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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Indivior, a company that makes treatments for opioid use disorder, actually contributed to the opioid crisis by catering to the very physicians that fueled overuse of prescription opioids, according to the attorneys general of 16 states.

Those state officials, including Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, announced on July 26 that they reached an $86 million settlement in principle with Indivior “for its role in driving the spread of deadly opioid addictions,” a press release from Raoul’s office said. […]

The settlement in principle was negotiated by Raoul and the attorneys general of New York, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia in coordination with an executive committee consisting of the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon and Vermont.

“This settlement builds on our progress, through multiple settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors, to ultimately help families get their loved [ones] access to the treatment and recovery resources they deserve,” Raoul said in the release.

* Governor JB Pritzker

On July 2, 2024, the State of Illinois received federal approval of its proposed Healthcare Transformation 1115 Demonstration waiver that will allow the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) to begin nation-leading work to expand Medicaid coverage. Assistance will soon address root causes of health disparities, such as housing and food insecurity, and help individuals transitioning from incarceration.

“Here in Illinois, the 1115 waiver is the cornerstone of our broader strategy to address health-related social needs,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We are using it to direct Medicaid resources toward initiatives that address the root causes of health inequalities such as housing, food insecurity, unemployment, violence prevention, re-entry from prison settings, substance use treatment, and more. Illinois is leading the way in this work and once again setting the nationwide standard for what equitable, effective, and people-centric healthcare should look like.” […]

The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approved Illinois’ application to amend and extend for five years an existing 1115 waiver to include services newly-eligible for federal Medicaid match. These programs were designed to specifically address health-related social needs and improve health outcomes statewide, with a focus on housing support, medical respite and food and nutrition.

Coverage for pre-release services for individuals leaving carceral settings is also included, reflecting a major policy shift in the Medicaid program, as well as highly-innovative services to address community firearm violence. Expanded home- and community-based services, including non-medical transportation and expanded employment services will also be covered.

Services additionally include substance use disorder (SUD) assistance as well as coverage of Violence Prevention and Intervention services for Medicaid beneficiaries impacted by violence. […]

Some other items contained in the extension application continue to be under review. The state prioritized health-related social needs and reentry for initial approval and will continue discussions with the federal authorities on other components of its request.

*** Statehouse News ***

* SLPR | What will a new push for nuclear energy look like in Missouri and Illinois?: While Missouri just has Callaway, Illinois has more nuclear plants than any other state. A recent Illinois law repealed a nuclear moratorium, which could clear the way for new nuclear plants in the form of small modular reactors. “There’s a lot of excitement in Illinois about the future of nuclear,” Huff said. “But that moratorium that had been in place was keeping any real possibilities from being tangible.”

* Sun-Times | Tons of plastic trash litters Great Lakes beaches. Why not hold manufacturers responsible?: Fortunately, states can help solve this challenge. The Alliance for the Great Lakes is calling for implementing extended producer responsibility policies — holding producers responsible across the life cycle of their products and packaging, from design and materials to end-of-life management. And momentum is building in the Great Lakes region. Our friends in Minnesota became the fifth state in the U.S. to establish extended producer responsibility legislation for packaging, joining our bi-national Great Lakes partners in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec, which have been implementing extended producer responsibility policies for years. More recently, extended producer responsibility laws have passed in Maine, California, Oregon and Colorado.

* NFIB | NFIB Illinois PAC Endorses Pro-Small Business Candidates: The endorsed candidates completed a candidate questionnaire regarding issues important to small-business owners across Illinois. The NFIB IL PAC Board—comprised of small-business owners from across the state—considers and approves state legislative endorsements. NFIB represents over 10,000 small and independent businesses throughout Illinois.

*** Statewide ***

* Patch | Strong Geomagnetic Storm Could Bring Northern Lights To IL This Week: Conditions appear favorable for residents in Illinois to see the northern lights through Wednesday after an Earth-directed solar storm created what scientists call a “cannibal CME.” The aurora borealis may be seen deep into the nation’s midsection if weather conditions allow. The aurora forecast for Monday night and early Tuesday morning calls for a G3-level storm with a Kp Index of 7, a measure of auroral strength. The chances of seeing the northern lights are best with a Kp index of at least five.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | CTA’s Red Line extension gets new financial help from the feds: According to U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Chicago, the Federal Transit Administration has decided to speed up funding for the 5.6-mile extension, providing a projected $1.973 billion over seven years rather than 10. That means the feds will provide twice as much as was expected in the first year of construction: $746 million. That in turn will reduce local financing costs by more than $200 million, since more of the cash needed for the project will be available upfront, rather than having to be financed locally, mostly by a transit tax-increment financing tax on real estate.

* Block Club | DNC In Chicago: United Center Neighbors Brace For Restricted Access, Traffic, Police — And Confusion: The vehicle screening perimeter will allow ride-sharing services and delivery drivers to pass through at a designated checkpoint. Bicyclists can also pass through this area and are not required to undergo a screening process, officials said. While there are few homes within the security footprint, dozens of neighbors will be affected. Officials have held community meetings and canvassed the area to try to reach neighbors and talk to them about how to prepare for life during the convention.

* Tribune | Cooling centers open as heat, humidity and storms loom; city monitoring forecast ahead of Lollapalooza: Through Friday, 256 cooling centers will be open across the city to provide vulnerable residents with relief from the heat. A map of hours and locations, which include public libraries and community service centers, can be found here. The heat index is anticipated to exceed 100 degrees at times on Wednesday and Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. An extreme heat warning will be issued if the heat index is expected to exceed 105-110 degrees for at least two consecutive days.

* Crain’s | Media veteran Steve Edwards takes on civic engagement role at Chicago Fed: Starting Aug. 13, Edwards will become executive vice president for external affairs and civic engagement and will serve as a member of the bank’s executive committee, the Chicago Fed announced today. “Edwards brings wide-ranging experience at mission-driven organizations to this newly created role,” the Fed’s press release notes.

* Chicago Mag | Looking for Al Capone: “The details of Al Capone’s first three or four years in Chicago are somewhat minimal, with little mention of him in the press,” Chicago mob historian John J. Binder wrote in his 2017 book Al Capone’s Beer Wars: A Complete History of Organized Crime in Chicago During Prohibition. As Binder pointed out, a man using the name Al Brown was arrested in January 1921. Capone often used Al Brown as an alias — as late as 1927, the Tribune would still refer to him by this name — so there’s a strong possibility that this was Al Capone, who’d just turned 22. Of course, it could’ve been someone actually named Al Brown — or another criminal hiding behind the same alias. It was a lot easier to get away with using an alias in 1921 than it is today.

* Sun-Times | Organizers of Chicago River open swim event appeal city’s permit denial: The organizers of the event, which benefits ALS research and swimming lessons for Chicago kids, filed an appeal July 17 with the city after its permit application was denied by the Department of Transportation for safety concerns. The transportation department offered an alternate route from Ohio Street Beach to Oak Street, but organizers with A Long Swim are hoping their original plan can come to fruition. Their desired route is in the Main Stem of the Chicago River, essentially along the Riverwalk from Wabash to Lake Street.

* AP | Museums closed Native American exhibits 6 months ago. Tribes are still waiting to get items back: In Chicago, the Field Museum has established a Center for Repatriation after covering up several cases in its halls dedicated to ancient America and the peoples of the coastal Northwest and Arctic. The museum has also since returned four items back to tribes, with another three pending, through efforts that were underway before the new regulations, according to spokesperson Bridgette Russell.

* Sun-Times | White Sox trade Erick Fedde and Tommy Pham to Cardinals, Michael Kopech to Dodgers: The White Sox have agreed to a trade sending right-handers Erick Fedde to the Cardinals and Michael Kopech to the Dodgers in a three-team deal, a source told the Sun-Times. The Sox are receiving left fielder Miguel Vargas and infield prospects Jaral Perez and Alexander Albertus from the Dodgers in return. Outfielder Tommy Pham is going from the Sox to the Cardinals along with Fedde, and infielder Tommy Edman goes from the Cardinals to Los Angeles, according to a source.

* Block Club | Gator Watch In Lincoln Park? No, It’s A Turtle On A Log, City Says: On Thursday, Block Club reporters saw what appeared at first to be the head of an alligator briefly crest above the water before disappearing below, leaving a murky shadow in the water. After a few hours spent monitoring the shadow, no movement was detected. Photos from the incident were sent to Chicago Animal Care and Control and to Frank Robb, who famously trapped Chance the Snapper. The verdict came in quickly: It’s “100% not a gator,” Robb, a gator expert, said. The photos instead looked to him like a snapping turtle and a log, he said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | Cook County man pleads guilty, sentenced for threatening court officials: Prosecutors alleged that on Dec. 1, 2023, Christian called the DeKalb County State’s Attorney’s Office more than a dozen times, made threats to commit a school shooting or bombing, made threats to shoot a local circuit judge, and made threats against an Illinois Supreme Court justice and the president, according to court records.

* Daily Herald | Citing safety and building height, Arlington Heights panel rejects affordable housing plan: Citing concerns ranging from crime and tenant vetting to building height and compatibility with the neighborhood, the Arlington Heights plan commission has rejected revised plans for a 3-story, 25-unit permanent supportive housing development for people with disabilities and veterans on South Arlington Heights Road. But the 5-2 vote late Wednesday from the advisory panel is only a recommendation. The final decision rests with the nine-member village board, the majority of whom supported earlier iterations of the plan.

* Daily Herald | With promise of $47 million in public funding, Schaumburg all in on The District: Schaumburg has pledged $47 million in public funding for The District at Veridian, clearing the way for construction to begin on the $185 million, 30-acre mixed-use development on the former Motorola campus. The first of four phases of the long-awaited “Main Street”-style project will bring 65,000 square feet of retail space, including a grocery store, and more than 300 high-end apartments to the southwest corner of Algonquin and Meacham roads.

* Daily Southtown | Patrick Rea, longtime Tinley Park official, dies at 84, remembered for devotion to village: “He truly loved Tinley more than anyone I’ve ever met,” said Mayor Michael Glotz, who asked Rea to speak at his inauguration ceremony. “He was there for everybody but himself.” […] Rea was a village trustee for 37 years, starting in 1971, then was village clerk from 2009 until 2017. He served in the U.S. Army, either in active duty or the Reserves, for more than 20 years and left the military with the rank of brigadier general. Tinley Park’s Veterans Memorial near the south entrance to the 80th Avenue Metra station was named in his honor.

* Daily | Smoke on the water: Fox Lake dispensary touted as Illinois’ 1st dockside marijuana shop: The dispensary is located in a former barbecue joint at 44 Route 12 and celebrated its opening day Friday. A ribbon-cutting is scheduled for Tuesday. As for the waterside location that provides access to boaters, the company said in a statement that “we wanted to create an experience that allows a convenient and unique way for customers to access our services directly from their boats, enhancing their experience in a very scenic location.”

*** Downstate ***

* AP | Wind power can be a major source of tax revenue, but officials struggle to get communities on board: An Associated Press analysis of county tax data from local governments in Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska — states either with many wind farms or a high potential for wind power — found wind companies rank among the biggest taxpayers in many rural communities, with their total tax bills at times outstripping that of large farms, power plants and other major businesses. While that tax income from wind power does not represent a significant percent of counties’ budgets, it totals millions of dollars some local leaders say has translated into meaningful change. But the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University, which tallies local opposition to wind power, finds efforts to block wind projects are “widespread and growing.”

* QC Times | John Deere lays off more than 300 in Moline and East Moline in latest round of cuts: The agriculture giant notified the state of Illinois via both email and certified mail 298 workers at John Deere’s Headquarters in Moline were laid off July 24, according to a letter sent to the state July 25. The total employment at headquarters now stands at 1,993. John Deere included a list of all jobs cut which included accountants, chief of staff and a variety of people in management and senior positions. In a second letter to the state sent that same day, an additional 21 employees at John Deere’s East Moline Harvester Works were being laid off.

* Pantagraph | Illinois State solar car team takes third in 2 summer races: ISU’s team entered the car into the ASC’s single-occupancy vehicle class and was the third to cross the road race finish line in its class Saturday in Casper. Before it could hit the road for the latter cross-county event, the team of around 16 students first qualified at the Formula Sun Grand Prix, undergoing “scrutineering” inspections to ensure technical standards are met, and then racing on the NCM’s 3.15-mile Grand Full Course — a race track used by General Motors for Corvette testing. ISU’s solar car made 149 laps on the course, covering 469 miles in the three-day race from July 16-18 and placing third.

* Effingham Daily News | 5 graduate from Effingham County Problem Solving Court: The ceremony was led by Judge Ericka Sanders, who explained that most people lack the ability or drive to make it through the program and stay sober. “They do what most people can’t, change, and they changed despite every unimaginable obstacle in their way,” Sanders said. “You are the definition of success in anyone’s book.” […] In a video played during the ceremony, it was revealed that it costs $46,743 to incarcerate someone, while it only costs $6,000 to put a resident through the Effingham County Problem Solving Court program, which began in 2006.

* News-Gazette | UI offers $2,000 to students to cancel housing contracts due to large incoming class: An email which informed resident advisers they will have first-year students as temporary roommates attributed this change to a “larger than anticipated number of new students.” [Mari Anne Brocker Curry, director of housing information] did not say what caused this situation and, due to university policy, cannot share information on the size of the incoming class until official counts are finalized on the 10th day of classes.

* BND | Bear seen in Illinois likely swam across Ohio River from Kentucky, wildlife official says: Also, since the bear went unseen for 48 hours, then showed up in Missouri on Wednesday, it’s likely it swam across the Mississippi River too, according to John Hast, the bear and elk program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources.

* Tribune | Kamala Harris has little-known childhood connection to Illinois; family friend recounts memories from her year in Champaign-Urbana: Urbana resident Diane Gottheil, now 85, recalled fondly her friendship with Harris’ parents during their year in Illinois. Gottheil was finishing up her Ph.D. in political science when they joined the university’s community in 1966, bringing a 2-year-old Harris in tow. Gottheil said that she viewed Harris’ mother Shyamala Gopalan as a major role model, admiring both her work as a medical researcher and her passion for civil rights.

*** National ***

* Neil Steinberg | Google can pull the plug at any time: Poking around Google, I found a laundry list of misdeeds Google suggests might earn banishment, beginning with: “Account hacking or hijacking” and including “Child sexual abuse and exploitation,” “Harassment, bullying & threats” and “Terrorist content.” Only I hadn’t done any of these. The only thing I could think of is, my account was deleted exactly at midnight, and my blog posts automatically at midnight. Thursday’s was fairly benign: A reader cc’d me a letter sent to City Lit, the Logan Square bookstore that created international headlines by booting a writer off its reading club list for the author’s Zionist leanings.

* Law & Crime | ‘Violates free speech rights’: Part of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Stop W.O.K.E Act dies with permanent injunction by federal judge: Judge Mark Walker of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida issued a permanent injunction, saying the law that bans diversity training in private workplaces “violates free speech rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.” The ruling follows a three-judge appeals court panel’s March decision that upheld Walker’s original injunction. The State of Florida did not oppose the motion to make the ruling permanent.

* NYT | Overlooked No More: Willy de Bruyn, Cycling Champion Who Broke Gender Boundaries: In early 1936, a Belgian cyclist, Willy de Bruyn, read an article in the Flemish newspaper De Dag that would change his life. He learned that a Czech sprinter who had been assigned female at birth was transitioning and would begin living as a man. It was just the spark de Bruyn needed. He went to see a local doctor and soon announced that he, too, wanted to live the balance of his life as a man.

  8 Comments      


National stuff

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico reporter…



Pritzker’s campaign responded…

In case you missed it, a new “scoop” from POLITICO reveals how Gov. JB Pritzker has used his influence as Governor of Illinois to implement new regulations against harmful e-cigarettes and call out the industry, even as his first cousin once removed serves as a board member for Juul. What’s more, Gov. Pritzker didn’t even profit from his first cousin once removed’s actions and frankly thinks first cousin once removed is a pretty distant relative to be involved in this story at all.

These new details highlight what was long suspected: Gov. Pritzker is beholden to the Illinois families he was elected to serve, not anyone else.

“Just when you think you know who someone is,” said JB for Governor communications director Christina Amestoy. “He turns around and proves you exactly right.”

Also



Click here for Schuba’s 2018 story.

* Meanwhile, Pritzker was on “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” yesterday

Look, the electorate is energized. Democrats are ready to go. You’ve seen hundreds of thousands of people signing up to volunteer. Plus, our candidate is the Energizer Bunny. She’s been everywhere all the time over the last several days, and we’re excited about that, to get to see her in the battleground states and all over the country.

And her message is one that I think resonates with people. One of those things, of course, is pointing out the differences between these two candidates.

I mean, on the other side, they’re just weird. I mean, they really are. The things that they stand for — Donald Trump, of course, is afraid of windmills and, you know, he talks about all kinds of crazy stuff. You know, his running mate, as you probably have heard, is, you know, getting known for his obsession with couches, and — and somebody who is hiding his views on a woman’s right to choose. And then just broadly, the attack on people who are childless and saying that we ought to raise taxes on childless people and calling them “cat ladies,” I think, you know, he apologized to cats, but he hasn’t apologized to women.

* This morning, Pritzker was asked about how Democrats were lately calling some top Republicans “weird” and if he embraced the move

I actually talked about it yesterday. The truth is, there are a lot of very weird, strange things coming out of both the Republican nominee and the vice presidential nominee on the Republican side. I mean, there’s this consistent kind of talk about Donald Trump’s fear of sharks. I’m not sure why that’s relevant to becoming president of the United States. There’s the talk about couches and dolphins in the vice presidential candidate’s case, and and it’s just, you know, I don’t understand. We should be talking about the issues that are important to working families across the United States. That’s what Kamala Harris is talking about. That’s what all of us ought to be focused on.

* Pritzker did not mention sharks, couches or dolphins in his afternoon Q and A, but he was asked about some confusion over whether he said he was being vetted or not. It was impossible to hear much of the question, but this is how he responded

I’ll correct your timeline. I think I said no on Tuesday morning that I had not received vetting documents, and then subsequently I was asked the question, just so you can go back and look at your records. And what I’ve said repeatedly since then is that, you know, I’m not going to talk about the conversations that I’ve had with the vice president or with her campaign, other than to say that I have committed myself to Kamala Harris, that I will go out and work my heart out for her to win this election, because we must. Because we cannot have Donald Trump as President of the United States.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

  18 Comments      


About that prediction of 25,000 migrants by convention time…

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the governor’s press conference this morning

Mary Ann Ahern: Can we talk about migrants, and are you prepared if Governor Abbott does send 25,000 migrants here before the DNC or during it?

Governor Pritzker: As you know, we have a partnership with Cook County and with the City of Chicago. There was an awful lot of planning that went into effect back in the early part of this year. And we’re excited about the Democratic National Convention coming. We’re also excited to have this partnership in place, as you know, and you can go to the City of Chicago’s website to see how many beds are currently occupied, how many beds are available, and also that we have a plan for expanding that if necessary.

So far, we have not seen the influx that we might have expected. And one of the reasons for that is because, despite the fact that Donald Trump told Republicans to walk away from an immigration bill that would have helped us actually secure the border, that the President has nevertheless put in place a series of agreements with countries throughout Central America and North America, including Mexico, to make sure that that we’ve stemmed the tide of border crossings.

And so actually, we’ve seen some of the lowest numbers of border crossings in the last two years, over the last several months. And I check on that weekly, talk to the White House and others, to make sure that that’s still the case.

MAA: Are your sources [that have been] talking back and forth, is Abbott just a threat or might that really happen?

Pritzker: Well, of course, we have a governor in Texas who cares nothing for the human beings who are have crossed the border, who are in his state. He frankly, ships them all across the country, including to Chicago. Threatened to do it again when he was at the RNC, but we have not seen any evidence of him increasing the numbers that have been sent to the City of Chicago.

I asked Pritzker about that not long ago and he said mostly the same thing. I would also note that the logistics of busing 25,000 people here in the next few weeks would be difficult. The convention will end 25 days from now, so that’s 1,000 people a day, every day, which is well beyond anything the city has ever before seen.

* Also, the city’s predictions haven’t always turned out to be accurate. This is from the end of January

Looking to the future, [Beatriz Ponce de Leon, deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights] said the city is projecting another 800 people arriving per week, based on historical data. As summer approaches, those numbers could go up to 1,200 arrivals a week, which the city has experienced before, she said.

That didn’t happen. Not even close. The shelter census last week was 5,621, down from 14,900 at the end of December.

The city currently has 5,000 empty beds, according to the Tribune.

* Not saying it won’t happen, not saying it can’t happen. Just saying.

…Adding… And, just to be clear, this is what I wrote in comments…

Oh, I figure he’ll pull some sort of stunt next month. I’m just not convinced that he can pull off 25k people.

  4 Comments      


Corrections officer in hot water for mocking Sonya Massey online busted by cops yesterday

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. The governor’s office has confirmed that a Logan Correctional Center employee who was put on administrative leave last week for mocking a murder victim online is the same Thomas Angeli who was arrested in Sangamon County yesterday

Scroll down, and it says this, however

Charge 1: FOID Card Required - Acq/Possess Firearm
Statute: Possess Firearms - Expired FOID -Class A
Counts: 1

* Angeli, you’ll recall, posted this…


And, as we noted last week, this wasn’t the first time, either

The Illinois Department of Corrections has specific rules that prohibit employees from disclosing information related to offender’s records.

In response to a post from April [2019], correctional officer Thomas Angeli, who goes by Tommy Angeli on Facebook, commented about transgender woman Janiah Monroe, who had recently been transferred to a women’s facility. “Saw her in healthcare when she first came in…dude looks nothing like a girl..a tall n skinny guy,” Angeli wrote. Later the officer expressed expectations that the inmate would have “something feminine” by way of sexual organs, but did not.

…Adding… MrJM in comments…

Why did Logan Correctional Center ever employ a goon whose knuckle tattoos say “PURE HATE”?

Ugh…

  18 Comments      


Today’s quotable: ‘I made it clear to the Bears’ leadership that it would be near impossible to get anything done’

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s first of two public appearances today

Reporter: So you met with the Bears CEO a couple weeks ago. Any movement there in terms of a public financing deal? And also, have you called other mayors or governors in other states about maybe the best practices they have done that hasn’t worked?

Pritzker: Well, I’ve done a lot of research on this topic, but let me be clear, there isn’t much change. I mean, I made it clear to the Bears’ leadership that it would be near impossible to get anything done. If there was a proposal put on the table by them that could get done, you couldn’t actually get it done probably during the veto session and would have to wait until next spring. But in reality, there isn’t a proposal on the table right now that would be acceptable to anyone that I know in the legislature.

  11 Comments      


Pritzker responds to CTU president’s claim that he’s denying funding for ‘Black, brown, working class and immigrant kids’ in Chicago

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NBC 5’s Mary Ann Ahern at today’s Pritzker presser

Governor, can I ask you about the CPS bailout? Have you noticed the CTU President’s remarks claiming that you are denying funding for Black/Brown or working-class immigrant children? And she’s somewhat- well she’s outright lobbying against you as a possible VP candidate.

* The tweet…


SDG’s page is full of praise for Minnesota Tim Walz, who is considered one of the few very real possibilities for VP.

* Pritzker’s response

Look, I think that they’re in the middle of a negotiation, and so I think they’re going to say things that they think are going to, you know, will advance their cause. I think I’ve been clear, I want to fully fund education, public education, in the state of Illinois. I have worked hard during my term in office to do that. Billions of dollars more have gone into education, public education, for our state. I want to do even more.

We’re taking every resource that’s available to us for education and putting it there. So I know that there are people who would like more, I’m one of them, and so let’s go do that. But that is not something that can happen immediately during their negotiation.

It is something that I think we should be working on every single year, and I’ve done that. Again, almost half a billion dollars more has gone into public education every single year since I took office. And again, I will do everything I can to meet the needs of our students and make sure that we’re paying our teachers properly. But you know, criticism at this moment isn’t helpful. I think, you know, they came to Springfield, they talked to the legislature. We, in fact, did provide a significant amount more money for public schools, and we’ll continue to do it every year I’m in office.

  21 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN

The Illinois lottery, celebrating its 50th anniversary this month, has enduring appeal for one reason, if you ask longtime host of the live drawing, Linda Kollmeyer: “Dreams do come true with the Illinois lottery.” […]

The first Illinois Lottery drawing happened on July 1, 1974.

The first drawing on WGN was in 1975 – with Ray Rayner hosting, standing with former governor Dan Walker.

That first year, the lottery sold 100 million tickets – garnering nearly $130 million in sales. […]

Profits initially went to the state’s general fund. But in 1985, state lawmakers decided those profits should be specifically set aside for education.

Today the Illinois Lottery generates $3 billion a year, nearly a third of which goes to the Illinois common school fund.

* The Question: How often do you buy Lottery tickets? Also, let us know how you’ve fared over the years.

  34 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Jul 29, 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 Barbara, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


Pritzker wants ‘a’ Karina’s Bill, but not necessarily ‘this’ bill

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

“I support Karina’s Law,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker emphatically told me. It’s the strongest statement he’s made about the bill that stalled in the Senate last spring. The proposal would mandate that police remove firearms from a person who has been served with a domestic violence order of protection.

But there still appear to be some Pritzker caveats.

Pritzker has previously said that the bill would put big strains on local and state police because it could require as many as four officers to remove those firearms from each of the offenders, and there are thousands of people who would fall under the law’s jurisdiction here.

“What I’m trying to highlight about it,” Pritzker said, “is the resources don’t currently exist to do in the timely fashion that it’s required under the law to accomplish it.” Local police agencies, “don’t have the manpower. It’s just a fact,” he said. “There aren’t enough sworn officers to carry out what’s being asked here.”

“So, having said that, should we try?” Pritzker continued. “Well, yeah,” he said. “Is there a way to organize this law, to effectuate what everybody wants, and also do it within the manpower that exists? I think maybe. But we have a lot of laws where enforcement falls short, partly because when the law is going through the legislature, they’re not considering what it actually takes to effectuate the law. And I don’t want that to happen here.”

Is the law, then, a giant unfunded mandate?

“I appreciate the angle which you’re approaching it, but the reality is that we have laws on the books that say that you should be arrested and when you’re convicted of murder, you have to spend a certain number [of years in prison]. Is that an unfunded mandate when they pass a law in Springfield that says that murder is a criminal activity? I mean, that’s the job of police officers, but, you know, all I’m doing is you’re putting some recognition on the idea that you know that we need to consider the challenge for local and state police in carrying it out. It’s not, you know, should we do it? We absolutely should try to do it.”

Does he have any ballpark idea of what the bill would cost?

“I don’t know what it would cost, because it’s the number of going forward, the number of people who get, particularly on Karina’s Law, the number of people, we don’t know the number of people who will have to have their weapons removed, as opposed to those who would turn them in. We just don’t know.

“But here’s the thing, I think we need to continue to have conversations about this. Obviously, I’ve been an advocate for gun safety my entire adult life, and so I am very much in favor of what I think we all want to have effectuated here. I just know that what law enforcement would tell you is it is hard to find the manpower to do everything.”

So, is it fair to say he wants “a” bill, but not necessarily “this” bill?

“I believe there may need to be more conversations,” the governor said. “ ’A bill’ should pass, yes.” He did not elaborate further.

The day after I told subscribers about Pritzker’s remarks, the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence released its annual Domestic Violence Homicide Report for 2023, months ahead of its usual October release.

The group’s consultant said that the coalition hoped an early release of the numbers, which showed that domestic violence deaths rose by 110% last year, would increase the urgency of passing Karina’s Bill.

While it stalled in the Senate last spring, Senate President Don Harmon has since told me he is “eager” to pass the bill after a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling appeared to open the door to its constitutionality.

To my eyes, Pritzker appears torn. He is a longtime gun control advocate who supports the bill’s concept, but fears that law enforcement won’t be able to carry out the bill’s sweeping mandate.

So it appears to me that, since the Illinois State Police would also be involved with this task, at least some of those failures would reflect directly back on the governor, which is likely making him antsy.

Pritzker will have to work out an acceptable solution with legislators before the General Assembly decides to pass something on its own. It would be almost politically impossible for Pritzker to veto a bill that he wasn’t comfortable with, so some sort of deal is a must for him — but not so much for legislators.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Grayson’s behavior in Logan County led superior to ask, ‘How are you still employed with us?’ Capitol News Illinois

Before former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy Sean Grayson was accused of shooting Sonya Massey after she called police to investigate a prowler, he had a rocky, one-year tenure with the Logan County Sheriff’s Department.

Personnel records show that Grayson’s time there was fraught, though he was not fired by the department. Grayson’s file from Logan County shows he continued a high-speed pursuit of a traffic offender even after his supervisor ordered him to terminate it, a woman filed a complaint claiming Grayson tried to watch as she was strip searched, and her fiancé, who was in Logan County jail, claimed Grayson questioned him in front of other inmates as retaliation for his girlfriend’s complaint.

Logan County Chief Deputy Nathan Miller wrote in a November 2022 report that Grayson needed “extensive” training after failing to listen to his superiors. He wrote Grayson needed field training, along with “additional traffic stop training, report writing training, high-stress decision making process classes, and needs to read, discuss and understand issued Logan County Sheriff’s Department policies.”

“Seven months on. How are you still employed by us?” Miller asked Grayson during a recorded meeting to discuss Grayson’s actions.

“I don’t know,” Grayson responded.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will sign birth equity legislation at 11 am. At 1 pm, the governor will celebrate Illinois’ Medicaid waiver expansion at the Greater Chicago Food Depository’s Volunteer Orientation Hall. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | First lawsuit under new Illinois Fertility Fraud Act illustrates challenges in proving claims, crafting legislation: It wasn’t until almost a half-century after conception that the mother and daughter learned new information that shocked them both: A commercially available genetic test in 2022 revealed that Culver’s DNA matched with the DNA of a granddaughter of [Dr. Bradley D. Adams of Christie Clinic], according to a lawsuit filed by Paula Duvall and Culver in Champaign County in February. […] The case was believed to be the first filed under the Illinois Fertility Fraud Act, which went into effect in January. The law states that “the assisted reproductive treatment of a patient using the health care provider’s own human reproductive material without the patient’s informed written consent has caused significant harm and had a severe negative impact” on Illinois residents, including fertility patients and their children. But a Champaign County judge in late June dismissed Christie Clinic from the lawsuit, in part because the law “does not allow health care facilities like Christie” to be named as defendants, according to court documents.

* WGLT | Going to bat: Logan County correctional staff advocate for keeping facility local: On Friday, staff from Logan and other regional correctional centers held a charity softball tournament that served both to raise money for the Lincoln food bank, and to spotlight efforts to keep the prison in Logan County. A state report has determined the facility in poor condition and that it needs to be replaced. The state government looks poised to build a new prison in Will County, which it contends will better serve the 43% of inmates who hail from the Chicago area.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Lead feet in Illinois? 50% of crash deaths tied to speeding, so why does it persist?: In Illinois last year, 1,241 people were killed in vehicle crashes, and 55% of those deaths were speeding-related, ISP said. Who are these scofflaws? Significant segments are younger and male. In 2022, nearly one-quarter of drivers involved in fatal crashes between ages 18 and 44 were speeding. Also, 35% of male drivers ages 15 to 20, and 32% of male drivers ages 21 to 24 involved in fatal crashes were speeding, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s political campaign paid a firm for fundraising help while it lobbied City Hall, spurring calls for reform: Mercury Public Affairs, a New York City-based political strategy firm, has been lobbying Johnson since July 2023 on economic and labor causes, according to a Tribune examination of city lobbyist registration records. But starting this year, the company’s consulting division also worked for Johnson’s political fund, state campaign finance records show. Wearing both hats, though uncommon, is not a violation of state or city ethics codes. But it is a dynamic that good government watchdogs said raises concerns about the appearance of a conflict of interest for a firm seeking to influence the mayor’s office while also working to raise money for him.

* Sun-Times | Who’s paying for Chicago’s DNC? Voters won’t have the full picture till it’s long over: Once subsidized by taxpayers, major-party national conventions are now almost fully funded by uber-wealthy donors, massive corporations, labor unions and other influential big-money groups. […] A handful of major party backers confirmed to the Sun-Times that they’ve ponied up for the Democrats’ presidential election-year extravaganza, the four-day affair kicking off Aug. 19 that’s mostly funded through unlimited contributions to a non-profit host committee.

* Streetsblog Chicago | New RTA Report recommends income-based fare programs: The RTA report recommends addressing that challenge by creating an income-based reduced fare program called Regional Access. It also calls full state funding of ADA Paratransit and Regional Access, which would help reduce the $730 million budget gap. Lastly, it proposes unlocking collaborative pricing policies across the region by investing in technology and funding reform.

* Crain’s | Jewel, Mariano’s parents put merger on ice to fight Colorado challenge: Kroger and Albertsons, two supermarket operator giants and parent companies of Chicago grocers Mariano’s Fresh Markets and Jewel-Osco, have agreed to delay closing their $24.6 billion merger as a challenge from the Colorado attorney general goes to court. At a hearing yesterday in Denver, Judge Andrew Luxen granted a preliminary injunction halting the deal and canceled a hearing that was scheduled for Aug. 12. Instead, Luxen will oversee a two-week trial on the merits of the proposed tie-up beginning on Sept. 30.

* Sun-Times | Against all odds, piping plovers keep making history in Illinois: The viral saga began when Monty and Rose tried to nest in a Waukegan parking lot in 2018, which Semel said was “a terrible spot with drag racing, and the city wasn’t responsive to closing off the area.” Much changed quickly. This year Waukegan made piping plover the city bird the day before piping plovers returned to a restricted beach there. In 2019, Monty and Rose nested at Montrose, the first in Cook County since 1948.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County property tax late fees could be used for tax relief for low-income homeowners: The median tax bill south suburban taxpayers received this year went up about 20%, according to the county treasurer, the biggest increase in the last 29 years. The year before, the median residential tax bill for the north and northwest suburbs jumped 15.7%, the biggest percent increase in the last 30 years. Now, 13 of the board’s 17 members are calling for a hearing to create a new property tax relief rebate program. They want to pay for it with fees the Cook County treasurer collects from people who pay their bills late.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton former and current elected officials announce campaigns against Tiffany Henyard: Trustee Jason House, who became an outspoken advocate for launching an investigation into Henyard’s spending of village tax dollars, formally announced his run for mayor. Former Trustee Edward Steave, who lost a bid for reelection last year, is running for trustee and incumbent Trustees Kiana Belcher and Brittney Norwood and Village Clerk Alison Key will seek reelection.

* ABC Chicago | Dolton Trustee Jason House announces campaign for mayor in bid to unseat Tiffany Henyard: Dolton Senior Village Trustee Jason House’s candidacy is part of a team effort of former and current trustees all running in opposition to incumbent Mayor Tiffany Henyard. Former and current elected leaders are hoping to change the tide of Dolton politics by launching a joint effort against current Henyard under the slogan, “Clean House 2025.”

* Daily Herald | Virtual reality: Local college football players thrilled to be in video game: EA stopped producing NCAA games in 2014 after a federal court ruled the NCAA broke federal antitrust laws by not paying players for allowing their images and likenesses to be used. Now, in the age of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL), players receive $600 and a copy of the new game for the console of their choice as compensation. “It’s a very surreal, full circle feeling,” said Jaden Dolphin, a former Maine West linebacker who tallied 62 total tackles last season for Northern Illinois University.

*** Downstate ***

* Shaw Local | La Salle County GOP to host former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker at annual dinner: The La Salle County Republican Central Committee announced it will host its annual Reagan Day Dinner, featuring the former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. The event will take place on Friday, Aug. 2, at the Pitstick Pavilion, on Route 23, north of Ottawa. Walker is celebrated for his transformative conservative leadership and impactful policies during his tenure, the La Salle County Republicans said in a news release. Some of his notable achievements include:

* Pantagraph | Central Illinois political parties energized by Harris, united under Trump: “I think she’s going to bring out some new voters, some new people, and honestly, I’m looking forward to seeing a career prosecutor … run against a felon,” said Patrick Cortesi, chairman of the McLean County Democrats, referring to Harris’ legal background and Trump’s felony convictions. Livingston County GOP Chairman Dave Rice said his party focuses more on policy positions than individual candidates, and in that respect, Harris would represent a continuation of the 81-year-old incumbent’s work.

* SJ-R | Big Lincoln: How Illinois is using lifelike Abraham Lincoln to help tourists, businesses: The Illinois Office of Tourism partnered with Matador in early June to release the first U.S. state AI travel guide to help people learn and explore Illinois from their phone. Meet “Big Lincoln,” the handheld 16th President of the United States, who’s now telling you the best place to eat in town. The AI president shares the same bobblehead look and name as Illinois’ official mascot, which has been featured in international mascot competitions in the past.

* WSIU | SIU-Carbondale Chancellor Austin Lane talks about enrollment, bonuses and administrative stability: WSIU’s Brad Palmer caught up with SIU-Carbondale Chancellor Austin Lane last week. Chancellor Lane updated the SIU Board of Trustees earlier this month on the enrollment picture for the campus, which he said includes a 14% increase currently in new students. He starts out talking about the 3.4% increase in summer enrollment.

* WCIA | Elevator explodes at Decatur ADM complex: A spokesperson from ADM said a “potential smoldering event” was found at an elevator in the building around 6:30 a.m. Upon investigation, surrounding operations were shut down and the complex was evacuated. The Decatur Fire Department was called to the scene. The elevator exploded an hour later at 7:30 a.m. The spokesperson said no one was hurt in the incident. However, the elevator did withstand some structural damage.

  25 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, Jul 29, 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)

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Talk with you Monday

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Environmental Protection Agency

Illinois EPA Interim Director James Jennings today announced $43,159,886 in funding that is being provided to 17 individual communities to replace lead service lines during the last quarter of State Fiscal Year (SFY) 2024. The funding is provided through the Illinois EPA’s State Revolving Fund (SRF), which provides low-interest loan funding for drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater projects. The funding for each of these awards is being provided in the form of principal forgiveness, so none of the communities will not have to repay any of the funds awarded.

“We know lead service lines are a major obstacle for community water supplies throughout Illinois,” said Interim Director Jennings. “Illinois EPA is committed to utilizing our State Revolving Fund to maximize funding available to communities to remove the threat of lead in drinking water, while prioritizing disadvantaged communities that would have no other resources to take on this challenge.”

Lead is a toxic metal that can accumulate in the body over time. Lead can enter drinking water when corrosion of pipes and/or fixtures occurs. Service lines are small pipes that carry drinking water from water mains into homes. Many homes built prior to 1990 may have lead service lines or lead containing plumbing fixtures or faucets. Eliminating lead service lines in homes will help to reduce lead exposure for residents. For resources on lead in your home, visit: https://epa.illinois.gov/general-information/in-your-home/resources-on-lead.html.

Click here for a complete list of the communities receiving principal forgiveness funding.

* Governor Pritzker…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) Director Heidi Mueller, DCFS staff, legislators, and students to celebrate this year’s scholarship recipients at the department’s annual luncheon. This year, 352 current or former youth in care will receive scholarship certificates provided by the Illinois DCFS Scholarship Program, including up to five consecutive years of tuition and mandatory fee waivers valid at Illinois public universities and community colleges. The program also provides student recipients with financial assistance for books and school supplies, a monthly grant payment to supplement other expenses, and an Illinois Medicaid card. […]

Historically, the department has awarded an average of 53 scholarships each year. This year’s record-breaking 352 scholarships follows 259 scholarships awarded in 2023, solidifying the department’s continued commitment to ensuring educational opportunities for current and former youth in care; and an increased investment in DCFS programs by Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly. The governor’s FY25 budget provided $11.16 million in funding for DCFS scholarships, nearly doubling the $5.66 million provided in FY24.

The DCFS Scholarship Program is available to youth who have an open DCFS case, whose cases were closed through adoption or guardianship, or who aged out of care at 18 or older. DCFS Scholarship Program recipients are selected based on their scholastic record and aptitude, community and extracurricular activities, three letters of recommendation and a personal essay illustrating their purpose for higher education. […]

Scholarship recipients receive up to five consecutive years of tuition and academic fee waivers to be used at colleges and universities, community colleges and trade schools, a monthly grant of $1,577 to offset other expenses and a Medicaid card. Four awards are reserved for the children of veterans, and two awards are reserved for students pursuing degrees in social work in honor of Pamela Knight and Deidre Silas, two DCFS caseworkers who succumbed to injuries sustained in the line of duty.

*** Statewide ***

* Brownfield AG | Illinois farmers own 24% of the land they farm: A new study from Illinois Farm Business Farm Management (FBFM) shows the state’s farmers only owned 24% of the land they farmed in 2021. Brad Zwilling, vice president of data analysis at FBFM, says it’s not a new trend. “Crop share was at 27% and cash rent at 48%,” he says. “That trend has continued to increase on the cash rented side and lower on the crop shared side primarily due to more and more absentee landlords or just wanting to not have to worry about marketing grain.”

* Tribune | Climate bill rebates for electric appliances and upgrades coming to Illinois in 2025: They are some of the juiciest consumer incentives in President Joe Biden’s 2022 climate bill: rebates of up to $8,000 for a heat-pump air conditioner and heater, up to $4,000 for an electrical panel, up to $2,500 for electrical wiring, and up to $1,750 for an electric heat pump water heater. And they’re coming to Illinois. The state plans to roll out its home energy rebates in the first quarter of 2025, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency said in a written response to questions from the Tribune.

* My Journal Courier | State spreading awareness of Firearm Restraining Orders: The Illinois Department of Public Health, Brady: United Against Gun Violence and the Ad Council have released a public service announcement video advocating an end to gun violence. The agencies are promoting “Pause to Heal,” a multi-state campaign to bring awareness to Firearm Restraining Orders, or “red flag laws” designed to help prevent firearms from falling into the wrong hands.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | How the quantum and United Center projects could spark action in investment-starved neighborhoods: The quantum and United Center projects — which have their own anchor users lined up, unlike other planned megadevelopments in the city — set the stage for more real estate investors to follow into neighborhoods they don’t frequent. But the proposals also put pressure on city officials to ensure they are properly leveraged as a launching pad. “They shouldn’t just be seen as little dots on the map, and that’s the only planning that happens,” said city planning department veteran Eleanor Gorski, who is now CEO of the Chicago Architecture Center. “These are dots with ripples, and the city needs to step up and produce the ripples.”

* WTTW | Gage Park Man Who Spent 21 Years in Prison Now the 45th Person to be Exonerated After Being Framed by Disgraced Ex-Detective: Edwin Ortiz, who is now 51 and lives in Gage Park, was 14 years old when Jose Morales was shot to death in Humboldt Park alongside his friend Marvin Taylor, who was wounded. Ortiz was convicted in connection with the shooting in 1993 after being investigated by Reynaldo Guevara, a former Chicago police detective accused of routinely framing suspects. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office did not oppose Ortiz’ request to have his more than 30-year-old conviction vacated.

* Tribune | Three charged with murder, arson and financial crimes in connection with death of Chicago firefighter: Martez Cristler, 22, of Hammond, Indiana, and Nicholas Virgil, 37, of Riverdale, are charged with murder and arson. Anthony Moore, 47, of Blue Island, is charged with wire fraud, insurance fraud and forgery. […] Moore’s arrest report lists State Farm Insurance as the victim in the incident. A Tribune reporter spoke with Moore last year shortly after the fire, and he said he was in the process of rehabbing the property as a rental unit.

* WTTW | Is There an Alligator in Lincoln Park’s North Pond? Witnesses Say Creature They’ve Dubbed ‘Muddy Waters’ Is Lurking But Confirmation Scarce: Tom Hildum knows people aren’t going to believe him. But the Auburn resident swears he’s seen an alligator in Lincoln Park’s North Pond. Not once, but twice. “I was skeptical too,” said Sheba Heard, Hildum’s wife of 16 years. Then she got a look at the creature herself, “tip to tail, skimming across the top of the water.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Suburban Chicago lab lied to Medicare, billed millions of dollars for COVID-19 tests on dead people, federal probe finds: Abdul Wahed’s company, Pro Diagnostics in Bridgeview, is suspected of using a suburban doctor’s credentials without her knowledge to approve the tests, according to court papers filed in the federal investigation. Tens of thousands of Medicare claims for tests in Illinois and other states showed the same doctor ordered them, which aroused suspicions, according to the court filing. Pro Diagnostics billed Medicare for 48,552 claims on Dec. 6 and for another 35,585 claims the next day, according to the affidavit, which says law enforcement officials were alerted because of the “extraordinary spike in billing.”

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Kristin Bayer Selected as New Williamson County Circuit Clerk Republican Nominee: Bayer was selected the nominee after Justin Maze resigned the Williamson County Circuit Clerk seat earlier this year. Bayer will be running unopposed on the November ballot. “I am excited for this opportunity and looking forward to serving the people of Williamson County,” said Kristen as she spoke to several supporters at the Administration Building Thursday afternoon.

* WPSD | Boys and Girls Clubs of Southern Illinois reach fundraising goal to reopen: BGCSI’s reopening campaign sought a goal of $200,000 to relaunch the clubs after closing last summer. The organization is aiming to open up around the time that school starts, but that step hinges on the hiring of a new CEO and staff.

* WSIL | Herrin Animal Control deemed “no kill” shelter: The center posted to Facebook on Friday morning to announce it received a “No-Kill Status” from the Best Friends Network. This recognition goes toward shelters that manage a 90% save rate for the animals. “We are extremely happy to have received this prestigious accomplishment helping the City Of Herrin animals get a second chance on life,” wrote the center. “We cannot possibly save them all, but we can save most.”

* WCIA | Daughters of Central IL Olympian celebrating his legacy 100 years later: he 2024 Olympic Games in Paris kick off Friday. The last time the “City of Love” played host was a century ago when an athlete from Central Illinois went for gold— twice. Now, the University of Illinois is celebrating Harold Osborn’s life and legacy ahead of the games. The university welcomed back two of Harold Osborn’s daughters to give a webinar about their father Thursday morning. They said he is a reminder that humble beginnings can lead to global success.

* WGEM | Illinois Treasurer Frerichs shows off unclaimed property ahead of State Fair auction: Items include a Rolex Oyster watch, Mike Singletary and Troy Aikman football cards, uncut sheets of money and many rare coins and other collectables. Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs holds the auction each year at the fair. His office auctions off unclaimed property, including items left in abandoned safety deposit boxes, if they go unclaimed for at least 10 years. All proceeds are held by the Treasurer’s Office and paid to the property’s owner or their heirs if they are located.

*** National ***

* The Grio | The ‘Kamala ain’t Black’ conspiracy theory explained: While it is easy to dismiss this claim by using the age-old method of genetic testing called “eyesight,” theGrio decided to investigate this hilarious hypothesis seriously. […] To effectively debunk this allegation, we must first agree on what people are saying. While there are numerous stories and tweets claiming Harris descended from a white slaveowner, those stories just prove people’s ignorance of America’s true history. Slavemasters often raped their human property, which explains an American Journal of Human Genetics study showing the average African American’s genome is nearly a quarter European. Loving vs. Virginia didn’t cause that; the sexual violence of racial terrorism did. As one teenager wrote: “It is fair to remember that almost the total of race mixture in America has come, not at Negro initiative, but by the acts of those very white men who talk loudest of race purity.”

* Sun-Times | ‘Illinoise’ superfans are seeing the Broadway show over and over: If theatergoing were an Olympic sport, then Matthew Dodson would be Michael Phelps. This year alone, the Manhattanite has already attended 160 performances on and off Broadway. In the past, thanks to rush and lottery ticket options, as well as last-minute deals on SeatGeek, he’s racked up head-spinning numbers for shows like “Company” (50 times), “Shucked” (60 times) and “The Phantom of the Opera” (100-plus visits).

* KFVS | Boar’s Head recalls more than 207,000 pounds of deli products over possible listeria contamination: The nationwide recall of about 207,528 pounds of products was announced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service on Friday and includes several varieties of its deli products that were produced on the same day as the liverwurst. The ready-to-eat liverwurst products were produced between June 11 and July 17 and have a 44-day shelf life.

  2 Comments      


FOP Labor Council wants indicted murderer reinstated to job with back pay (Updated)

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Nexstar Illinois Capitol Bureau Chief

…Adding… The grievance was filed by the FOP Labor Council, not, as posted in that tweet, the ILFOP.

* They’re calling for Grayson’s full reinstatement and back pay…

The grievance was terminated without just cause. Further, the employer publicly disseminated details of the investigation and termination on Facebook, in violation of the CBA and prior to giving the grievance or his representatives notice of the decision to terminate.

Remedy Sought: Reinstatement and reimbursement of all lost wages, restoration of all lost benefits, and any other appropriate relief.

That Facebook post is here.

* Sonya Massey’s autopsy was released today. A.P.

Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon had previously disclosed initial findings on Massey’s July 6 death in Springfield and the full autopsy report released Friday confirmed those conclusions, including that her death was a homicide.

The report states that in addition to the bullet striking her just beneath her left eye, Massey had “minor blunt force injuries” to her right leg and she weighed 112 pounds.

The autopsy findings were released shortly before civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Massey’s family, was scheduled to hold a news conference in Springfield.

* WAND reporter


* Invisible Institute and Investigative Reporting Workshop

Invisible Institute, Illinois Public Media and the Investigative Reporting Workshop obtained new records from the Logan County Sheriff’s Office, where Grayson worked for 11 months prior to Sangamon County, that show department officials concluded Grayson ignored internal policies during a high-speed chase, fielded at least two formal complaints about his behavior and told him directly that they had considered firing him.

These records also include audio recordings from a November 2022 interview between Grayson and Logan County’s chief deputy which suggest the department — as well as other police departments that had employed him — were previously aware of issues with his performance and integrity as an officer.

Grayson’s relatively short law enforcement career, during which he moved between six Central Illinois police departments in just four years, has come under scrutiny in the weeks since he shot and killed Sonya Massey on July 6, 2024. […]

By the time he applied to be a deputy at the Logan County Sheriff’s Office in March 2022, Grayson had four different policing jobs across Central Illinois — three part-time gigs and one full time post. “My communication, people-centric nature, and compassion have afforded me excellent critical thinking skills,” Grayson wrote in his application.

But when Logan County officials called his current employer, the Auburn Police Department, they received mixed reviews. Auburn Police Chief Dave Campbell said that, while Grayson was an eager officer who showed up for his shifts early and had never been disciplined, he struggled with report writing and had raised concerns that he was “too aggressive.”

* Sangamon County’s response



* SJ-R

An official fundraiser has been set up for the family of Sonya Massey after she was fatally shot by a now former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy on July 6.

Massey’s father, James Wilburn, set up a GoFundMe page for the family. The family is asking for $100,000 to cover mental health counseling, supporting for the family, travel costs and household support as the family works to pursue justice for Sonya, according to the page.

“Sonya is remembered as caring and loving mother to her two children, a 17-year-old son and a 15-year-old daughter,” the family wrote on the donation page. “Sonya loved cooking, doing hair, nurturing her children, and spending time with her family. She was also a devoted church member.”

As of Thursday afternoon, the fundraiser had reached about $4,000.

…Adding… WCIA

WCIA reached out to the police union for comment about the grievance.

“As a labor organization, we have an obligation to protect our members procedural, and due process rights contained in the collective bargaining agreement,” The Illinois FOP said in a statement. “Those rights come with very strict timelines.”

  37 Comments      


If wishes were fishes…

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune on the new CPS budget

Despite pressure from the teachers union to reject Chicago Public Schools’ proposed $9.9 billion budget, Board of Education members unanimously voted Thursday to pass the district’s spending plan for the 2024-25 school year.

While the vote may have settled the debate over addressing CPS’ $505 million deficit, the plan doesn’t account for future collective bargaining costs resulting from ongoing negotiations, with the approximately 30,000-member Chicago Teachers Union and the Chicago Principal Administrators Association of over 1,200 members. […]

“There is no surplus in the budget that would accommodate allocating additional money to CPS,” said a spokesperson for the governor’s office, adding that Johnson has not made a request to its office for additional state funding for CPS. “That budget is balanced and includes an additional $350 million for school districts across the state.” […]

The governor’s office noted in a statement to the Tribune that Pritzker has invested more than $1.8 billion in the state’s evidence-based funding formula — for which the state is progressively upping its contributions to school districts statewide with the goal of “adequate” funding by 2027. With the state already taking on teacher pipeline and retention programs and new early childhood education investments, more money will not be allocated to CPS this year, Pritzker’s spokesperson said. […]

“The district, city and state can’t be like people who finish dining out and then point to the other to pick up the tab,” CTU leadership said in their statement. “CEO Martinez should have taken the opportunity to stand up and join us in calling on Gov. Pritzker and the legislature to provide the resources owed to CPS students for the schools they deserve. Instead, the CEO chose the easy route.”

The “easy route” is pretending that the state and federal governments are gonna bail out the CPS budget this fiscal year, which started on July 1, by the way.

* WBEZ

The mayor, who oversees Martinez, had demanded the district keep on its books a $175 million pension payment covering non-teacher staff. Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot initially shifted that expense from the city’s budget, which is separate from the CPS budget, in a highly criticized move. But in a major rebuke of the mayor, the budget approved Thursday did not include that payment. […]

On the pension payment dispute, CTU Vice President Jackson Potter implied the school board should consider paying the $175 million. The CTU had harshly criticized Lightfoot for saddling CPS with the payment, chiding her for “ripping off CPS” and “robbing students.” But Potter touted Johnson as a new type of mayor who needs resources in the city budget to invest in affordable housing and mental health services.

“We have to deal with the conundrum of robbing Peter to pay Paul on the city side,” he said.

Potter said the district should instead prioritize more strongly lobbying state and federal lawmakers for more funding, pointing to the Democratic National Convention’s arrival in August as a good time for CPS, the CTU and City Hall to put on a coordinated pressure campaign.

  6 Comments      


Meanwhile… In Ohio

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* A.P.

Consumers cannot expect boneless chicken wings to actually be free of bones, a divided Ohio Supreme Court ruled Thursday, rejecting claims by a restaurant patron who suffered serious medical complications from getting a bone stuck in his throat.

Michael Berkheimer was dining with his wife and friends at a wing joint in Hamilton, Ohio, and had ordered the usual — boneless wings with parmesan garlic sauce — when he felt a bite-size piece of meat go down the wrong way. Three days later, feverish and unable to keep food down, Berkeimer went to the emergency room, where a doctor discovered a long, thin bone that had torn his esophagus and caused an infection.

Berkheimer sued the restaurant, Wings on Brookwood, saying the restaurant failed to warn him that so-called “boneless wings” — which are, of course, nuggets of boneless, skinless breast meat — could contain bones. The suit also named the supplier and the farm that produced the chicken, claiming all were negligent.

In a 4-3 ruling, the Supreme Court said Thursday that “boneless wings” refers to a cooking style, and that Berkheimer should’ve been on guard against bones since it’s common knowledge that chickens have bones. The high court sided with lower courts that had dismissed Berkheimer’s suit.

* Justice Michael P. Donnelly wrote in dissent

The question must be asked: Does anyone really believe that the parents in this country who feed their young children boneless wings or chicken tenders or chicken nuggets or chicken fingers expect bones to be in the chicken? Of course they don’t. When they read the word “boneless,” they think that it means “without bones,” as do all sensible people. That is among the reasons why they feed such items to young children. The reasonable expectation that a person has when someone sells or serves him or her boneless chicken wings is that the chicken does not have bones in it. […]

But I am convinced that Berkheimer should be able to present evidence of their negligence to a jury. Jurors likely have eaten boneless wings, some will have fed boneless wings to their children, and jurors have common sense. They will be able to determine, better than any court, what a consumer reasonably expects when ordering boneless wings.

* Ohio Dems response

* Ohio State Rep. Elliot Forhan emailed colleagues with this co-sponsor request this morning

Colleagues,

I will soon introduce a bill to remedy a grave injustice coming out of our state Supreme Court. Justice Joe Deters says if your boneless chicken wings have bones and you suffer horrific life-altering injuries as a result, too bad.[1] You should have expected bones in your “boneless” chicken wings.

This has far greater negative consequences to Ohioans than simply putting a damper on snacking while we watch football. What does this tell Ohio’s moms and dads? If a kid gets hurt by a bone in a McNugget, Ohio law says that’s just fine. This cannot be the law. We cannot close the courtroom doors to those who are harmed by others.

Kids don’t expect McNuggets to have bones in them. Moms and dads don’t expect chicken fingers to have bones in them. Grown men don’t expect boneless wings to have bones in them. It’s right in the name. Boneless.

The gentleman in this case was horrifically injured. He had to have surgeries and suffered infections that changed his life forever. I can’t believe we need to put this in the statutory code of Ohio, but the bill will simply state that boneless means boneless. And companies that harm their customers will be liable.

If you would like to serve as a co-sponsor of the legislation, then please notify me by the close of business on Tuesday, July 30, 2024.

Thoughts?

  44 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  20 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker downplays VP talk, denies call with Harris campaign. Sun-Times

    - The Sun-Times first reported the Harris campaign called Pritzker Wednesday about the possibility of serving as her running mate, but the Illinois governor told reporters that Harris’ campaign “did not call me yesterday.”
    - The Sun-Times stands by its story.
    - Asked directly about the call, Pritzker responded, “I don’t want to talk about any private conversations that I’ve had, but I will say that I have said directly to the vice president that I’m going to do everything and anything that is necessary to make sure that we beat Donald Trump and JD Vance.”

* Lincoln Presidential Library…

A new “Picturing Lincoln” initiative by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum means more than 1,000 high-resolution photos – many of which have never been online before – are now available to people around the world. Thousands more pictures, posters and paintings related to President Lincoln will be added in coming months.

The first batch of images includes:

    - 129 pictures of Lincoln
    - 178 of Lincoln’s Tomb, including some of Lincoln’s coffin when it was unearthed during a construction project
    - Rare pictures of Lincoln’s grandchildren and great-grandchildren
    - Photos of Robert Lincoln, his hobbies and his homes
    - Dozens of photos related to Lincoln’s assassination, funeral and the execution of the conspirators who plotted his death. […]

The images, with a resolution of 600 dpi, can be found at www.PresidentLincoln.Illinois.gov/PicturingLincoln. They are hosted by the Illinois Digital Archives, which is operated by the Illinois Secretary of State. “Picturing Lincoln” was made possible by a $100,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, funded through the Illinois State Library.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | As the DNC returns to Chicago, Illinois’ dean of the delegation, Dick Durbin, basks in the moment.: There is no shortage of Democrats parsing Durbin’s every move, trying to suss out if this term might be it for the No. 2-ranking Democrat in the U.S. Senate. He has this advice for those already quietly jockeying for his job in 2026: Cool your heels. “I’ll make up my mind and decide whether I’m going forward or not after the first of the year, and people on the bench then have to make decisions accordingly,” Durbin told WBEZ from his Chicago office overlooking the Loop and Lake Michigan.

* AP | Chicago police chief says out-of-town police won’t be posted in city neighborhoods during DNC: As many as 500 officers, mostly from Illinois agencies, will travel to Chicago to boost DNC security. They’ll be directing traffic and working at the numerous checkpoints around the convention sites of the United Center and McCormick Place. “This will free up our officers, our Chicago police officers, to be in more volatile areas,” Snelling said at a news conference with the U.S. Secret Service, FBI, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and city leaders. “We can’t have a successful Democratic National Convention, if we’re not protecting the entire city as a whole.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Pritzker touts Illinois’ cannabis social equity program: Poised to be ‘national standard’: Pritzker said that the study, which was authored by the Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Office, reported that Maryland had the second most diverse cannabis industry, with 37% of business permits held by minority or women owners, followed by New Jersey with 36%, Colorado with 34%, Michigan with 25%, and Massachusetts with 24%.

* Play USA | FanDuel Pleads With Legislators To Keep Online Gaming Tax Rates Reasonable: This year, Illinois lawmakers increased a 15% online sports betting tax rate to as high as 40% at a graduated rate. Brandt Iden, vice president of government affairs at Fanatics, said despite threats made to leave the Illinois market if the tax rate increased, operators are going to stick it out. “Illinois wasn’t quite as bad as New York, but Illinois has been bad from a sports betting perspective,” Iden said. “I mean, they raised the tax rates overnight, a very difficult progressive tax rate structure, and it doesn’t make sense.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago Board of Education passes $9.9B budget, withstanding pressure from Mayor Brandon Johnson and teachers union: While the vote may have settled the debate over addressing CPS’ $505 million deficit, the plan doesn’t account for future collective bargaining costs resulting from ongoing negotiations, with the approximately 30,000-member Chicago Teachers Union and the Chicago Principal Administrators Association of over 1,200 members.

* CBS Chicago | Businesses concerned about effect of Chicago DNC security restrictions: Brent Bashier owns Doc’s Smokehouse in Milwaukee and said he did not expect to be surrounded by fencing during the Republican National Convention there earlier this month. The feds’ map for the RNC showed Doc’s right by the hard perimeter but technically in the pedestrians-allowed zone. “We didn’t know that our side street would also be fully restricted. What was not depicted in any of the maps was that there was only one way to get to us,” Bashier said.

* Sun-Times | Judge rejects motion to dismiss weapons, misconduct charges against former 45th Ward superintendent: A Cook County judge on Thursday rejected a motion to dismiss weapons and misconduct charges against a former 45th Ward superintendent who allegedly tried to sell a World War II- era machine gun to an undercover federal agent while working a city job. […] Defense attorney Jim McKay, his voice rising to an impassioned shout, told Judge Kenneth Wadas that if the court allowed the case against Charles Sikanich to continue, authorities might as well start charging veterans at VFW halls too. “What about all of the cannons out in front of every VFW hall in the United States?” McKay asked. “If that’s the case, then everyone at that VFW hall should be charged too. This is insane.”

* Tribune | Cook County judge unlawfully banned exoneree turned law clerk from courthouse over a phone, lawyers allege: a motion alleges, Judge Peggy Chiampas “began screaming loudly from the bench ‘bring him in, bring him in, bring him in.’” After questioning him in chambers, Chiampas wrote an order that banned Robert Almodovar, who was issued a certificate of innocence in 2018, from the Leighton Criminal Court Building, an unusual move in a public building with a mandate for transparent court proceedings. Now, Almodovar, through his attorney, is contesting the ban and asking that a judge other than Chiampas hear the matter, which has spurred a bizarre, monthslong process in which the matter has been tossed around to multiple judges who seem reluctant to touch the issue and roped in assistant state’s attorneys, even though there are no criminal or contempt of court charges.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Capitol News Illinois | In the suburbs, proposed water rates spark outrage from residents, advocates: At Monday’s hearing, area residents lodged often passionate complaints, with all but one speaker opposing the request. Pat Smith, a nearby resident, said her family installed new insulation and upgraded windows to reduce energy costs, but struggled to reduce its water bill. […] Cindy Zacharias, a registered nurse from Bolingbrook, noted the number of people, particularly older people on fixed incomes, who spoke before her and described struggling to pay their water bills.

* Tribune | Longtime OPRFHS history teacher departs the school citing ‘the continued toll of antisemitism’ there: In the letter, a copy of which Pioneer Press obtained through a public records request, Soffer, also a 2003 graduate of the school, said the last few years at OPRFHS have been “incredibly trying”. He said that antisemitism at the school – which enrolls students from the neighboring towns of Oak Park and River Forest – and the district’s lack of response to it, created “an untenable climate” for him.

* Daily Herald | The DuPage County Fair is back with a full-scale carnival, sheepherding dogs and loads of ice cream: Along with the county fair staples, the Mama Coco Mobile Cuisine food truck has al pastor and steak tacos with fresh chopped cilantro and onion. Nearby, The Roasted Cob stand serves whole corn cobs with the charred husks still attached. Gyro meals spill over the plate. And on the sweeter side of things, a pie-eating contest is set for Friday afternoon on the west lawn.

* Daily Herald | Going for Gold: Here are the suburban athletes on Team USA competing in Paris: Twelve athletes who attended suburban high schools will compete for Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, which kicks off Friday, July 26 and runs through Aug. 11. […] Korbin Albert, Grayslake, Classical Consortium Academy, women’s soccer A midfielder for Paris Saint-Germain in 2023, Albert is making her Olympic debut. The U.S. women began group play Thursday with a 3-0 win over Zambia.

*** Downstate ***

* Herald-Review | Former Decatur council candidate sues mayor, city: In a Monday court filing, Marty Watkins, a U.S. Army veteran and a chaplain at the Macon County Sheriff’s Department, alleged that both former City Manager Scot Wrighton and Public Works Director Matt Newall “gave the directive” for the removal of his campaign signs in March 2021 while other candidates’ signs, also allegedly in unauthorized areas, were untouched. Watkins also alleges that Mayor Julie Moore Wolfe was “informed” about the signs being removed. […] Watkins is seeking $400,000 in damages to compensate for emotional harm, pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life. Reached by Herald & Review Thursday afternoon, Watkins said his “claim basically speaks for itself.”

* SJ-R | Accusations of sexual abuse of a minor leveled against former Springfield Catholic bishop: A former Springfield Roman Catholic bishop has been accused of sexually abusing a minor according to one of several lawsuits brought against the St. Louis archdiocese and current Archbishop Mitchell T. Rozanski this week. Archbishop George Lucas, who served in Springfield from 1999 to 2009, was a priest and the dean of education at the St. Louis Preparatory Seminary School in the late 1980s when the alleged abuse occurred.

* WCIA | Deja vu? Canadian wildfire affects being felt in Central Illinois: Canadian wildfires are burning thousands of miles away, but the affects are starting to be felt here in Central Illinois. Air quality is getting worse from the smoke, and some people may want to be careful over the next few days.

*** National ***

* The Telegraph | The secret deal that plunged Rupert Murdoch into a family war: Although Succession has ended, the real-life battle for the Murdoch empire rages on: a decades-long tale of power, money, and internecine family rivalry that would make the Ancient Greeks blush. This week it has been revealed that Rupert Murdoch is embroiled in a secret legal battle with three of his children over the future of the business. At 93, it seems the old tycoon has lost none of his appetite for a fight, nor his willingness to line up with one of his children against the others.

* BOLTS | For Thousands of Georgians, Freely Traveling Across State Lines for an Abortion Is Not an Option: The near-total ban will severely constrict the reproductive choices of Georgians on probation and parole. Residents in this category who need an abortion will be faced with an impossible choice: giving birth and caring for a baby they do not want and likely cannot afford to raise, or traveling out of state for an abortion and risking a violation of their parole or probation conditions, which could land them back in prison.

  9 Comments      


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

Friday, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Jul 26, 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, Jul 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

State legislators resumed a series of hearings this week to scrutinize pharmacy benefit managers – a highly concentrated industry that critics say drives up the cost and limits availability of prescription drugs. […]

In Illinois, Rep. Natalie Manley, D-Joliet, who chairs the House Health Care Availability and Access Committee, said she hoped the hearings presented a chance for the legislature to learn more from PBM executives – though only lobbyists from the trade association representing major PBMs have spoken before the committee.

Two weeks before the state committee met for its most recent hearing, the Federal Trade Commission released an interim report detailing the agency’s findings in an ongoing antitrust probe of PBMs. […]

The report indicated PBMs have engaged in “delay tactics” over the past two years in failing to give the FTC the records it ordered them to provide. CNBC and the Wall Street Journal have reported that the Federal Trade Commission is preparing to sue PBMs to obtain the documents the agency requested over two years ago as part of the. […]

Chad Worz, executive director of the American Society of Consultant Pharmacists, said PBMs have used their position as middlemen to exploit pricing while selling the same drug to various buyers.

* C-Strategies…

Becky Carroll, Founder, President and CEO of C-Strategies, Inc., a strategic communications and public affairs firm, has been named the winner of Silver 2024 Bulldog PR Professional of the Year Award. The annual Bulldog PR Awards are exclusively judged by award winning journalists, celebrating public relations and communications excellence throughout the U.S. Nominees this year ranged from internal agencies to private firms, granting all public relations and corporate communication talent an opportunity to compete.

As part of the selection process, the panel of journalists evaluated applicants based on their vision, strategies, and distinctive approaches that enabled them to achieve their ultimate objective.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | The hope, the worry and the surreal that Illinois Black female Democratic delegates see in Kamala Harris’ moment: Ald. Emma Mitts, 37th Ward and currently the most-tenured woman on Chicago’s City Council, said it’s a milestone she’s excited to witness. “Wow, wow. My inside quivers, chills to just the thought of it. Chills go over your body,” Mitts said. “It has always been difficult for a woman, and particularly a Black woman. To have one in the White House — know that there’s still hope for women in the world. We can still be that leader. We can be the top leader, as it should be. We’ve been leaders all our life.”

* Tribune | Ascension selling 9 Illinois hospitals to California-based Prime Healthcare : Ascension plans to sell the hospitals, along with four of its post-acute and senior living facilities, to Prime Healthcare. Neither Prime nor Ascension disclosed the sale price Thursday. The hospitals slated to be sold to Prime include: Ascension Holy Family in Des Plaines, Ascension Mercy in Aurora, Ascension Resurrection in Chicago, Ascension St. Francis in Evanston, Ascension St. Joseph in Joliet, Ascension St. Joseph in Elgin, Ascension St. Mary in Kankakee, Ascension St. Mary in Chicago and Ascension St. Elizabeth in Chicago. Other facilities involved in the sale include Fox Knoll Village in Aurora, Villa Franciscan Place in Joliet, Heritage Village and Heritage Lodge in Kankakee, and Resurrection Place in Park Ridge, all now operated by Ascension Living.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | How Will the Democratic National Convention Impact Downtown Chicago? Here Are the Security Zones: The security perimeter was drawn to allow the convention to take place from Aug. 19-22 without disruption and without impacting the daily lives of Chicagoans more than necessary while allowing protestors to exercise their First Amendment right to demonstrate, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said.

* Sun-Times | With Chicago casino on the horizon, Bally’s accepts $4.6 billion buyout, merger: Bally’s announced Thursday it accepted the $18.25-per-share buyout from Standard General, the New York hedge fund led by Bally’s chairman Soo Kim. That’s a premium over the $15-per-share offered up in March by Kim, whose fund currently owns about a quarter of Bally’s stock.

* Crain’s | Gas prices around Chicago surge after tornado shuts refinery: Exxon’s Joliet power outage “has driven up prices across the board in the Great Lakes region,” Patrick DeHaan of GasBuddy said in an email. “Jet, diesel and gasoline are all higher.” Retail gasoline prices this week are up 26 cents in Michigan, 22 cents in Illinois, 14 cents in Wisconsin, 13 cents in Indiana and 10 cents in Ohio, he said.

* Chalkbeat | Union members assail Chicago Public Schools budget plan ahead of board vote: At Tuesday’s hearing, more than a dozen union members addressed the board to demand that the district back union proposals for smaller class sizes, a librarian in every school, more special education support staff, updated curriculums, substitute-teacher pay increases, and other investments.

* Sun-Times | CPS developing ‘transportation hub’ bus system for general education students: District officials are looking into creating a so-called transportation hub program, where general education students could go to a school near their home to catch a bus to their assigned school and be dropped back off there, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said at Thursday’s monthly Board of Education meeting. But the details are still being sorted out. “This option will not be available for our general ed students on the first day of school,” Martinez said. “We hope to open our first hub stops during the first quarter and continue to expand them throughout the school year.”

* Chalkbeat | Summer child care can be a puzzle. For parents of children with disabilities, it’s even more complex: Chicago Public Schools currently serves over 52,000 students with Individualized Education Programs, but only 9,019 students are eligible as of July 12 for the district’s summer program for these students, also known as Extended School Year. For students who aren’t eligible for the Extended School Year program, families look to Chicago Park District’s summer day camps for kids between 6-12 years old and special recreational programs for children and teens between 8 and 17 years old. These programs run for about six weeks and can cost $160 or more, but financial aid is available for families. Many of these programs have limited spots and parents say they fill up quickly in the spring.

* Sun-Times | CPS students issue the grades in cafeteria taste test: The tastings, held as often as four times a month, help CPS figure out which items to include on the next season’s menu, said Ariana Luster, school nutrition specialist at Chicago Public Schools. Luster also uses the feedback to improve dishes or determine which should be cut from the menu. “Notoriously, school food isn’t seen in the most positive light. So we try to do whatever we can to be responsive to the feedback, give them the things they like but also meet the standards that we must meet,” Luster said.

* Block Club | A Chicago Restaurant Was On The Brink Of Closure. Then, Keith Lee Showed Up: “Hey y’all, he got something,” Lee said after taking his first bite of the birria arancini. “It’s spicy, it’s flavorful. This is delicious — and I love the ingenuity of it.” After tasting the arancini, Lee went into the restaurant, met Sciacca, paid $3,000 for the tabs of future customers — and left a $1,000 tip.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Chicago Sky announce plans for a $38 million training facility in Bedford Park: ‘It’s not shared. This is ours.’: The $38 million facility will be built in partnership with the Village of Bedford Park and located next to the Wintrust Sports Complex just south of Midway Airport. The Sky expect construction to be completed by December 2025 and the 40,000-square-foot facility to be fully available for the 2026 WNBA season. […] The new facility will have two regulation-sized courts, an improvement from the single court at the team’s current training facilities at Sachs Recreation Center in Deerfield. The new building also will include amenities such as individual lockers, strength and conditioning equipment, player lounges, recovery and film rooms and a private kitchen.

* Tribune | Portillo’s argues that NLRB is unconstitutional in labor board filings: Portillo’s filings come after labor board officials issued a complaint against the fast-expanding hot dog giant earlier this month, alleging it violated labor law before and after a union election at its Addison food preparation facility last year. Workers at that facility voted 28-20 to unionize in an April 2023 election that remains contested as the company has repeatedly challenged the results. Oak Brook-based Portillo’s is one of a number of companies that have recently raised challenges to the labor board’s constitutionality either in lawsuits, labor board filings or hearings. Other companies that have raised constitutional issues over the board’s structure include Amazon, Trader Joe’s, Starbucks and SpaceX, which has filed two lawsuits against the NLRB in federal courts in Texas.

* Daily Herald | Charges pending against Schaumburg shooting suspect as victim remains in serious condition: Charges were pending Thursday against a Schaumburg resident who surrendered to police late Wednesday after an hourslong armed standoff that followed the shooting of a tree trimmer. The victim was listed in serious but stable condition Thursday at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Schaumburg police Cmdr. Christy Lindhurst said.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘We don’t have any info and nobody will tell us’: Dispatch records detail confusion after Sonya Massey shooting: New records of scanner traffic the morning of Massey’s death show that it was more than just her family that was confused in the aftermath of the shooting. […] In another recording released by Sangamon County Dispatch, a dispatcher calls the Illinois State Police Dispatch line. “We don’t actually know what happened; he just screamed shots fired. Somebody heard — one of the dispatchers heard the gunshots and said female shot in the head, but we don’t know if she shot herself or if a deputy shot her,” the county dispatcher said.

* WSIL | Southern Illinois Family Devastated by Flooding, Memories Washed Away: One week ago, severe flooding turned Nashville, Illinois, into a temporary island. Since then, nearly 70 homeowners have reported flood damage. One of those residents, Jami Lane, says it’s a week later and her family is still trying to process what happened. “It was rushing through the house, and it was really traumatic for them, my 6-year-old, for several days after,” Lane said.

* WJBD | Discover Downstate Illinois begins bracket contest to find Best BBQ Joint: There are a number of local BBQ places in the competition including Smoked to the Bone in Iuka, Big Daddy’s in Centralia, Yellow Rose in Wayne City, Curly Tail in Flora and White House in Du Bois. The Facebook contest is set up the same way as past competitions to select the best burger, ice cream, and coffee shop in the region.

*** National ***

* NYT | Newsom Orders California Officials to Remove Homeless Encampments: Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, called on state and local leaders to “humanely remove encampments from public spaces” in an urgent manner, prioritizing those that most threaten health and safety. His executive order could divide Democratic local leaders in California, some of whom have already begun to clear encampments while others have denounced the decision from conservative justices as opening the door to inhumane measures to solve a complex crisis.

* AP | An Olympic-sized fight erupts among anti-doping officials, and it’s just getting started: The stream of threats, recriminations and anti-doping innuendo flowed freely again Thursday when tensions over a U.S. law designed to combat drugs in sports escalated on the eve of the Paris Olympics. […] After details emerged about 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a banned substance - Chinese authorities blamed it on contamination from a hotel kitchen - but none were suspended and some went on to win medals at the Tokyo Olympics, the U.S. launched an investigation. The latest round of backlash played out in a trio of news conferences in Paris, the highlight of which came when leaders at WADA suggested they might sanction one of their biggest critics, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, over the law.

  6 Comments      


Corrections officer put on administrative leave for mocking murder victim (Updated)

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Earlier today


People who live around Logan Correctional Center are trying keep it from being shut down by the state.

* Response from the Illinois Department of Corrections

The Department has been made aware of a social media posting on Facebook made earlier today. The Department is conducting an internal investigation. CO Angeli has been advised of his administrative leave, effective immediately.

The Illinois Department of Corrections is a multicultural agency deeply committed to ensuring diversity, equity, and inclusion. We want to be clear: the comments made by this individual do not reflect the principles and standards of the Department. We apologize to anyone affected by these remarks and reaffirm our commitment to upholding policies and practices conducive to eliminating all forms of exclusion, including, but not limited to, racism, ageism, ableism, sexism, discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender and gender identity, and religious oppression.

We will continue to educate and engage our team on the importance of environments where all feel valued, respected, and included.

* Angeli has had problems before, so the department’s “education” program apparently didn’t work for him. From 2019

At least 25 Illinois Department of Corrections employees have taken part in online conversations that mocked, demeaned, or disclosed personal and medical information about transgender inmates — including calling transgender women “it” and “he” — in two private Facebook groups, an Injustice Watch review has found.

The posts were written by low-level officers, sergeants, lieutenants, and other correctional staffers — including a counselor and a parole officer — from across the state. The posts included comments degrading transgender women and outing other LGBTQ prisoners. They openly discussed private information about inmates, including alleged sexual acts and medical treatments they received. […]

The Illinois Department of Corrections has specific rules that prohibit employees from disclosing information related to offender’s records.

In response to a post from April, correctional officer Thomas Angeli, who goes by Tommy Angeli on Facebook, commented about transgender woman Janiah Monroe, who had recently been transferred to a women’s facility. “Saw her in healthcare when she first came in…dude looks nothing like a girl..a tall n skinny guy,” Angeli wrote. Later the officer expressed expectations that the inmate would have “something feminine” by way of sexual organs, but did not.

Maybe he figured his union would save him again.

..Adding… The US 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled just this week that IDOC employees can be fired for this behavior

The Illinois Department of Corrections suspended corrections sergeant Gary Hicks for 10 days after an internal investigation into his Facebook posts—posts a news article described as “Islamophobic” and “offensive.” The internal investigation concluded that Hicks violated Department policies banning “conduct that is unbecoming of a State employee or that may reflect unfavorably on or impair operations of the Department.” Hicks sued the Department and various officials connected to the disciplinary process under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging a First Amendment retaliation claim and an as-applied Fourteenth Amendment challenge to the Department’s policies. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on both claims, and Hicks appeals.

We conclude that Hicks cannot sustain a First Amendment retaliation claim because the Department’s interest in manag- ing its affairs outweighs the interest Hicks had in posting the content. Nor can Hicks sustain an as-applied Fourteenth Amendment challenge because someone in his supervisory position would not have to guess that their actions may be “unbecoming of,” “reflect unfavorably on,” “or impair operations of the Department.” We therefore affirm.

  11 Comments      


Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Thursday, Jul 25, 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 Darvin Furniture, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Republican chair claims Pritzker ‘desperate’ to leave Illinois (Updated)

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ILGOP…

As Democrats from across the country scramble to get into Vice President Kamala Harris’s good graces, JB Prtizker has joined the fray hitting the liberal national media circuit as the latest Governor to kiss the ring in a desperate attempt to leave his state for Washington. Pritzker has made no secret that he has ambitions beyond *just* governing our state.

Illinois Republican Party Chair Kathy Salvi released the following statement:
“No one is surprised that JB Pritzker is chomping at the bit to leave Illinois. He’s shown more interest in campaigning around the country this year than he has in reducing the tax burden that has made Illinois the least “tax friendly” state in the country and 2nd in the country for residents leaving. We welcome Vice President Harris considering Governor Pritzker, because his poor track record would all but guarantee our neighbors, Wisconsin and MIchigan, swing Republican, as they’ve benefitted from the mismanagement of our state by an out of touch billionaire. He’s all yours, madam Vice President.”

Thoughts?

…Adding… DPI

  58 Comments      


Former South Works steel site will be transformed into a massive quantum campus (Updated)

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

PsiQuantum, a Palo Alto, California-based company, is planning a multibillion-dollar investment in Chicago to build the nation’s first commercially useful quantum computer, according to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office.

The company plans to be the anchor tenant of the state’s future quantum campus at the former U.S. Steel South Works site, breathing life into the long-vacant property. […]

Quantum computing creates infinite combinations of the “binary bits” used by computers to calculate larger and more complex problems. It could lead to the manufacturing of new medical drugs and make sensitive data almost impermeable to hacking, among other possibilities touted by experts.

* Crain’s

PsiQuantum’s facility will be about 300,000 square feet and employ up to 150 people within five years. The centerpiece of the project is a unique super-cold computing facility where blast furnaces once stood.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker predicts the campus will make Illinois “the undisputed leader of quantum computing,” ultimately attracting more than $20 billion in private and public investment and thousands of jobs. […]

Related Midwest is leading the development of the USX site, which includes another 312 acres beyond the quantum campus. Clayco will oversee construction, and its architecture subsidiary, Lamar Johnson Collaborative, will handle design. The project is a potential lifeline at a time when the pipeline of large construction projects is drying up.

The state will provide $200 million to PsiQuantum in grants, workforce development assistance, a low-interest loan and other incentives in exchange for a minimum investment of $1 billion by the company. Psi is a startup that has raised more than $700 million.

* Business Wire

To bolster the Quantum Park and help build an even stronger quantum ecosystem, PsiQuantum will partner with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Chicago, University of Illinois Chicago and Northwestern University to collaborate on research projects and explore opportunities to develop educational programs in quantum applications. PsiQuantum’s operations in Chicago will create at least 150 jobs in the next five years and will be critical in developing a strong workforce that includes not only PhDs in quantum physics, but careers in mechanical, optical, and electrical engineering; software development; and technical lab work.

“We’re excited to be partnering with PsiQuantum and the Governor’s office to make the IQMP the leading quantum computing hub in the world,” said University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Chancellor Robert Jones. “The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign along with our other university partners will be working closely with PsiQuantum in the build-out of the cryogenic plant that will support the first US-based utility-scale quantum computer. This collaboration with the PsiQuantum team will bolster Illinois’ quantum workforce and scale this technology into a new quantum reality.”

…Adding… Press release

Governor JB Pritzker was joined by federal, state, and local leaders and partners to reveal the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park’s (IQMP) location at USX on the South Side of Chicago and announce the quantum campus’ first anchor tenant – PsiQuantum. As the leading quantum computing company focused on building the first useful, error-corrected quantum computer, PsiQuantum will drive innovation, competitive research, and economic growth in Illinois.

“PsiQuantum brings years of foundational research and scientific groundwork, a clear and comprehensive business and tech development strategy, and a global reputation as a pioneer in quantum computing applications—I am thrilled to welcome them to Chicago and have them as a partner in the work ahead of us,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Our vision of Illinois as a global quantum capital comes further into focus at Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park, providing limitless opportunities for economic investment and innovation right here on the South Side.” […]

“Governor Pritzker and his administration have made extraordinary progress in establishing the state as a global leader in quantum computing, and PsiQuantum is thrilled to partner with them and anchor the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park,” said Prof. Jeremy O’Brien, PsiQuantum CEO and co-founder. “The IQMP will serve as a hub for the state’s thriving quantum ecosystem, and we can think of no better place to build the first utility-scale quantum computer in the United States.”

  32 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Kamala Harris campaign considering J.B. Pritzker for vice presidential candidate. Sun-Times

    -Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign called Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Wednesday to gauge his interest in running for vice president.
    - CNN’s Jake Tapper asked the governor if he is being considered as Harris’ running mate, he responded that he was unable to comment on “private conversations.”
    - Asked by Tapper if he would accept the No. 2 slot on the ticket if it was offered, Pritzker said, “Well, I think you know, I love being governor of Illinois.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will be at the Secret Service Chicago Field Office at 11:30 am for the DNC security briefing. At 1 pm the governor will announce a new business investment. Click here to watch.


*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***


* Tribune | Chicago announces ‘transformational’ quantum computer commercial development at fallow South Works site: Mayor Brandon Johnson, who met with top PsiQuantum executives several months ago to pitch the site and the city, said it is significant that a revolutionary new industry is set to spring up on grounds that built the material to create Chicago’s skyline during the last century. “We were the first to shift the economy when steel was being used to grow industry,” Johnson told the Tribune. “Now here we are. I think it’s very fitting that Chicago is upfront and on the cutting edge of what it means to transform our global economy.”

* WTTW | Men in Stateville Prison Fear Ongoing Poor Conditions, Threat of Heat a Month After Man Dies in Custody: The nailed-shut windows and broken industrial fans mean there’s little ventilation inside Stateville Correctional Center. Old floor fans face toward the building’s higher levels in a failed attempt to circulate air on the top galleries as heat stays trapped inside. […] Men inside the facility were hoping for change after Michael Broadway, 51, died in custody on June 19, but “that’s the problem, nothing has [changed],” wrote Muhammad.

* ABC Chicago | Protestors hold rally after inmate Michael Broadway dies at Stateville Correction Center: Broadway had served 18 years on a murder conviction, but he had filed a claim of innocence. He got an undergraduate degree from Northwestern University while incarcerated. His family told ABC7 he was asthmatic and was housed on the ninth floor of Stateville with a broken fan and a sealed window. On June 19, a 90 degree day, they said he collapsed and was later pronounced dead. The Will County coroner’s office said Broadway’s autopsy report is still pending.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Chronicle | Greenwood maintains fundraising lead in 114th House race: Greenwood started the second quarter with $106,514 and finished with just $111,344, largely on the strength of a $15,000 contribution from SEIU HealthCare IL IN PAC. She received no individual donations in the quarter. On July 12, she got a cash infusion from fellow Democratic state Rep. Jay Hoffman of the 113th District. Hoffman, who is running unopposed, transferred $48,500 from his campaign to Greenwood’s. Added to two other July transfers totaling $3,500, Greenwood has $160,000 on hand.

* WGEM | Proposed Illinois bill would make it easier for people to apply for rental properties: If you are in the process off applying to rent an apartment, you know it can be a daunting process that includes collecting information and application fees. However, a bill sent to Illinois Governor JB Pritzker’s’ desk aims to make applying for apartments easier for tenants and landlords. The proposed bill would allow a tenant to use a reusable tenant screening report when applying to rent a property, which would include important background information such as tenant income, credit score, and rental and eviction history.

* WBBM | Over 500 Illinois workers say promised raises have not arrived: Teamsters Local 916 said the Illinois Department of Central Management Services [CMS] is not paying workers at the Illinois Department of Transportation the negotiated wage increases in the collective bargaining agreement. The union said that, as of July 1, more than 500 IDOT Teamsters have not received the wages they are legally owed.

*** Chicago ***

* People’s Fabric | Tactical team who killed Dexter Reed under investigation for over two dozen unjustified stops and searches: In one complaint, a man described “a pattern of harassment and intimidation” by 11th District tactical officers outside of his residence, including multiple stops and searches. In the other complaint, COPA lists 28 locations where “the accused officers allegedly engaged in a series of unjustified traffic stops and searches in the 11th District.”

* WBEZ | Democrats expect Republican leaders to send more buses of migrants to Chicago before the DNC: “The city is maintaining sufficient bed capacity in our existing temporary shelters and preparing sites in the event that new temporary emergency shelters need to be activated on short notice,” said a city spokesperson. Since August 2022, more than 45,000 migrants, mostly from Venezuela, have been flown and bused to Chicago, mostly from Texas, leading to a humanitarian crisis that continues to unfold.

* Tribune | Pioneer Arcade receives city, state support to be developed into affordable housing: Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the Illinois Housing Development Authority announced the 2024 low-income housing tax credit awardees Tuesday, and the Hispanic Housing Development Corp.’s plan to construct 61 affordable housing units for older adults at the former bowling and billiards hall was one of 16 projects statewide to receive funds. Without the city support needed to receive the low-income housing tax credits, the Hispanic Housing Development Corp. would have left a $6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on the table, as well as the potential for an additional $24 million in federal rental subsidies to help the developer maintain affordability for the proposed building over a period of 40 years.

* Crain’s | Could the Field Museum get that Stegosaurus Ken Griffin just bought?: Supporting a dinosaur exhibit in Chicago also wouldn’t be a first for Griffin. In 2017, he donated $16.5 million to the Field Museum to support upkeep on Sue and to exhibit a touchable cast of the biggest dinosaur ever discovered, a long-necked titanosaur called “Maximo.”“The Field Museum’s never-ending goal is to offer the best possible dinosaur experiences. Ken Griffin’s longtime support is a major step forward in achieving that goal,” then-Field Museum President Richard Lariviere said at the time of the donation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Funding for Wheeling Twp. mental health board hits another snag: Funding for Wheeling Township’s community mental health board, stalled for more than 18 months, now faces a new obstacle. Township Supervisor Kathy Penner said Tuesday that an attorney has spotted a flaw in state legislation intended to clear the way for the township to levy a voter-approved property tax to fund the 708 board.

* Daily Herald | Longmeadow Parkway nearing completion in Kane County, with no tolls attached: “It’s going to be a game changer for people,” Carpentersville Village President John Skillman said. Longmeadow Parkway is expected to ease congestion on other nearby bridges. Currently, drivers in the area cross the Fox River via bridges on Route 62 in Algonquin, Route 72 in East and West Dundee or Main Street in Carpentersville.

* Tribune | ComEd issuing months of renewable energy credits after computer snafu, but thousands of customers still facing sticker shock from solar providers: Nearly a half year after a bungled ComEd computer billing system upgrade all but shut down the Illinois community solar program, thousands of impacted customers began receiving long-delayed renewable energy credits on their July bills. In some cases, the credits totaled $600 or more worth of solar energy generated since February.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Records: Sheriff’s office knew about Sean Grayson’s DUIs. Were there any other red flags?: Jeff Wilhite, a spokesman for Sangamon County, said the sheriff’s office knew about both DUIs. […] Campbell, in a statement emailed Wednesday afternoon, said the sheriff’s office “understood that the serious misconduct referenced (in Grayson’s Army personnel file) was a DUI.”

* WIFR | Northern Illinois counties implement Safe Streets for All Action Plan: Leaders in Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson and Whiteside counties are putting their communities first by implementing the Safe Streets for All Action Plan. In collaboration with Blackhawk Hills, the plan is designed to guide future infrastructure plans and avoid vehicle-related fatalities and severe injuries. From 2019 to 2021, road deaths across the nation increased by 17.4%, with a 32.1% increase in Illinois alone. Within the six participating counties, a 7.1% increase of deaths has affected these areas. Blackhawk Hills submitted a grant to address these concerns, ultimately receiving the Safe Streets for All (SS4A) gran to support the Safety Action Plan.

*** National ***

* WIFR | Eye on Politics: One-on-one with Adam Kinzinger: Adam Kinzinger has been called a country-first man of conviction. Some call him Illinois’s biggest RINO, or Republican In Name Only. WIFR anchor Mike Garrigan sat down with the former Republican congressman turned CNN commentator to cover a variety of topics.

  23 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Jul 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Invisible Institute and the Investigative Reporting Workshop

Sean Grayson, the former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy now charged with murder in the fatal shooting of Sonya Massey, was previously discharged from the U.S. Army for serious misconduct, military records show.

Grayson, who is white, was indicted by a grand jury in the July 6 death of Massey, who is Black. Ben Crump, the family’s attorney, said the U.S. Department of Justice has also opened an investigation into the incident, but the agency said in a statement that it is “assessing the circumstances” and following the criminal case.

Documents obtained from the Kincaid Police Department, where Grayson previously worked, note that he was discharged in 2016 for “Misconduct (Serious Offense)” at the Fort Riley Army installation in Kansas. Army officials confirmed Grayson was a wheeled vehicle mechanic from May 2014 to February 2016, but declined to provide further details about his discharge.

“The Privacy Act and (Department of Defense) policy prevent us from releasing information relating to the misconduct of low-level employees or characterization of service at discharge,” Army spokesman Bryce S. Dubee wrote in an email. Officials at Fort Riley did not return voicemails seeking comment.

* WGN

The terminated Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office deputy involved in the shooting death of a woman who called for 911 assistance worked at six different law enforcement agencies in the last four years, state records obtained by WGN’s Nexstar sister station show.

Since August of 2020, Sean Grayson worked less than one year at the Auburn (Ill.) Police Department, one year at the Logan County (Ill.) Sheriff’s Office, and then just over a year with the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office, the records obtained by WCIA show. He was also employed with police departments in Virden, Kincaid and Pawnee.

Grayson was arrested twice for Class A misdemeanor DUIs, once in 2015 and once in 2016.

* WTTW reporter Amanda Vinicky

* Crain’s

Illinois and 29 other states reached a settlement with Cameo for potential violations of consumer-protection laws related to its business of providing paid celebrity video endorsements.

Cameo appeared to run afoul of consumer-protection laws by not providing “appropriate disclosures to consumers who purchased personalized video business messages that an endorsement of a product is a paid endorsement,” Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said in a statement. The company also failed to refund users who paid for the business Cameo feature but mistakenly signed up for the less-expensive personal message Cameo, Raoul said. […]

It’s not clear if there is a financial component to the settlement. It appears the investigation may be related to a product Cameo offered specifically for businesses for advertising. Cameo’s core business involves consumers paying celebrities, ranging from actors and pro athletes to people such as former Gov. Rod Blagojevich to record video messages, often as gags or birthday greetings.

Under terms of the deal, Cameo will implement programs and policies to help ensure its website and mobile applications users comply with all applicable state and federal laws, including the FTC’s Endorsement Guides, Raoul’s office said. Cameo will also implement a watermark system for paid advertisements, implement a system for legal disclosures to and acknowledgements from all celebrities and consumers and monitor paid advertisements for compliance and establish reporting mechanisms for non-compliant Cameo videos.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Here are 2 ways Illinois is trying to combat maternal mortality rates: Debra Tisckos, the director of maternal child health services at the Sangamon County Department of Public Health said that the rates of maternal mortality were high due to lack of prenatal and postnatal care, plus lack of education and access to proper care. “Things like hypertension, diabetes and just lack of prenatal and postnatal care are contributing factors,” Tisckos said in April during an interview with The State Journal-Register. “There needs to be more education out there on getting these things done, and more support and help for women that don’t know.”

* WCSJ | Illinois treasurer’s office launches Spanish I-CASH website: Treasurer Michael Frerichs says that there are many Spanish speakers in Illinois who could benefit from the new site. Frerichs says unclaimed property can come in many forms, such as forgotten items in a deposit box or a forgotten bank account. He says in many cases, it’s simple to reunite the property with its rightful owner.

* WSIL | Alcohol is Leading Factor for Deadly Boating Accidents in 2023, Illinois Officials Say: The Illinois State Fire Marshal stated alcohol continued to be the leading known contributing factor in deadly boating accidents for last year, totaling 79 deaths across the nation or about 17 percent of total deaths.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | A new north DuSable Lake Shore Drive? Long running idea takes step forward with a concept that leaves out bus lanes, includes more park space: That vision includes changes to the sharp curves and bottleneck-inducing traffic lights as the Drive enters downtown, and priority for CTA buses on exit and entrance ramps. It calls for adding lakefill in some places downtown and separating pedestrians from cyclists along the Lakefront Trail. It includes eliminating one lane of traffic north of Irving Park road. Missing from the concept are lanes on Lake Shore Drive that would prioritize the many CTA express buses that use the route. Transit priority lanes had been a key element of each of the other options that had been finalists for consideration.

* Tribune | Authorities investigating break-in at Cook County state’s attorney’s office: Authorities are investigating a break-in at the administrative offices of Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, officials said. Staff with the state’s attorney’s office contacted the Cook County sheriff’s office on Tuesday to report that several computers were missing at their offices at the main courthouse in the George Leighton Criminal Court Building, according to a statement from the sheriff’s office. Police opened an investigation, which is ongoing.

* ABC Chicago | South Side churches’ reading camp for Black boys getting national attention: Salem and Progressive Baptist churches started a pilot program to help improve the reading skills of young Black boys. It’s called Black Boy Literacy. The program was so successful last summer that the churches brought the reading camp back this year to prepare Black boys for the upcoming school year. What started as a pilot program– has become a model for other Black churches across the country.

* Block Club | More Than $400,000 Raised So Far In Chicago’s 2024 School Board Elections: The money is a mix of small donations from candidates’ friends and family, sizable personal loans and in-kind and financial support from existing political and labor groups, according to a Chalkbeat analysis of state campaign finance records. The political fundraising arms of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, which has $3 million on hand, and the Chicago Teachers Union, which has around $175,000, are holding their fire for now, putting off making major donations to candidates. That’s not surprising: Many candidates are still sorting out challenges to their petitions to get on the ballot, and spending is likely to pick up once a clearer picture of the most competitive races and candidates emerges.

* The Triibe | Black businesses are looking to benefit from the DNC in Chicago: Stephanie Hart, owner of Brown Sugar Bakery in Greater Grand Crossing, said she is already reaping benefits from the upcoming Democratic National Convention (DNC), which is scheduled to come to Chicago on Aug. 19-22. In May, she catered a welcome party for delegates and people working the DNC. She said she reached out to convention organizers with hopes to become a vendor during the event.

* Tribune | As new Foxtrot owner plans to reopen stores, a former undocumented worker recounts his struggle to find a job and collect back pay: As a co-founder of Foxtrot and new investors plan to reopen about a dozen stores this fall, Mancera and most of the other 50 former immigrant workers who worked at the commissary continue to struggle to find new jobs to make ends meet. Mancera said that his quest for employment has been stymied by few opportunities, with competition from newly arrived migrants who are willing to work for extremely low wages and those who have legal work permits. Unlike former workers at the storefronts who qualified for unemployment, most of those who worked at the commissary are ineligible for unemployment benefits due to their immigration status.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘A game changer’: New pumping station promises to ease Des Plaines River flooding: A new $4.1 million pump station along the Des Plaines River in Mount Prospect will help neighborhoods that have been battered by flooding for decades, officials said at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday. “This project is simply a game changer,” Mount Prospect Mayor Paul Hoefert said of the station on River Road north of Camp McDonald Road. “It will help provide an unprecedented level of flood protection for hundreds, if not thousands, of homes in Mount Prospect on the west side of River Road.”

* Tribune | County to consider $7.25 million settlement for wrongfully convicted ‘Marquette Park Four’ member: On the heels of the Chicago City Council approving a record $50 million settlement to a group of men once known as the “Marquette Park Four,” the Cook County Board will consider a $7.25 million settlement for one of those men who accused county prosecutors of wrongful incarceration and detention. The Charles Johnson deal is one of several costly settlements the county’s Finance Committee approved unanimously Wednesday, the others related to county-run Stroger Hospital. All of them, totaling $24 million, will be considered by the full board Thursday.

* Lake County News-Sun | Illinois catcher Camden Janik, a Wauconda grad drafted by Pirates, is ‘embracing the unknown’ as he turns pro: “You could tell that he was definitely on track to do something special, partly because he always just wanted to get better,” said Clay Kovac, Janik’s coach at Wauconda. “Playing pro ball was definitely in the back of your mind, but it’s not easy to play against great players day in and day out. I can’t say enough about him.”

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Eastern Illinois Food Banks’s “Food Mobile” is hitting the road: The Eastern Illinois Food Bank serves over 18 counties, distributing food to over 100 people every day. […] “Our priority is definitely to provide as much inclusive, nutritious food to people as possible. We really want to be growing those stronger communities. Getting out into these communities and making it as simple as possible for people to receive food assistance. There’s no donation to small no, no way to get involved that doesn’t make too much of an impact.”

* WCIA | Danville company fined $200k by OSHA for two labor accidents: Inspectors from the DOL’s Occupation Safety and Health Administration responded to two incidents earlier this year at Viscofan USA Inc.’s Danville facility. One employee suffered broken bones and lacerations on Jan. 25 when their arm was caught in a roller machine. On Feb. 1, another employee suffered chemical burns while cleaning a pump. In both incidents, OSHA determined that the company “lacked adequate procedures for energy control and failed to have them in place before the workers began their tasks.” The agency also said Viscofan failed to train its workers on machine safety procedures and on use of hazardous chemicals

*** National ***

* AP | Experts say a twice-yearly injection that offers 100% protection against HIV is ‘stunning’: The shots made by U.S. drugmaker Gilead and sold as Sunlenca are approved in the U.S., Canada, Europe and elsewhere, but only as a treatment for HIV. The company said it is waiting for results of testing in men before seeking permission to use it to protect against infection. […] The prospect of a twice-a-year shot is “quite revolutionary news” for our patients, said Thandeka Nkosi, who helped run the Gilead research at the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation in Masiphumelele, South Africa. “It gives participants a choice and it just eliminates the whole stigma around taking pills” to prevent HIV.

* The Athletic | Simone Biles is back at the Olympics, and no one is telling her what to do anymore: The Paris Games are being billed as a rebirth for gymnastics, the culmination of that long and painful process. The change, however, started even before this Olympic cycle. It began in Tokyo when Simone Biles said she couldn’t go on and no one told her she’d better go anyway. […] “My ‘why’ is nobody is forcing me to do it,” she said. “I wake up every morning and choose to grind in the gym and come out to perform for myself.”

* ProPublica | He Was Convicted of Killing His Baby. The DA’s Office Says He’s Innocent, but That Might Not Be Enough.: Eaton read the journal knowing that in the years since the infant was taken to the emergency room, shaken baby syndrome has come under increasing scrutiny. A growing body of research has demonstrated that the triad of symptoms doctors traditionally used to diagnose the syndrome — brain swelling and bleeding around the brain and behind the eyes — are not necessarily produced by shaking; a range of natural and accidental causes can generate the same symptoms. Nevertheless, shaken baby syndrome and its presumption of abuse have served, and continue to serve, as the rationale for separating children from their parents and for sending mothers, fathers and caretakers to prison. It’s impossible to quantify the total number of Americans convicted on the basis of the diagnosis — only the slim fraction of cases that meet the legal bar to appeal and lead to a published appellate decision. Still, an analysis of these rulings from 2008 to 2018 found 1,431 such criminal convictions.

  7 Comments      


Hey, why no periods in Vance’s name? (Update)

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember this funny little kerfuffle from 2019?

Major media organizations have been using those periods on the name of Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker. But that’s not how the governor has been spelling it — at least not lately — though his name has appeared with periods in the past, as when he ran for Congress in 1998.

Long story short, Pritzker told Brian Mackey that he doesn’t use periods in his name.

Back to the story

Many of us rely on the Associated Press to settle these questions, so I emailed the corporate office in New York. Spokeswoman Lauren Easton wrote back after broadcast: “AP is considering how to handle the styling of the governor’s initials but hasn’t yet resolved it.” But the AP Stylebook says when someone uses initials instead of a first name, periods should be used

* The Associated Press (which doesn’t put periods in AP) continues to this day to refer to the governor as “J.B. Pritzker.” So does the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times and NPR, which, like the AP, does not put periods in the abbreviation of its own name.

* Why am I bringing this up? Well, here’s an AP (A.P.?) story about another politician who doesn’t use periods in his name

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance used his first solo campaign rallies Monday to throw fresh barbs at Vice President Kamala Harris a day after President Joe Biden threw the presidential election into upheaval by dropping out and endorsing his second-in-command to lead Democrats against Donald Trump.

Sen. Vance’s full name is James David Vance. But no periods for the A.P.

Odd.

* The Tribune and the Sun-Times are also using Vance’s preferred spelling, while continuing to spell Pritzker’s name with periods. Same for N.P.R.

USA Today, which also doesn’t put periods in its own abbreviation, spells their names “J.B. Pritzker” and “JD Vance.”

The Washington Post is being consistent, however. The paper spells both Pritzker’s and Vance’s names with periods.

* And, yes, of course this is a trivial matter. But these news outlets are all about words. The AP Stylebook is 524 pages long, for crying out loud.

On the off chance that Pritzker is chosen as a vice presidential candidate and faces Vance, we’ll probably see a revisiting of this oddly contradictory policy. Until then, inconsistency will likely prevail.

…Adding… The A.P. is the culprit here…


  18 Comments      


Former AT&T president says no quid pro quo, no unlawful intent means Madigan-related charges should be dismissed

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Lawyers for the former AT&T Illinois boss accused of trying to bribe then-House Speaker Michael Madigan argue in a new filing that the prosecution’s case has been “significantly undermined” by a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling walking back a federal bribery statute.

Paul La Schiazza, 66, was charged in an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in October 2022 with conspiring to pay former state Rep. Edward Acevedo $2,500 a month in consulting fees as part of a plan to win Madigan’s backing of several pending pieces of legislation in Springfield. His trial is scheduled to kick off in September.

In a flurry of motions filed late Tuesday, however, La Schiazza’s attorneys asked the judge to toss key bribery and conspiracy counts in the indictment, order the government to turn over grand jury minutes, and limit the statements of alleged co-conspirators that can be introduced at trial.

The motions were the latest fallout from the high court’s ruling last month in the case of former Portage, Indiana Mayor James Snyder that held the federal bribery statute commonly known as “666” applies only to bribes, not gratuities, and that there must be a quid pro quo agreement to accept something of value in exchange for an official act.

All the motions are here.

* From one of the filings

In defending its decision to bring these charges, the government argued for years that 18 U.S.C. § 666 criminalized both gratuities and bribes and did not require proof of a quid pro quo. After the government indicted this case—the Seventh Circuit made clear that “[a] bribe requires a quid pro quo—an agreement to exchange this for that, to exchange money or something else of value for influence in the future.” United States v. Snyder, 71 F. 4th 555, 579 (7th Cir. 2023). Yet the government continued to press its position that no proof of a quid pro quo was required to convict under Section 666. Ultimately, in Snyder v. United States, the Supreme Court rejected the government’s interpretation of Section 666, holding that the statute applies only to bribes, and that bribery “requires that the official have a corrupt state of mind and accept (or agree to accept) the payment intending to be influenced in the official act. ” Snyder v. United States, 144 S. Ct. 1947, 1955 (2024). The Court also held that Section 666 was modeled on the federal bribery statute, 18 U.S.C. § 201, and shared the same “defining characteristics.” Id.; United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers of California, 526 U.S. 398, 404-05 (1999) (holding that bribery requires a “quid pro quo – a specific intent to give or receive something of value in exchange for an official act.”). In other words, the government must plead and prove a quid pro quo, which it did not do. […]

The indictment does not allege facts establishing a causal connection between the legislative actions undertaken by Madigan and the benefits he allegedly received from AT&T, much less an express agreement by Madigan to undertake these acts in exchange for Mr. La Schiazza having AT&T offer Acevedo a consulting job. […]

The government has not alleged AT&T hired Acevedo in exchange for a specific official act, i.e., that Mr. La Schiazza bribed Madigan. Indeed, the Indictment does not allege that Madigan even knew of AT&T’s hiring of Acevedo or AT&T’s desire to “get credit” for the hiring. Without any factual allegations supporting the existence of a quid pro quo or that Mr. La Schiazza understood that he was acting unlawfully in offering an exchange to Madigan, the Indictment violates Mr. La Schiazza’s rights to indictment by a grand jury and protection against double jeopardy, as well as his Sixth Amendment right to be informed of the nature of the accusations against him. Therefore, this Court should dismiss Courts One and Two in full.

  9 Comments      


Groups ramp up ahead of Iowa’s 6-week abortion ban

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Some background is here if you need it. Press release from the Chicago Abortion Fund and the Iowa Abortion Access Fund…

Yesterday, the Iowa District Court for Polk County issued an order for dissolving the temporary injunction on Iowa’s 6-week abortion ban. The ban is scheduled to take effect on Monday, July 29, 2024, marking a devastating setback for abortion access in the Midwest and forcing Iowans to travel out of state for necessary healthcare.

Qudsiyyah Shariyf, Deputy Director of the Chicago Abortion Fund (CAF), issued the following statement:

    “This ban is a severe setback for the Midwest. We are heartbroken for our neighbors in Iowa. These decisions, like all abortion bans and restrictions, disproportionately harm systemically oppressed communities, including people of color, people with low incomes, and those living in rural areas. The Chicago Abortion Fund, in partnership with the Iowa Abortion Access Fund, is dedicated to ensuring that anyone forced to leave the state of Iowa for abortion care receives the comprehensive support and resources they need.”

    “In 2023, CAF received support requests from over 12,000 people from over 40 states, including over 360 people requiring hospital-based complex care through our CARLA program. This ruling in Iowa will continue to increase the number of people forced to travel for abortion care – both due to the devastating impacts of the ban as a whole, and due to the lack of guidance on exceptions and when doctors can act to provide emergency abortion care. We remain steadfast in our commitment to guarantee that all people have access to the abortion care they want, need, and deserve – regardless of who they are, their situation, or their zip code,” Shariyf added.

Leah Vanden Bosch, Development and Outreach Director of the Iowa Abortion Access Fund, issued the following statement:

    “The upholding of this abortion ban in Iowa is an absolute devastation and violation of human rights, depriving Iowans of their bodily autonomy. Abortion is essential health care that needs to be accessible to all. This ban will harm marginalized communities and puts the lives of all pregnant people at risk. We know a ban will not stop the need for abortions. As one of the oldest abortion funds in the nation, we remain committed to providing abortion care for all Iowans. We are partnering with CAF to ensure that we will continue to do that work. We will not stop. Please continue to stay engaged and support people who need abortion care. By working together, we will continue to take care of one another.”

Overview of Abortion Access in Iowa:

    - An estimated 4,150 abortions took place in Iowa in 2023 (Guttmacher Institute).
    - In 2023, 390 Iowans traveled to Minnesota, 370 traveled to Illinois, and 180 traveled to Nebraska to seek abortion care (Guttmacher Institute).
    - Prior to the 6-week ban, Iowans drove an average of 53 minutes to their nearest clinic. Travel times are expected to increase significantly, similar to trends observed by the Center for American Progress, in Indiana after their complete abortion ban.

CAF’s Partnership with Iowa Abortion Access Fund:

    - The CAF Helpline is ready to support Iowans. Following the ruling in June, we deepened our partnership with the Iowa Abortion Access Fund to stretch resources to support more people needing to leave the state. Visit the CAF Helpline to complete an intake and receive support.
    - Since the Dobbs decision, CAF has heard from 465 Iowans, a number expected to rise due to the 6-week ban.
    - In just the first three weeks of July 2024, as many anticipated the impending enforcement of the ban, we received over 60 support requests from Iowans. This marked a 165% increase in support requests from previous months, despite abortion still being legal in Iowa. We anticipate these numbers will continue to grow following the implementation of the 6-week ban.
    - CAF has fielded over 20,000 support requests and distributed almost $7 million in direct assistance since the Dobbs decision.

No Increase in Wait Times for Abortion at Illinois Clinics:

    - In 2023, there were 37,300 people who traveled to Illinois for abortion care (The New York Times).
    - Independent abortion clinics like Hope Clinic, Family Planning Associates (FPA), Women’s Aid Center, Choices, and Equity Clinic have not experienced increased wait times due to proactive hiring and operational adjustments, unlike East Coast clinics facing over two-week wait times (The Washington Post).

Infrastructure and Support Systems:

* WGEM last month

Though only law in Iowa, it will impact Illinois as more patients will turn to the state for abortion care. Illinois has some of the most permissive abortion laws in the U.S.

Planned Parenthood of Illinois (PPIL) Abortion Expansion Program Manager Julie Uhal said the organization is ready for a potential influx of patients. She said the ground has constantly been shifting since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, and PPIL is prepared for this latest development.

“We have done enough capacity expansion work and we are ready to see patients from where ever they are coming from. We’re ready to support them with travel support funding, financial assistance,” Uhal said. “Yeah, we’re here and we’re not backing down anytime soon.”

* KWWL yesterday

This new law will ban most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, which is before most women even know they are pregnant. Once a heartbeat is detected, an abortion will no longer be permitted in the state.

However, the Rockford Family Planning Center, which offers only abortion pills, said they are already seeing an uptick in women from Iowa crossing state lines for services. The center noted that even making the choice to take the abortion pill can be a tough decision.

Meg Larkin, an administrator with Rockford Family Planning Center, said, “If you knew that I could fill up my ultrasound room with all the tears that we have shed in there…See, nobody wakes up and goes ‘Oh i think I’m gonna have an abortion today.’ It’s a difficult, challenging decision for most people.”

Larkin also said that they expect more people to come in once the Iowa law is officially in effect. The abortion pill can only be taken up to 10 weeks and 5 days into a pregnancy.

* Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton

[Governor Pritzker] and I are unapologetically clear that in Illinois, we trust women all across America and are never going back.

To our neighbors in Iowa, just know that abortion is safe and legal here in our state and we are here for you.

* House Speaker Chris Welch

Hey Iowa! In Ilinois, we trust women to make decisions in consultation with their doctors. You’re welcome here.

* Illinois’ state party chair and state Rep. Lisa Hernandez

The cruel attacks on reproductive freedom across the country are an affront to our core values.

To anyone fearing whether they will be able to receive the care they need: Illinois will always protect your rights.

  6 Comments      


Biz types launch new PAC, 501c4 ‘One Future Illinois’ (Updated)

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fran Spielman

Business and real estate interests spent millions to tank Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to raise Chicago’s real estate transfer tax on high-end home sales to create a dedicated revenue source to combat homelessness.

They also bankrolled a $2 million independent expenditure committee to help elect moderate City Council members they hoped would be “part of the solution, not lob bombs from the sideline.”

Now, influential business leaders are forming yet another nonprofit group, with an affiliated political action committee, to advance their “long-term, systemic civic priorities” for the city and state.

They’re calling it “One Future Illinois,” and its leadership roster of business heavyweights includes some who have held prominent positions in city and state government.

Among them: investment banker Steve Koch, who served as deputy mayor under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel; Derek Douglas, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club; and Jesse Ruiz, former deputy governor for education in Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration. Ruiz also served as interim CEO of Chicago Public Schools, chair of the Illinois State Board of Education and board president of the Chicago Park District.

Their PAC’s statement of organization describes its mission as “To advance common sense solutions to meet the most significant challenges and opportunities of the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago.” No contributions have yet been reported.

Mike Ruemmler, who was one of Rahm Emanuel’s top go-to people, will run both the c4 and the PAC, Fran reports. Go read the rest.

…Adding… Crain’s

In a call with Crain’s, the group’s leaders wouldn’t disclose how much they expect to raise, but the money should start flowing soon and is expected to take in at least seven figures.

The group will “be involved” in the mayor’s race and next City Council election, said Michael Ruemmler, a former advisor to both Emanuel and President Barack Obama. He wouldn’t disclose if they’d take on Johnson.

Asked if the PAC will spend money opposing elected school board candidates supported by the Chicago Teachers Union, Ruemmler would only say “we’ll take a look at all the candidates.”

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Domestic violence deaths spiked in Illinois last year, adding to calls for passage of Karina’s Bill: Domestic violence deaths rose by 110% across the state last year, according to a coalition of advocacy groups who said the sharp spike is a somber reminder why lawmakers must crack down on abusers who own guns. “This increase really shows that we have to step up our efforts here in Illinois to reduce these preventable homicides,” said Vickie Smith, former executive director and consultant for the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence. “Because if they’re increasing that much just over one year, then what are we looking at over the next few years?”

* AP | Survivors sue Illinois over decades of sexual abuse at Chicago youth detention center: Temarkus Washington says the sexual abuse he experienced as a teenager at a troubled Chicago youth detention center still gives him nightmares. […] “It’s actually not something that I like to talk about or even think about. I did what I had to do to survive in there,” said Washington, speaking at a Chicago news conference with other survivors. “I am here because I want to feel confident in myself again. For so long I doubted myself and felt so scared.”

* Nik Hunder | Despite scrutiny, the CTA’s president rode the system only 58 times in 2023: Since data showing his 2022 riding habits was made public, Carter had eight months left in 2023 to improve how frequently he rode the system in 2022 (23 times). He did not meaningfully or consistently increase that figure in 2023. Fifty-eight times in 2023 is barely more than once per week. Looking more closely, 52%, or 30, of those trips came in June and July, with 34% (20) being taken in July alone, according to ridership data I received from a Freedom of Information Act request.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois lawmakers, insurance leaders discuss challenges with pharmacy benefit managers: “The healthcare conglomerates appear to be driving growth by generating increasing levels of revenue from their vertically integrated affiliates,” said Ann Gillespie, acting director of the Illinois Department of Insurance. “Said another way, these corporations are growing by paying their own companies more and more.” Gillespie said she will not tolerate consumers receiving less than the value of the benefits they pay for through insurance plans.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago leaders brace for as many as 25,000 new migrants ahead of DNC: ‘We just need to be prepared’: In the event of a surge before and during the convention, which starts Aug. 19, the city would first house new arrivals with its roughly 5,000 available beds, Ponce de León said. If that’s not enough, a mix of city, county, state and federal funding would open several “just-in-time” shelters,” she added. “Everything to be able to open these beds very quickly is beginning to fall into place,” Ponce de León said.

* Active Transportation Alliance | Coalition calls for halting NDLSD redesign project: We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to not only reimagine our lakefront, but also to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our city and region. Despite this window of opportunity, the current proposal, called ‘The Essential,’ will largely rebuild the highway as it currently exists.

* Sun-Times | Phillips fires state championship coach Paris Martin two weeks after he filed a lawsuit against CPS: Martin, Phillips’ boys basketball coach for the last two seasons, claims that Chicago Public Schools never has paid him and that he never officially has been cleared to coach by CPS. The school district requires that all coaches pass a background test. Martin filed a lawsuit July 8 against CPS, Phillips, Talley, Phillips athletic director James Daniels IV, Phillips operations manager Shelonda Mackey and Phillips girls basketball coach Larry Stokes in the Northern District of Illinois’ Eastern Division. Early Tuesday, Martin started a Go Fund Me page to raise money for state championship rings for Phillips’ boys basketball players. As of Tuesday afternoon, $200 of the $14,300 goal had been donated.

* WBEZ | CPS is counting on hundreds of positions going unfilled to balance its budget: Faced with a budget deficit of more than $500 million, the school district is counting on vacancies to provide $220 million in savings in the spending plan being voted on Thursday. The district says it calculated these savings by looking at natural attrition, turnover, and the time it takes to hire and staff positions.

* Chalkbeat | State ends scrutiny of Chicago Public Schools over long bus rides for students with disabilities: The state notified the district in April that it was ending a corrective action that required the district to “make every effort” to keep commute times for students with disabilities to less than an hour. The state imposed the monitoring in fall 2022, after district leaders acknowledged that roughly 3,000 students with disabilities had longer bus trips than that, with 365 of those students on trips longer than 90 minutes. In its effort to comply with the state plan and deal with a bus driver shortage, the district cut busing for general education students at the start of last school year, and reserved seats for students with disabilities, as well students who are homeless — groups that are entitled to transportation under federal law. It offered free Ventra transit cards to general education students who would have previously been eligible for bus service, largely those attending selective enrollment and magnet programs.

* Sun-Times | Center on Halsted launches website for its HIV hotline, renews push to get people to call in: The Center on Halsted is making a renewed push to get people connected to its HIV hotline by debuting a website alongside it. “We’re continuing to amplify that this resource is available,” said Joli Robinson, CEO of Center on Halsted, which has administered the hotline for more than three decades.

* Tribune | ‘Titanique the Musical’ parody show is headed to Chicago: “Titanique the Musical,” a critically acclaimed and highly successful off-Broadway parody of the famous 1997 movie “Titanic,” 1990s pop culture and the song stylings of Céline Dion, is sailing to the Broadway Playhouse (175 E. Chestnut St.) for an eight-week run next spring, from March 25 to May 18, 2025. The campy, comedic attraction will appear on the subscription seasons of both Broadway in Chicago and Porchlight Music Theatre Chicago. This will be, in essence, a Porchlight production developed for Chicago.

* Chicago Records | Bridgeport Records builds on its blowout opening weekend: Chicago’s newest independent vinyl shop, Bridgeport Records, opened its doors on July 12 at 3336 S. Halsted. The store is the brainchild of veteran deep-house DJ and producer Vick Lavender and former union leader Jerry Morrison, who’ve both spent decades in the house-music scene but connected for the first time only a few years ago. Lavender founded Sophisticado Recordings in the mid-2000s, and Morrison spent 22 years with the Service Employees International Union, where he played a major role building labor power in Illinois.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | How will suburbs respond to SCOTUS decision allowing cities to fine, arrest homeless people?: Arlington Heights officials are reviewing the Supreme Court’s decision, Village Manager Randall Recklaus said via email. In the past, police were called about people living in the parking garage located below the Arlington Town Square shopping center. In response, the village introduced an ordinance prohibiting “the use of village parking facilities for activities other than parking a vehicle or walking to and from that vehicle,” Recklaus wrote, adding that officers issue citations “when appropriate.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Newly released dispatch records detail confusion following shooting of Sonya Massey: James Wilburn spent days not knowing how his daughter Sonya Massey died. […] “I was under the impression that a prowler had broke in and killed my baby,” Wilburn said Monday. “Never did they say it was a deputy-involved shooting until my brother read it on the internet.”

* WCIA | Sonya Massey’s family wasn’t immediately told her death was deputy-involved: Massey’s family is also calling for Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell to resign for hiring Grayson in the first place. State records obtained by WCIA show that Grayson worked at six different law enforcement agencies within a four-year period and that he has two misdemeanor DUIs in his background. County officials said they were aware of the DUIs due to required background checks but added that according to their knowledge, Grayson had not been terminated from any previous jobs.

* SJ-R | Massey family meets with Pritzker; DOJ opens investigation into fatal shooting: The high-profile attorney who has been retained by the Massey family confirmed at a press conference at the Springfield NAACP Building that Massey’s mother and father and Massey’s two children were among those who met in private with Gov. JB Pritzker and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton on Tuesday. It was open “but emotional at times,” Crump admitted. […] Wilburn also pushed the governor, Crump said, to consider legislation that prevents law enforcement officers with blemishes on their records to be able to resign without having any findings and then go to the next law enforcement agency.

* Capitol News Illinois | DOJ confirms it is ‘assessing the circumstances’ of Sonya Massey shooting: A spokesman for the Department of Justice issued a statement to Capitol News late Tuesday: “The Department of Justice is aware of and assessing the circumstances surrounding the tragic officer-involved death of Ms. Sonya Massey and extends condolences to her family and loved ones.”

* WGLT | Bloomington pawn shops raided by Illinois Attorney General’s Office: “Investigators from the Illinois Attorney General’s organized retail crime task force executed a number of search warrants today as part of an ongoing investigation,” said AG Deputy Press Secretary April McLaren. […] The AG’s office declined further comment, including whether there are more business locations affected. McLaren only noted that there were a number of warrants in play.


* WCIA | Local filmmakers bring Central Illinois to movie screens: Central Illinois is working towards its Hollywood moment. One Danville filmmaker is ready to share his movie that features local actors and locations. He said they created this film independently and the mission was to keep it within the community.

* EFfingham Daily News | 17th annual Effingham Artisan Fair provides oasis for area artists: In total, 35 artists participated in the fair which is five more than last year. This included both experienced and emerging artists. “I think this is one of the best years for novice artists that we’ve ever had,” said Kim Stanfield, one of the lead organizers of the event.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Sunday was the hottest day ever recorded on Earth, scientists say: The results from the Copernicus Climate Change Service show the planet’s average temperature on July 21 was 17.09 degrees Celsius (62.76 degrees Fahrenheit) — breaking a record set only last year. The historic day comes on the heels of 13 straight months of unprecedented temperatures and the hottest year scientists have ever seen.

* TND | FCC head seeks new protections against AI-generated robocalls: The head of the Federal Communications Commission wants to require callers to disclose their use of artificial intelligence. FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel said it’s the latest effort from her agency to protect Americans from misleading uses of AI. “Bad actors are already using AI technology in robocalls to mislead consumers and misinform the public,” Rosenworcel said in a news release. “That’s why we want to put in place rules that empower consumers to avoid this junk and make informed decisions.”

  24 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Jul 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
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