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Will wonders never cease?

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we discussed a few months ago, some truly awful investment and spending decisions made by Chicago’s elite financiers on behalf of some of the city’s museums and cultural institutions have put those institutions in very real financial danger.

Also as I told earlier, partly in reaction to this problem, the General Assembly passed a bill with a large bipartisan majority that would allow museums and aquariums to reduce the number of required free admission days by half, from 52 down to 26. Gov. Pat Quinn vetoed the legislation

“Many Illinois families can only visit these museums on the 52 days that they are currently open to residents free of charge,” the governor wrote in a letter to lawmakers that explains his veto.

“Limiting the number of days our aquariums and museums are available free of cost would disproportionately limit access to our lower-income families,” he said. “I cannot support any legislation that seeks to reduce exposure to the vast educational resources on display at our museums, particularly for those in our state that are most vulnerable.”

* The bill received 79 votes in the House back in April, but impassioned speeches on the House floor today by members of the Black Caucus helped turn the tide in favor of Quinn’s veto and just 49 House members voted to override.

Also helping to kill the override motion was a speech by Rep. Jack Franks, who before today has rarely if ever had anything nice to say about Gov. Quinn. Franks said the veto had changed his own perspective and urged his colleagues who’d never changed their minds to do so on today’s vote.

“The governor is right!” Franks said.

That’s not a misprint.

…Adding… Statement from Gov. Quinn…

“It’s always important to ensure that our residents with modest incomes have equal access to our world-class museums and cultural institutions.

“I commend members of the House for their vote today. They did the right thing.”

  25 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sen. Kirk Dillard to John Kass

“The inevitable outsider characterization makes me laugh,” said Dillard. “No, I don’t think he’s inevitable. And while I respect Mr. Rauner’s success in the private sector, his inner-circle status with Rahm Emanuel is not a plus in a Republican primary.” […]

“In one of your columns I had to laugh, because Rauner tried to backtrack how close he was with the mayor,” Dillard said. “There’s nothing wrong with a relationship. But you have to be able to tell the mayor ‘no.’ As chief of staff for Gov. Edgar I told Mayor (Richard) Daley ‘no’ when he wanted casinos the size of several football fields. Rauner is the man who made Rahm Emanuel rich. That’s the fact. And governmentally, it’s a problem to be that close to the mayor of Chicago.”

* Kass’ take

Some argue that Rauner is beholden to the mayor of Chicago. But Rauner is the one who helped Emanuel make several million dollars in private deals when Emanuel was between political posts. Besides, guys like Bruce Rauner don’t dance for politicians. It’s the other way around.

I think both guys make good points. No way can Bruce Rauner be considered an “outsider,” and polling has shown this to be a killer GOP primary issue.

But he’s an insider who does, indeed, make politicians dance for him. And he’s lately taken to criticizing Emanuel over the way the mayor handled the teachers’ strike.

* The Question: Will Bruce Rauner’s insider experience help him govern if he’s elected? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


surveys & polls

  38 Comments      


About 2,500 attend anti gay marriage rally

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Red meat for the faithful from our live session coverage post

* The official crowd estimate from the Secretary of State…

As of noon, Secretary of State Police estimate today’s rally, both inside and outside the Capitol, at about 2,500 people.

An inside photo…


* Back to the rally…


  71 Comments      


Getting It Right For A Change

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

We talk a lot about what’s wrong with Illinois, but did you know we’re leading the nation in the transition to clean energy? Since the General Assembly passed our Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) with bipartisan majorities in 2007 setting clean energy targets for Illinois, we’ve all been winners. We’re on a path to get 25% of our power from renewable energy by 2025, and already we’re seeing the benefits.

Moving to clean energy has already paid off for Illinois. The RPS has already:

    • Saved consumers $177 million per year
    • Created 19,047 clean energy jobs
    • Eliminated 5 million tons of air pollution

It’s a great start, but to stay on track we need to update the RPS to suit today’s competitive power market. Our electric markets have changed a lot since 2007, and we need to update the RPS to reflect that, to make sure we’re incentivizing investment in Illinois clean energy projects. We need to stop sweeping the Renewable Energy Resources Fund and let the Illinois Power Agency invest it in our communities.

Clean energy companies have more than $4.5 billion in Illinois wind and solar projects ready for development. Let’s keep the benefits coming, and greenlight the next generation of clean energy investments in Illinois. We need the General Assembly to update the RPS this fall, and keep us on track to a better future.

To learn more, visit www.ILikeCleanEnergy.org.

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Caught on tape

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yikes

In September 2008, Cook County Board of Review analyst Thomas Hawkins was talking about an alleged scheme to lower property tax assessments for a corrupt Chicago police officer when he mentioned that the “boss” had grand plans for how to make even more in bribes in the future.

“This is the move…Joe’s gonna run for assessor…he’s gonna win,” Hawkins allegedly told the officer, Ali Haleem, who was secretly recording the conversation for the FBI. “And then he’s gonna appoint his top deputy for commissioner. So now Joe’s gonna get paid double. He’s gonna get paid for raising taxes and lowering (them).”

The “boss,” according to the Tribune, was Cook County Democratic Party Chairman Joe Berrios, who was then on the Board of Review and eventually won his race for county assessor.

More

Berrios hasn’t been charged with any crime, and he wasn’t in court Tuesday as hours of wiretapped conversations defendants Tommy Hawkins and John Racasi had about their alleged bribe scheme were played for a federal jury.

But he was center stage nonetheless as both defendants repeatedly implicated him in the secretly taped conversations with an undercover FBI informant.

In one, recorded Sept. 17, 2008, Hawkins, 49, boasts that he was “with Berrios… having lettuce salads” — code, the feds say, that the defendants used for accepting cash bribes.

In another, recorded Sept. 11, 2008, Hawkins was recorded explaining that he planned to bypass “red tape” on an allegedly corrupt property tax appeal by going “straight to Berrios and get a signature.”

“You know, with the lettuce, say here you go, man — sign this. Put this through right away,” Hawkins was taped saying.

  41 Comments      


Defending Gov. Dangerfield

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Bill 3717 was introduced yesterday by Rep. David Harris (R-Arlington Heights). The measure would cut the governor’s office budget by a million dollars

Reduces a Fiscal Year 2014 appropriation from the General Revenue Fund to the Office of the Governor for operational expenses from $5,521,100 to $4,521,000. Effective January 1, 2014.

This is almost undoubtedly a ploy to get some media attention rather than an actual legislative threat.

Harris talked to WUIS about his bill

“It’s my contention [Gov. Quinn] and his staff haven’t done their job, because it’s a cooperative venture here in the state, between the legislature and the chief executive,” Harris says. “We passed 600 bills in the spring session. Six hundred bills. Because we didn’t pass one single bill he claims we haven’t done our job.” […]

In response, a spokesman for the governor sent a summary of task forces, deadlines and public pronouncements Quinn has made to help resolve the pension issue, and says the governor isn’t taking a paycheck until that’s done.

That isn’t enough for Harris, who says Quinn has job perks most legislators do not.

“I’m not driven around by state troopers, I have to buy my gas myself, kay? I have to put food on my table and it doesn’t come from the state coffers at the executive mansion. So there’s a little bit of a difference here,” he says.

Harris also notes that, unlike he did for legislators’ pay, Quinn did not veto his own salary; he is just making a temporary choice to not take a paycheck.

OK, but Harris is now getting paid. And Quinn didn’t use his veto to touch staff salaries. Harris’ bill is focused on staff. That’s a bit much.

* And speaking of no respect for Quinn

The chairman of a legislative panel considering a pack-age of tax breaks for Archer Daniels Midland signaled Tuesday the General Assembly may move forward with a plan despite the threat of a veto from Gov. Pat Quinn.

Earlier this month Quinn said he would oppose any legislation offering tax incentives to the Decatur-based agribusiness giant to keep its world head-quarters in Illinois unless the House and Senate sign off on a plan to overhaul the state’s massively underfunded pension systems.

State Rep. John Bradley, a Democrat from Marion, brushed off the governor’s demands following a Tuesday hearing on a separate set of possible tax breaks aimed at helping Illinois beat out Florida as the headquarters of newly merged OfficeMax and Office Depot.

“We’re used to rhetoric like that coming out of the governor’s office,” Bradley told reporters after chairing a meeting of the House Revenue and Finance Committee.

Maybe so, but there’s no great love for this bill in the GA right now.

* And this is incredibly misleading

llinois Gov. Pat Quinn says publicly that public-pension reform is “a paramount issue right now,” but that’s not stopping him from asking for more than $100 million to hike the pay of unionized public employees.

“In terms of fiscal issues, there’s a paramount issue right now, and that is pension reform,” Quinn told reporters on Tuesday. “We must not step back from it, we must step forward.”

At the same time, however, Quinn is asking lawmakers for $200 million in new spending, more than half of which will go to pay promised pay raises for the state’s public employees.

And that’s not sitting will with some lawmakers.

“Our unpaid bills have gone from $4 billion to $7 billion, this guy is a reckless ship when it comes to financial management,” state Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington said. “Yes, we need to live up to pour obligations, but (Quinn) needs to learn to live within our means.”

OK, first of all, that proposed approp is actually about paying off an old, unpaid bill. It’s for pay raises going back to 2011 which weren’t funded by the Legislature. A court has ordered the raises have to be paid. And the raises weren’t negotiated by Quinn but by Rod Blagojevich. And then there’s this

Quinn’s staff is urging lawmakers to pay them sooner, so less interest is piled on. Some agencies have already been able to find the money for back pay in their budgets.

So despite the lede of that first story, paying the raises is basically the same argument that Quinn is making on pension reform. Deal with it now or the costs will increase with every day of delay.

You can make the argument that Quinn ought to find the money to pay the raises from within his existing budget, but then you might be asked where he ought to make his agency cuts. And just about every time he lays off workers or closes a state facility, a large group of GOP lawmakers screams bloody murder.

Also, revenues are coming in about $360 million higher than original estimates. So if you treat the back pay as a past-due bill like all the others, then there’s a very logical argument to make that the supplemental appropriation should be approved.

* For his part, Gov. Quinn refused to directly criticize Senate President John Cullerton over the whole “is the pension debt a crisis or not” argument despite this story’s spin

Gov. Pat Quinn Tuesday reiterated that the state’s pension problems are an “extreme emergency” that demand lawmakers’ attention now.

Speaking at a Statehouse news conference, Quinn dismissed a statement from Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, over the weekend that the pension problem does not rise to the level of a crisis.

“I think it is a matter of extreme emergency, it is urgent,” Quinn said when asked about Cullerton’s comments. “Whatever word you want to use, when taxpayers are paying $5 million a day more in pension liability, to me that’s a matter of grave importance. We have to resolve the issue right now.”

  17 Comments      


Credit Union (noun) – an essential financial cooperative

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Cooperatives can be formed to support producers such as farmers, purchasers such as independent business owners, and consumers such as electric coops and credit unions. Their primary purpose is to meet members’ needs through affordable goods and services of high quality. Cooperatives such as credit unions may look like other businesses in their operations and, like other businesses, can range in size. However, the cooperative structure is distinctively different regardless of size. As not-for-profit financial cooperatives, credit unions serve individuals with a common goal or interest. They are owned and democratically controlled by the people who use their services. Their board of directors consists of unpaid volunteers, elected by and from the membership. Members are owners who pool funds to help other members. After expenses and reserve requirements are met, net revenue is returned to members via lower loan and higher savings rates, lower costs and fees for services. It is the structure of credit unions, not their size or range of services that is the reason for their tax exempt status - and the reason why almost three million Illinois residents are among 95 million Americans who count on their local credit union everyday to reach their financial goals.

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*** UPDATED x1 - Oberweis says he’s in *** Caption contest!

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* State Sen. Jim Oberweis is taking advantage of the “Defend Marriage Lobby Day” crowd to circulate his US Senate nominating petitions…

…Adding… So far, anyway, the crowd isn’t all that huge. From our live session coverage post


*** UPDATE *** From the Twitters…


  62 Comments      


“Emphasis added” gay marriage rally roundup

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* So were Springfield police officers enforcing a religious dress code yesterday, or were they just keeping the peace? Sun-Times

Throughout the day Tuesday, activists rallied, marched and met face-to-face with House members. Later in the day, a trio of Roman Catholic gay-rights activists — greatly outnumbered by police — silently prayed the rosary in support of Harris’ legislation at Springfield’s largest Catholic cathedral.

Bishop Thomas John Paprocki, head of the Springfield Catholic diocese, warned earlier in the day that anyone wearing rainbow sashes — a sign of solidarity in the same-sex marriage push — would be barred entrance to the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception because their defiance against church policy on marriage amounted to “blasphemy.”

The activists who showed up at a late-afternoon mass at the church were not wearing the sashes.

* Belleville News-Democrat

Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea, said people have strong opinions on both sides of the issue.

“But I do believe that it could be categorized, to a large extent, as generational,” Hoffman said. “People who are my daughter’s age believe much differently than older individuals. That’s just kind of the sense I’ve gotten from the calls I receive.”

Hoffman voted in favor of civil unions but has previously said he’s opposed to gay marriage. In an interview this week, however, he left open the possibility of voting in favor of it.

“I haven’t decided. I’m still reviewing some of the information that’s been provided by both sides. Until we see a final draft of a bill, I think it’s premature,” Hoffman said.

Um, dude, the bill was drafted months ago. It passed the Senate in February.

* SJ-R headline

Hundreds rally at Capitol for same-sex marriage

* Sun-Times lede

Saying it’s “criminal” gays and lesbians can’t marry in Illinois, more than 1,000 gay-rights supporters braved a steady rain at the Capitol Tuesday to push stalled same-sex marriage legislation — but faced a harsh backlash from a top Catholic leader.

* Chicago GoPride headline

Record-breaking crowds rally in Springfield for marriage equality

* The official Secretary of State Police estimate

“This is our hour. This is our moment,” Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn told the estimated crowd of 3,000 that had gathered under a cold rain.

* Speaker Madigan was the center of attention for some leaders who addressed the crowd

Noticeable absent was Lisa Madigan’s father, House Speaker Michael Madigan (D), who supports the measure but has yet to call the bill in the House.

“Mike Madigan’s House failed us,” said Andy Thayer, co-founder of the Gay Liberation Network. “We have a message to Mike Madigan, pass the damn bill this fall veto session.”

Thayer continued his impassioned message, “It is time. It is time Mike Madigan!”

At one point the energized crowd started chanting, “Call the bill!”

Lambda Legal’s Jim Bennett, chair of the Illinois Unites for Marriage Coalition, continued on message, “It’s time for Speaker Madigan to show some leadership and pass this bill now.”

* But this was unbelievably stupid

The tension was on display through the day, as some in the crowd shouted “Call the vote” while [gay marriage bill sponsor Rep. Greg Harris] spoke. Others took to the stage in the shadow of Abraham Lincoln’s statue to declare they were prepared to vote out of office lawmakers who got in the way — including Harris.

Yeah, that’ll help. Primary the most ardent gay marriage supporter in the entire Illinois General Assembly. Great.

Anybody who does that is a moron, plain and simple.

  19 Comments      


*** LIVE *** SESSION COVERAGE

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Watch today’s session unfold

  2 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Oct 23, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Madigan to House Clerk: Ignore the governor’s veto

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a memo…

October 22, 2013

Timothy D. Mapes
Clerk of the Illinois House of Representatives
420 State House
Springfield, IL 62706

Re: House Bill 214 (Madigan/Cullerton)

Dear Mr. Mapes:

On September 26, 2013, a Cook County Circuit judge held that the Governor’s line item veto of House Bill 214 violated Article VI, Section 11 of the Illinois Constitution and therefore, was void ab initio. This means that the line item veto has no legal effect and it is to be treated as void from the outset. The Governor has appealed the decision and the Supreme Court has agreed to review the issue. However, the order entered on September 26th remains in effect. Therefore, there is no viable veto of House Bill 214 that the House can consider.

With kindest personal regards, I remain

Sincerely yours,

MICHAEL J. MADIGAN
Speaker of the House

As of 12:30, the bill’s status page hadn’t yet been updated.

  16 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Candidate wanted big payday after fall

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A few years ago, Bruce Rauner’s running mate Evelyn Sanguinetti slipped and fell at the College Avenue Train Station in Wheaton.

According to Jon Zahm, Sanguinetti then sued Wheaton (her home town), DuPage County, METRA, the Union Pacific Railroad, the Illinois Prairie Path Corporation, and the DuPage County Dept. of Transportation.

* According to a copy of Sanguinetti’s suit that Zahm forwarded me, Sanguinetti demanded at least $50,000 each from Wheaton and Metra and unspecified damages from the others.

Zahm is a major Rauner hater, but he’s had some interesting posts on his Rauner-hating blog, including some deets on the Sanguinetti lawsuit

These are mostly taxpayer funded entities. When they are sued, the cost of government services rise to pay off the settlements and costs of litigation, and to cover the costs of increased insurance premiums. So what did these entities do to Evelyn to receive the wrath of her six count lawsuit?

Let me use exact words from her suit filed on her behalf by Chicago lawyer Ronald Stearney, Jr.:

    “Allowed and permitted said sidewalk where pedestrians walked and frequently and necessarily used to enter and exit the College Avenue Train Station to remain, when said Defendant knew or should have known that said sidewalk caused an unnatural accumulation of water, snow, ice or other dangerous substances, which in turn posed a dangerous condition, especially to the Plaintiff Evelyn R. Sanguinetti.”

The suit goes on to say, 8 other ways, very similar things about the sidewalk on the way to that train station. Got to love legalese.

Unbelievable. You fall on a sidewalk while walking to the train and blame the government and penalize the taxpayers where you live and work.

And ask for at least a hundred large.

Zahm says he believes the suit was settled.

*** UPDATE *** From the Rauner campaign…

Evelyn was not after a “big payday.” The case was settled and Evelyn gave the net proceeds to Operation Support Our Troops. She was subsequently elected to an at-large position on Wheaton City Council.

She sued two entities for at least 50 large each. In my book, that’s a big payday. And whatever she did with the proceeds makes no difference. If she didn’t need the money, why get all those lawyers involved?

  94 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Today’s tweet

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From our live feed


*** UPDATE *** From McKinney’s story

Advocates for the Senate Bill 10 plan to attend a 5:15 p.m. Tuesday Mass at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception as part of what organizers describe as a “loud Catholic Presence for marriage equality” that will wrap up a daylong rally in support of the stalled legislation. […]

“It is blasphemy to show disrespect or irreverence to God or to something holy,” Paprocki said in a statement released late Tuesday morning. “Since Jesus clearly taught that marriage as created by God is a sacred institution between a man and a woman (see Matthew 19:4-6 and Mark 10:6-9), praying for same-sex marriage should be seen as blasphemous and as such will not be permitted in the cathedral.

People wearing a rainbow sash or who otherwise identify themselves as affiliated with the Rainbow Sash Movement will not be admitted into the cathedral and anyone who gets up to pray for same-sex marriage in the cathedral will be asked to leave,” Paprocki said.

“Of course, our cathedral and parish churches are always open to everyone who wishes to repent their sins and ask for God’s forgiveness,” he said.

  61 Comments      


Durkin says he will support primaried incumbents

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* If GOP Reps. Ed Sullivan and Ron Sandack end up in hot primaries next spring, their new House Republican Leader will have their back. The two men are the only publicly known Republican supporters of gay marriage. Illinois Issues

[House GOP Leader Jim Durkin] said he plans to back incumbents in primaries next year, regardless of how they vote on the [gay marriage] issue.

“I’m supporting every one of my colleagues who’s here, no matter how they vote on this issue, or any other issue. We are a caucus that is diverse, and we’re not going to agree on every issue. But my pledge to every one of them when I was elected two months ago was that I want each and every one of them to be returning with me when we get sworn in. … I will support every one of my incumbents who have a primary challenge, no matter what [side of an] issue they take or whatever vote may prompt a primary.”

That could get expensive, particularly considering all the money Durkin will have to spend next fall to take back some seats his caucus lost to the Democrats last year.

Your thoughts?

  18 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm. Things are a little slow around here today. So how’s about a caption contest to get the juices flowing? Here’s Rahm Emanuel and Pat Quinn sharing a stage the other day…

  64 Comments      


Bringing it on himself

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s goes super-hyper-breathless on John Cullerton

It’s official: Illinois Senate President John Cullerton is the Alfred E. Neuman of Illinois politics.

As all but the most dedicated news-avoiders know by now, Illinois has a problem on its hands. It’s a big, big problem. Whopping. Ballooning. Staggering. Mushrooming. You could use any of those adjectives and then some, and they’d all be pretty accurate. That’s because Illinois has racked up more than $100 billion in unfunded pension obligations to its public employees. It’s a debt burden that’s threatening to sink the state’s finances. And no one in Illinois government seems ready to do a thing about it.

Now to limited thinkers like you and me, a state that’s more or less in bankruptcy is a state that’s facing something like a crisis. But then, we don’t think like Mr. Cullerton. What fortitude it must take to look upon tempests and never be shaken, to be presented with a mile-long IOU and simply shrug. That’s what happened this past weekend, when the North Side Democrat told a WGN-AM/720 radio interviewer that Illinois’ massive pension debt — the worst in the nation, mind you — is not a “crisis.”

Never mind the fact that the partial expiration of the state income tax increase in a little over a year will cost state coffers hundreds of billions of dollars by 2045 - the year arbitrarily designated by Jim Edgar back in the ’90s to fully fund the state’s pension systems. That tax hike budget hit is not a “crisis,” you see. It’s only a “crisis” if the powers that be decree it is so.

* But, I do admit that it’s Cullerton’s own fault that he’s being ridiculed for his “crisis” comment, as the Tribune rightly notes

Barely a year ago, on Sept. 13, 2012, Illinois Senate President John Cullerton met with the Tribune editorial board. He was positively loquacious in explaining why public pension reform was his No. 1 priority for the 2013 legislative session:

“It may not be the No. 1 priority of the public because they don’t understand the significance of how this crisis affects the operation of state government,” Cullerton said. “But those of us who know the state budget know this is essential because you wouldn’t have enough money to pay for health care or education.”

And that wasn’t the only time Cullerton referred to the pension “crisis”…



Oops.

  82 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: Addendum

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Apparently, it didn’t work as advertised

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Workers’ comp reforms two years ago have succeeded in driving down some costs, but overall costs have barely moved. Oy

Medical payments for workers’ compensation claims dropped only 4.6 percent in Illinois last year even though the General Assembly reduced the maximum fees for workers’ compensation-related office visits, surgery and other treatments by 30 percent in 2011 (see the PDF). That’s according to a study of 16 states by the Workers Compensation Research Institute, an insurance industry-funded think tank in Cambridge, Mass. The states were selected to represent the high, middle and low end of the cost spectrum.

Medical fees actually fell 24 percent last year, according to the study, as some providers already were charging less than the maximum amount allowed by law. But those savings largely were offset by greater use of medical services and increased spending on litigation over medical claims, second opinions by company doctors and other measures to control medical costs.

As a result, total payments per claim were down just 1 percent.

* And this is just depressing

While the study addressed only costs per claim, Illinois is well below average in the number of claims per 1,000 workers, in part because of high unemployment in construction and manufacturing, which tend to have more injuries.

Sheesh.

  19 Comments      


Kerner and Carlos

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I can’t help but think about our late friend Carlos Hernandez Gomez when reading this story today

A daylong look at the life and legacy of a former Illinois governor who led a ground-breaking national study on urban violence, reformed the state’s mental health system and became a federal appeals court judge before doing prison time for corruption, is coming to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library.

The Governor’s Conference on Otto Kerner begins at 8:30 a.m. Nov. 2 and will include a critical look at what happened to Kerner. Among panelists is Anton Kerner, son of the late governor, who questions the fairness of Kerner’s prosecution; and Bill Barnhart and Gene Schlickman, authors of a 1999 book “Kerner: The Conflict of Intangible Rights.”

In it, they argue that Kerner could be seen as a victim of unfortunate timing — given that his 1971 indictment linked to ownership of racetrack stock came in the wake of the 1970 death of former Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell, who was found to have hoarded more than $800,000 in cash, some in a shoe box, in the old St. Nicholas Hotel in Springfield.

“We think it’s going to be a fascinating look at one of our former governors,” said Mark DePue, director of oral history at the presidential library. “It’s something of a tragedy that he’s only remembered today because he was … convicted for some things that happened during his administration.”

Carlos was fascinated with Kerner’s legacy. He believed the former governor may have been railroaded by an over zealous federal prosecutor (Jim Thompson) who went on to use that successful prosecution to elect himself governor.

Carlos wanted to write a book about Kerner, but then he got sick and passed away. Carlos was very tough on politicians, but he wasn’t a cynical hater. He always tried to get every side of a story, so I think his Kerner book would’ve been fascinating. We’ll never know.

  17 Comments      


*** LIVE *** SESSION COVERAGE

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can watch live video coverage of today’s gay marriage Statehouse march by clicking here. And you can watch the rest of today’s session unfold below

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Rate the ad

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gay marriage advocates began running this ad on black radio stations over the weekend. Rate it…

Script…

Woman #1: You know what? It’s not fair that same gender-loving couples can get married in some states, but not in Illinois.

Woman #2: Not in Illinois? That’s not fair.

Woman #1: Nope. And that means same gender-loving couples don’t get treated equally when it comes to family leave in an emergency or Medicare. Listen to what President Obama had to say about it:

    Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law. For if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.

Woman #2: So our President’s out there for marriage equality?

Woman #1: And Michelle, too. Here’s what she said:

    In a country where we teach our children that everyone is equal under the law, discriminating against same-sex couples just isn’t right. So it’s as simple as that.

VO: Join President and Mrs. Obama and folks across our community who believe in fairness. Tellyour legislators to pass the religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act.

Paid for by Illinois Unites for Marriage.

* As subscribers already know, a new head count by the Windy City Times shows pro gay marriage forces within striking distance of passing a bill. Check it out.

* Related…

* Daily Herald Editorial: It’s time for a vote on marriage equality in Illinois: Promises were made then that a vote would happen during the fall veto session. And no matter which way it goes, it’s time for legislators to go on the record despite concerns about the political calendar. Legislators on both sides of the issue are concerned about potential opponents filing against them in the primary based on this vote. Much has changed, however, in the last few months.

* Buses depart this morning for March on Springfield for Marriage Equality

* Illinois gay marriage rally draws protesters to Springfield

* Poll: By 2-to-1 Illinois Catholic Voters Back Same Sex Marriage

* Thousands expected to rally for Illinois same-sex marriage

* All eyes on Harris as veto session approaches

* Latino community leaders lend support to marriage equality

  11 Comments      


Credit Union (noun) – an essential financial cooperative

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Cooperatives can be formed to support producers such as farmers, purchasers such as independent business owners, and consumers such as electric coops and credit unions. Their primary purpose is to meet members’ needs through affordable goods and services of high quality. Cooperatives such as credit unions may look like other businesses in their operations and, like other businesses, can range in size. However, the cooperative structure is distinctively different regardless of size. As not-for-profit financial cooperatives, credit unions serve individuals with a common goal or interest. They are owned and democratically controlled by the people who use their services. Their board of directors consists of unpaid volunteers, elected by and from the membership. Members are owners who pool funds to help other members. After expenses and reserve requirements are met, net revenue is returned to members via lower loan and higher savings rates, lower costs and fees for services. It is the structure of credit unions, not their size or range of services that is the reason for their tax exempt status - and the reason why almost three million Illinois residents are among 95 million Americans who count on their local credit union everyday to reach their financial goals.

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Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Oct 22, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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