illinois in over 120 different professions and over 300 license types, with a majority overseen by the Division of Professional Regulation (“DPR”). From the start of the Pritzker Administration, IDFPR witnessed an unprecedented and exponential increase in first-time applicants, as more professionals seek to work in Illinois.

* NASW Illinois…

The National Association of Social Workers, Illinois Chapter, congratulates the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) on its recent announcement that the state is finally moving forward with modernizing the professional licensing process in our state. The selection of NIC Licensing Solutions, LLC, as a partner in this effort is a promising step towards a more efficient, accessible, and user-friendly licensing system for all professionals in Illinois.

As representatives of the social work community, we are particularly encouraged by the potential this modernization holds for mental health professionals, many of whom have long relied on outdated paper applications. We strongly urge IDFPR to prioritize these professions in the transition to the new system. Streamlining the licensing process is crucial to enabling these professionals to enter the field promptly, especially as the state continues to face significant mental health workforce shortages.

We also encourage IDFPR to take this opportunity to review the current licensure requirements and consider eliminating any unnecessary steps, questions, or documents that may create unnessesary barriers for those fully qualified professionals seeking to serve the people of Illinois.

We look forward to seeing the positive impact of this initiative and remain committed to working with IDFPR to ensure that Illinois remains a leader in fostering a strong, ethical, and well-supported workforce in the mental health field.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Graham, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Pritzker criticizes the Sangamon County sheriff, but stops short of calling on him to resign

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

Isabel: Governor, Sangamon County Sheriff Campbell has defended his hiring of Sonya Massey’s killer after calls for him to step down. Should Campbell resign?

Pritzker: Look, what happened to Sonya Massey should never happen to anyone ever again. And honestly, I have seen so much tragedy just over the course of my governorship. Think about George Floyd. Think about Breonna Taylor. Think about the, the many names of people, Sonya Massey included, who have been killed in similar circumstances by an officer of the law. We need to hold people accountable. I’m very proud of the work that the Illinois State Police did in investigating this quickly and bringing it to the state’s attorney so that the deputy sheriff could be charged, and was charged, in fact, with three counts of murder appropriately so.

The way in which this deputy sheriff was hired, the background should have been taken into account. The way he was hired is an enormous question that still needs to be made transparent.

How did the sheriff end up hiring this person? Must have known their background. Must have. No one hires somebody without checking out the hiree’s background. And so I have a lot of questions. And I’m so far disappointed with the answers that I’m hearing from the sheriff. But you know, I think that that the community is reacting the way that I think is appropriate, protesting, making their voice heard, asking for change. The Massey family in particular, thinking about how do we improve the system going forward. And so I stand with them in that effort.

The Massey family has called on the sheriff to resign.

* Earlier this week, I asked Sen. Dick Durbin’s office where Durbin, a Springfield resident, stood on Sheriff Campbell’s future…

The future of the Sheriff is a local decision. As a member of Congress and Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Durbin is focused on the federal component and ensuring the Justice Department is properly engaged.

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Pritzker reflects on VP vetting, asked about his future

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker said today that his vetting process by Vice President Harris and her team “was handled with the utmost professionalism, and I was glad that I made it through that process, made it to the final number of candidates.” Then said

I want to be clear with everybody. You often hear me say I love being the governor of Illinois. I really do love being the governor of Illinois. And so I was very torn during this process, about being a participant in it. Not because I don’t support Kamala Harris. I do a thousand percent, and I will be out there campaigning for her at every turn whenever I have time to do so. But I also, you know, know that this job that I’m doing now that we’re making a big difference today. Just one example, I want to turn around to the members of the General Assembly, they’re here, Sen. Peters, to the Secretary of State, to my wife, to the lieutenant governor, to all the elected officials here and the people who vote for us. I come to work every day knowing that we can make a difference. And we have over the last five and a half years. And so I continue to come to work with a great deal of joy and not sorry at all about the fact that we have a terrific Midwestern governor in Tim Walz that’s been chosen. And I’m going to go out and support him and the ticket and Kamala Harris every day. I think there are 90 days left as of today in the election, and we have to beat Donald Trump.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Gov. Walz is the current chair of the Democratic Governors Association, and Pritzker was asked whether he’d like that job

At the moment, I’m just focused on the job that I’ve got. Being the chair of the DGA is a an enormous, you know, amount of time that Tim Walz put into that job. Did a great job, by the way. And in some ways, I’m sorry that we’re going to lose him. On the other hand, I’d like him to become the next Vice President.

He also said he hasn’t had any discussions about his electoral future when asked whether he had talked with family or staff about a third term.

* Is a cabinet position in his future?

Q: Have you contemplated, either with Vice President Harris or just with yourself and your inner circle, a cabinet position? Is that something you would leave the governship for?

Pritzker: That is not something that I’ve contemplated. I really do love the job that I have. And remember that we’ve made a lot of improvements. We have a lot of work to do still for the state of Illinois, but we have made a lot of improvements. And I think, you know, every day I try to think about what’s the next thing, what’s on the list now that we can do to make people’s lives better. Today was a great day.

* He was also asked about the vetting process. Sen. Joe Lieberman, it was pointed out, once compared the process to having a colonoscopy without any anesthesia. Pritzker said Lieberman “described it very well” then said

I’ll just say you know, it’s an honor to be considered and it’s a grueling process. But one that as you may recall, Tammy Duckworth went through it back in 2020 and it was months longer than this process. So, you know, I think that it’s a worthwhile thing because all of us, and Tammy in particular, I would say along with me you know, we know how important this election is.

[Asked for any specific questions he got during the vetting process.]

I can’t think of anything that you wouldn’t already know, that people might get asked. I think, you know, importantly, I think that the process is one that attempts to weed out, can you be somebody’s support mechanism, right, to be the number two? Can you bring, you know, another set of advice to the table that’s valuable? And I think, you know, you don’t get on that list unless they think you actually could be President of the United States and do the job if you had to. So, you know, I can’t think of a particular question you wouldn’t already know that gets asked. But again, it’s an honor to to be asked, even if some of those questions are like a colonoscopy.

Discuss.

  16 Comments      


Kamala Harris picks Tim Walz as her running mate (Updated)

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP

Vice President Kamala Harris picked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to be her running mate on Tuesday. That’s according to three people who spoke to The Associated Press.

In choosing Walz, she’s turning to a Midwestern governor, military veteran and union supporter who helped enact an ambitious Democratic agenda for his state, including sweeping protections for abortion rights and generous aid to families. The people were not authorized to speak publicly about the choice and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

The NYT, CNN and Reuters are all confirming Walz as Harris’ pick.

* NBC

In picking Walz, who’s in his second term and also served 12 years in Congress, Harris will have as her No. 2 someone with a proven record of winning over white working-class voters in Rust Belt states while also boasting a robustly progressive record.

Democrats will hope that mix of attributes helps a Harris-Walz ticket shore up support in the onetime “blue wall” states of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan — longtime Democratic strongholds at the presidential level that Donald Trump flipped in 2016 and Joe Biden flipped back in 2020. This year, they’ve been seen as Biden’s, and now Harris’, most viable path to victory.

* Illinois Playbook

Gov. JB Pritzker took part in the “Comics for Kamala” fundraiser on Monday alongside Nick Offerman, Ben Stiller, Kathy Griffin and others. The governor kept his humor self-deprecating. “I am a little nervous about being in the mix with all these incredibly funny individuals,” Pritzker said. “I just want you to know I got on because I’m sitting around waiting for my call to be vice president. My phone hasn’t rung for at least a couple of days now, but I’m hoping I get that call.” The event went on to raise more than $460,000.

…Adding… Governor JB Pritzker


* Governor Pritzker’s statement…

Today, following Vice President Kamala Harris’ selection of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate, Gov. JB Pritzker released the following statement:

“Governor Tim Walz is a proven leader who brings to public service the big heart and hard work of a Midwesterner. His unwavering commitment to improving the lives of working families and to lifting up the most vulnerable is why I’m so excited he will be the Democratic Party’s nominee for Vice President. Tim is a friend and fellow Midwestern governor, and I’ve been proud to serve alongside him. Vice President Kamala Harris once again has proven her leadership by choosing someone our party and the nation can be proud of.

“I am fully committed to electing the Harris-Walz ticket. I will do everything I can to ensure victory in November for Democrats up and down the ballot here in Illinois and across the country.”

…Adding… ILGOP…

Vice President Harris’s pick reflects the agenda she intends to bring to this nation: another radical leftist from a deep blue state who will continue the disastrous Bidenomics policies crippling the nation’s economy as we speak. At least Americans can breathe easy knowing that Illinois’s own out-of-touch leftist billionaire governor JB Pritzker won’t be a heartbeat away from the Presidency anytime soon. With leftists like these headlining the Democrat ticket, President Trump’s message of secure borders, safe streets, and prosperous communities will win in November.

* Comptroller Mendoza…

A U.S. Army National Guard veteran and high school football coach who lowered taxes on the middle class – Kamala Harris chose a real champion for American families. I love that Governor Walz signed a bill to stop Minnesota students from going hungry and that he came out against a Minneapolis defund-the-police referendum. Governor Walz funded Minnesota police departments, putting more cops on the street and investing in body cameras. An avid hunter himself, Governor Walz established universal background checks for gun purchases. Governor Walz came from humble beginnings like I did and he brings common-sense, middle-of-the-road Midwestern values to this campaign. He is a strong defender of women’s reproductive rights. I will proudly vote as a delegate for Harris and Walz and will work tirelessly for the next three months to make sure America wins with them at the helm.

* More…

  70 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC7 I-Team

It has been called an American epidemic.

Wrongful convictions have led to people who were later exonerated losing more than 21,000 years in U.S. prisons. Illinois is the top state in the country for wrongful convictions.

Now, the state agency that oversees police training is mandating classes aimed at eliminating that.

Exonerees share their stories with police cadets.

“My name is Marvin Cotton Jr. and I served 19 years, seven months and 12 days in prison for crime that I did not commit,” one exoneree said. […]

“Not only the first state to mandate it, but it’s the first state to have this training. To our knowledge, when there’s nobody else in the country that is doing this type of training. And so, we’re very proud of that and proud that our legislatures thought enough of this program to make it a mandatory training to help right the wrongs of the past,” said Wrongful Conviction Awareness & Avoidance Director Marc Beach. […]

“I spent 23 years as a police officer,” Beach said. “I actually had no idea that wrongful convictions were really even an issue. The system that I represent would do that to somebody, and it would get it wrong. And so, I said, you know, I have to I have to do something to make that better.”

Go read the rest.

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker signs measures reining in biometric data privacy law, eliminating grocery tax. Capitol News Illinois

Illinois’ first-in-the-nation law that allows residents to sue companies over the improper collection of their biometric information will be slightly less punitive after Gov. JB Pritzker signed a new law late last week.

Lawmakers this spring amended the Biometric Information Privacy Act in response to an Illinois Supreme Court ruling last year that suggested lawmakers clarify the law. That ruling found fast food chain White Castle violated BIPA each time employees scanned their fingerprints in the course of performing their jobs, as the company never obtained employees’ permission to collect their fingerprints.

But under Senate Bill 2979, employees or customers whose fingerprints, retinal scans, voice samples or other unique biometric information were collected by businesses without their permission can only claim one violation of BIPA instead of hundreds. In jobs with fingerprint-enabled time clocks and cash registers or other secure areas that require biometric data scans to access, employees might end up scanning their thumbs or eyes dozens of times per day.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will be at the Women’s Justice Institute at 10 am to sign the returning citizens identification access bill. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | White Sox lose 21st straight to tie American League record: The beauty of baseball is that after a loss, there’s another game the next day. But anguish sets in after repeated beatdowns, day after day after day. Another game, another “L.” Defeat and unrelenting failure have taken a toll on the White Sox, who lost their 21st consecutive game Monday, 5-1 at the hands of the Athletics to tie the 1988 Orioles’ American League-record skid. The Sox, a national story they don’t want to be, are now two losses from tying the 1961 Phillies’ major-league record of 23.

* Block Club | Billy Joel Jr. Is ‘The Next Big Chicago Band You Don’t Know About’: Billy Joel Jr. is on the rise after dropping their EP, “Rubberhose,” and catching Stereogum’s attention with an April Fools’ Day joke. The indie rockers — who aren’t actually the Piano Man’s spawn — perform Wednesday at Sleeping Village.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Sonya Massey’s family is pushing for a change in state law after her death, but policymakers aren’t so sure: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said that based on Grayson’s record, it’s questionable whether Grayson should have ever been hired as a law enforcement officer. But like Turner, he said he’s not certain a new law is needed. It’s going to take some time for the current laws to “get going,” Raoul said. The problem is not the laws on the books right now, but in how they’re being implemented, Raoul said.

* SJ-R | Illinois lawmakers looking to lower prescription drug costs, but not everyone is on board : He, along with state Sen. David Koehler, D-Peoria, and Rep. Sharon Chung, D-Bloomington, are now urging lawmakers to take-up House Bill 4472 which would create a prescription drug affordability board. The board would be composed of 15 appointed members in-charge of establishing upper payment limits to certain prescription drugs and ensure those savings are passed down to consumers. Per the bill language, it could only set those limits on drugs with a wholesale acquisition cost of at least $60,000 per year or those experiencing a wholesale acquisition cost increase of $3,000 in the most recent 12-month period. For price limits on biosimilar drugs, the board could only do so if the biosimilar cost is not at least 20% lower than the name brand cost. For price limits on generic drugs, a 30-day supply of that drug must at least cost $100 and its price increased by no less than 200% in the preceding 12 months.

* WAND | Illinois local food infrastructure grant plan signed into law: Recipients could use the local food infrastructure grants for production, packaging, refrigerated trucks and processing equipment. Lawmakers said this is a great incentive for local food providers to invest in a healthier Illinois. “Right now, if you look at Illinois, 95% of our food is brought in from outside,” said Sen. Dave Koehler (D-Peoria). “That means trucking food thousands of miles away when we have the richest, fertile farmland anywhere in the world right here.”

* Sun-Times | Measure to streamline IDs for people exiting Illinois prisons, jails poised for Pritzker’s signature: The measure pushed by Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias eliminates the need for inmates and detainees to show physical copies of their birth certificates or Social Security cards in order to line up an ID — a common roadblock for people trying to find housing and work after incarceration. “We take our IDs for granted, but for people leaving jail, it’s an essential tool for reentry to perform everyday tasks and increase the likelihood of successfully building a productive life,” Giannoulias said ahead of the bill signing.

*** Statewide ***

* WSIU | Illinois Increases Funding for Schools: The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) has released data showing the impact of a $1.8 billion increase in funding for the state’s highest-need schools under Governor JB Pritzker’s administration. The Evidence-Based Funding (EBF) formula, established in fiscal year 2018, aims to distribute resources more equitably among Illinois schools. Since then, the state’s investment in EBF has increased from $6.8 billion in FY 2019 to $8.6 billion in FY 2025.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | At a tense time in American politics, Chicago hospitals prepare for Democratic National Convention: In some ways, preparing for the convention has been like readying for other large events, such as the NASCAR Chicago Street Race, the Chicago Marathon and Lollapalooza, say hospital leaders. In fact, it’s somewhat of a relief that the DNC is expected to attract far fewer attendees than Lollapalooza, said George DiLeonardi, vice president of security services and emergency management for Northwestern Memorial HealthCare. The DNC is expected to draw about 50,000 people, while Lollapalooza often attracts about 100,000 a day.

* Chalkbeat | Amid financial woes, Chicago Public Schools to receive similar state funding increase this year: Amid a bump in students learning English as a new language and a dip in local tax revenue, Chicago Public Schools would now need nearly $1.2 billion to be adequately funded, according to state data released Monday. The updated figure, which is $93 million more than was projected last year, was provided as part of an annual calculation determining how Illinois will distribute state money to public school districts — and comes as the city’s school district grapples with complex financial problems in the next school year.

* Tribune | Ford’s Chicago Assembly Plant celebrates 100 years on the Southeast Side, from building the Model T to the Explorer: Built at a cost of about $8 million, the massive Torrence Avenue factory employed 2,000 workers at the outset, with the capacity to turn out 600 “flivvers” — a nickname for the Model T — each day, according to a Chicago Tribune story at the time of its launch. The new plant built nearly 107,000 Model Ts in its first year and expanded to Ford delivery trucks in 1925. In 1927, it switched to producing the new Ford Model A.

* Tribune | Bud Billiken Parade 2024: Route, start time and a look back at 95 years of Chicago’s back-to-school tradition: Hundreds of thousands of spectators and generations of families will gather along the almost 3-mile route in Bronzeville Saturday to cheer on a variety of performers — bands, dance and drill teams, tumblers and cheerleaders — and watch honorary grand marshals and celebrities ride in style aboard floats and classic cars. And thousands of school supplies and other amenities will be handed out in Washington Park following the parade.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGN | Dolton trustees: Henyard mismanagement may lead to layoffs: Three trustees from the Village of Dolton called a special meeting on Monday night to try and keep the village running as they deal with embattled Mayor Tiffany Henyard. Trustees who do not support Henyard said she would not allow them to put items on the regular meeting agenda, so they set their own meeting to start before hers.

* Daily Herald | Will DNC bring migrant influx to Chicago? Municipalities, organizations prepare for possible bump: “We know more new immigrant arrivals are coming and we are doing a number of things to prepare,” said Dianha Ortega-Ehreth, executive director of Elgin’s Centro de Información in an email. The preparation comes as the U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported a “significant decline in migrant encounters” in the wake of President Joe Biden’s June 4 executive order barring migrants who unlawfully cross the southern border from receiving asylum in the U.S.

* Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove’s ‘human archive’ leaves after 38 years, will remain as chat bot: Administrative Services Director Brett Robinson has retired. He began working for the village 38 years ago, while still a student at Buffalo Grove High School. He has been there ever since, moving from the public works department to village administration. The 55-year-old Wauconda resident eventually was the village’s purchasing manager and treasurer before assuming his latest position in 2020. […] A loyal public servant, Robinson will still play a role in retirement — the AI-powered chat bot on the village’s website is called “Mr. Robinson” and has the image of a bespectacled buffalo with a goatee and cardigan. If you have a village-related question, you can chat with “Mr. Robinson.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘I should have died’: Missouri woman connects with Effingham firefighters who saved her life in Teutopolis HAZMAT spill: Terrie Tudor should not be alive today. She said it herself, along with the three firefighters who saved her life on Sept. 29, 2023. […] She was blind, using a ventilator and on continuous dialysis in hospitals in Springfield, Rockford and Hinsdale. Tudor has had five surgeries on her eyes alone.

* WTVO | Rockford’s Hard Rock Casino to feature 62-foot guitar monument to Rick Nielsen and Cheap Trick: The black and white checkerboard guitar monument that will adorn the front entrance to the Hard Rock Casino Rockford will stand 62 feet tall when it is installed later this month. Rockford’s Code and Regulations Committee has recommended the City Council approve several variances to the casino’s signage to allow for the huge guitar, which is modeled after the pattern made famous by Rockford natives Cheap Trick and guitarist Rick Nielsen.

  3 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Aug 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* Reader comments closed for the next week
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
* Three-quarters of OEIG investigations into Paycheck Protection Program abuses resulted in misconduct findings
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* Sen. Dale Fowler honors term limit pledge, won’t seek reelection; Rep. Paul Jacobs launches bid for 59th Senate seat
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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