Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar » Illinois
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Shaw Local

Last month’s pro-Donald Trump rally in Woodstock showed a familiar side of McHenry County, one that has long been loyal to the Republican Party.

But while hundreds of supporters of the former president celebrated their GOP affiliation and listened to speeches from prominent party figures like MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, McHenry County Board Chair Mike Buehler acknowledged the shift that has taken place in every other collar county around Chicago in recent years: They’ve turned blue. […]

The GOP still holds a large majority on the McHenry County Board and – whatever happens in the Nov. 5 election – will continue to hold most of the countywide elected offices, since the Democrats are not running anyone against the state’s attorney or auditor, and other countywide offices not up this cycle are also held by Republicans. Buehler himself is facing a challenge from Democratic county board member Kelli Wegener, while GOP Coroner Michael Rein faces a challenge from Democrat Chris Kalapodis.

Buehler won his position in 2020 by besting Jack Franks, who four years earlier became the first Democrat to win a countywide elected office in McHenry County since 1978.

And Democrats have made inroads in presidential politics in McHenry County too. In 2016, Trump carried the county with 50.3% of the vote against Hillary Clinton, beating her by almost 11,000 votes. In 2020, Trump still won the county, but this time it was by slightly more than 4,000 votes, and he received less than 50% of the vote.

* A lot going on in Downstate today


* NBC Chicago

Western Illinois University Macomb will be closed Thursday after an “ongoing emergency” near the campus, an alert on the school’s website said.

The closure comes a day after two Macomb police officers were shot Wednesday while trying to serve a warrant. […]

According to the Macomb Police Department, two officers Wednesday evening were shot while in the process of serving a warrant in the 300 block of North Normal Street.

“After knocking and announcing their presence several times, they forced entry into the residence but were immediately fired upon by someone in the residence,” Macomb’s chief of police said in an update late Thursday.

* Freedom From Religion Foundation

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is asking for the removal of an unconstitutional Ten Commandments display at the Jefferson County Courthouse.

FFRF was informed that a Ten Commandments display was recently installed at the courthouse in Mount Vernon, Ill. The display is nearly 6-and-a-half feet tall and sits in the center of the first floor lobby. The display includes a Protestant version of the Ten Commandments, given its particular language and numbering. At the bottom of the display is the biblical quote for Proverbs 21:15, which reads: “When justice is done, it is a joy to the righteous but terror to the evildoers.”

“Government promotion of one particular religion deters the nonreligious and minority religions from accessing important government services,” FFRF Patrick O’Reiley Legal Fellow Hirsh M. Joshi writes to Jefferson County Board Chair Cliff Lindemann.

By displaying this religious text in its courthouses, the county demonstrates a plain and undeniable preference for religion over nonreligion, and Protestant Christianity above all other faiths. Illinois’s Establishment Clause reads: “No person shall be required to attend or support any ministry or place of worship against his consent, nor shall any preference be given by law to any religious denomination or mode of worship.” FFRF is confident that state courts will find that a large Protestant Ten Commandments display by the county demonstrates preference for a religious denomination and mode of worship.

* Illinois State Rifle Association…

The Illinois State Rifle Association has released the following statement regarding the tragic events in Georgia yesterday.

“The Illinois State Rifle Association in the strongest of terms, does not condone any act of violence – especially the criminal misuse of firearms to commit violent acts.

Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those killed during today’s tragic shooting at a high school in Georgia. We’re also thinking of the other victims and their families and wishing them a full recovery.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | City sees modest improvement in violence figures over the summer: Chicago recorded 186 homicides between June 1 and Aug. 31, data show. Another 764 people suffered nonfatal gunshot wounds in that span. Summer 2023 saw 190 homicides while 747 others were shot and wounded. A year earlier, in 2022, the city recorded 207 homicides with another 957 shot over the summer.

* Sun-Times | Logan Square art gallery founder calls arrest, citations harassment — and neighbors agree: Trejon D’Angelo Williams said he created the gallery at 2334 N. Milwaukee Ave. to highlight marginalized artists, but he says he has been hindered due to harassment by Chicago police. He said police have been a constant presence at the venue, which showcases provocative art — most recently an exhibit about the war in Gaza and police violence. Ald. Daniel La Spata (1st) said Chicago police told him they were not proactively checking on Williams, but responding to 911 calls when they visited Aug. 21. They claimed they arrested Williams after he shoved officers, which resulted in injuries, La Spata said.

* Sun-Times | Humboldt Park ‘basement’ comedy club shut down after Instagram video goes viral: For five years, the Humboldt Jungle was the cool kids club, an underground comedy and music venue inside a residential basement that provided a space for local performers and audience members in the know. Humboldt Park resident Nathan Weil operated the secret space out of his home. Potted plants adorned the basement venue to give it a jungle feel, and patrons could bring their own alcohol. The shows had become popular enough to attract the attention of the popular Best Date Food Instagram page, which posted a video of the space in late August.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Northwestern | University administration rolls out new demonstration, discrimination policies: The updated Demonstration policy will enforce new requirements, barring overnight demonstration and adding limitations on what the University considers “activity that disrupts classes and other functions of the University, including prohibiting demonstrations at the Rock before 3 p.m. on weekdays and the use of amplified sound in that area before 5 p.m.”

* Tribune | Former assistant state’s attorney who headed wrongful conviction unit amid scrutiny sues Kim Foxx alleging discrimination: Nancy Adduci, who began her career at the Cook County state’s attorney’s office in 1996, filed a federal lawsuit last month that accuses Foxx and the office of demoting and firing her due to her age and race. Adduci, who is white, said in the complaint that Foxx’s deputies in October 2023 demoted her from her position supervising the Conviction Integrity Unit, now called the Conviction Review Unit, telling her they sought someone “more representative of the community” for the role.

* Daily Herald | How many officers does a suburban police department need? Answers vary: “You really need to know what your officers’ workload is and when the peaks and valleys are,” said Leonard Matarese, the managing partner at the Center for Public Safety Management at the International City/County Management Association. “You’ve got to really dig into the details, but that’s not something many police departments are equipped to do.” After keeping its police staffing level steady at about 108 sworn officers for the better part of a decade, Palatine is one of those suburbs ready to increase its ranks. The shift comes after officials identified a greater need for neighborhood-based policing and community services.

* Daily Southtown | Summit Hill District 161 calls for quick changes to ‘inexcusable’ school bus service: The CEO and founder of Safeway Transportation Services Corp. took full responsibility Wednesday for the bus problems that disrupted the start of school at Summit Hill Elementary District 161 in Frankfort. Meanwhile, the District 161 School Board and administration demanded the bus company improve its services as quickly as possible. […] [Board member John Winters] said he was disturbed hearing about kindergarten students riding the bus for two hours in the afternoon and having bathroom accidents during the long ride.

*** Downstate ***

* News-Gazette | Siblings to be honored as grand marshals of Arcola Broomcorn Festival: For many years, Terry and Angie Thornton have let people attending the Arcola Broomcorn Festival know what is going on during the festivities. This year, they will be part of what’s going on. The brother-sister Arcola natives will serve as grand marshals of the 53rd broomcorn festival parade.

* Pantagraph | Illinois State, Wesleyan universities safe after false reports of threats connected to WIU shooting: No active shooter and no credible threats were found, according to statements from ISUPD and BPD. The departments noted the rumors about a threat in Bloomington-Normal came at the same time as a shooting near Western Illinois University, almost two hours west of the Twin Cities.

* WAND | Man who escaped Sangamon Co. jail arrested by marshals in Springfield: The sheriff’s office said that Chane L. Jones, 42, had been booked on Tuesday for burglary and theft and was able to “mingle with three other inmates, who were administratively released from custody” Jones was arrested by sheriff’s deputies and US Marshals in the 1100 block of North 5th Street in Springfield. He is back in custody and faces additional charges.

* WCIA | ‘It left a lasting impact on our family’: Central IL woman urges more Nurse Honor Guard volunteers: When a nurse passes away after a career of serving his or her patients, the care doesn’t stop. The Nurse Honor Guard program aims to remember them even at the end of their lives. Phyllis Rogers called Carle Hospital in Urbana her office for many years. She started in family medicine and eventually switched to a management role. But Ali Boatright, her daughter, said her stethoscope was always close by.

*** National ***

* NYT | Republicans Seize on False Theories About Immigrant Voting: There is no indication that noncitizens are voting in large numbers. And yet the notion that they will flood the polls — and vote overwhelmingly for Democrats — is animating a sprawling network of Republicans who mobilized around former President Donald J. Trump’s false claims of a rigged election in 2020 and are now preparing for the next one.

  13 Comments      


And now for something a little different

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NY Times

Plenty of the submissions in a statewide contest to design Michigan’s next “I Voted” sticker featured cherry blossoms or American flags fluttering in the wind.

Only one entry, however, depicted a werewolf clawing its shirt to tatters and howling at an unseen moon. A smattering of stars and stripes poke out from behind its brawny torso.

“I Voted,” reads a string of red, white and blue block letters floating above the creature’s open maw.

The illustration, which was created by Jane Hynous, a 12-year-old from Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich., was revealed on Wednesday as one of nine winning designs that the Michigan Department of State will offer local clerks to distribute to voters in the November election.

* Michigan AFL-CIO chief of staff…


Heh.

  10 Comments      


Sean Grayson’s history of credibility issues includes bringing charges with no evidence

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Invisible Institute

Kyle Adkins was leaving his parents’ house in Kincaid, a small village in central Illinois’ Christian County, to pick up his young children from their mother’s house, just a few blocks away, on the night of May 8, 2021.

Kincaid Police Officer Sean Grayson pulled him over — but he wasn’t sure why.

Grayson told Adkins there was a warrant out for his arrest and issued him a Notice to Appear, a document equivalent to an arrest, recommending felony drug charges against him. The case dragged out for two years before it was dropped, and a new investigation reveals the warrant — and other evidence Grayson said he had against Adkins — never actually existed. Body camera footage shows Grayson admitting to the chief of police he had no evidence to recommend charges, but even after the footage surfaced in court, no other department or agency was notified.

Meanwhile, Adkins, who works as a mechanic, had to show up to court regularly for years, face questions about his reputation — and deal with repercussions for his loved ones pulled into his criminal case. He said he even struggled to get formal visitation with his kids while the case was ongoing — and said he’s just now building a stronger relationship with his oldest child, now 11.

Grayson, now 30, would go on to work at four other police departments across central Illinois, the last being the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office, where he would fatally shoot and kill Sonya Massey, 36, in her home in July 2024 after she called the police for help. Grayson shot at Massey, an unarmed Black woman whose family had called police with concerns about her mental health, three times, hitting her once in the head. He’s since been charged with murdering her.

Go read the rest.

* Here is Grayson admitting he had no evidence against Adkins

* The transcript…

Sean Grayson: Hey for the, for that NTA () on the charge for offenses, is it intent to deliver or just possession of meth? What are we putting on that?

Chief of Kincaid: You go anything on him?

Grayson: No.

Chief: On a Notice to Appear? I would just do intent to deliver.

Grayson: OK, and there’s a baggie, but I wasn’t going to mess with fixed testing it. I didn’t really care that much.

Chief: What was it?

Grayson: It was just like a baggie, but I didn’t really care to field test it to be honest with you.

* Back to the story

Carlton Mayers II, an attorney and police reform consultant who worked with lawmakers on some of the original language of the SAFE T Act, said that the original bill didn’t come with any funding for ILETSB’s new responsibilities, which had to be appropriated the next year. He added that the agency also still lacks administrative rules, which are proposed by state agencies and then approved by the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR).

Those administrative rules would lay out not only the processes for discretionary decertification, but could also speak to things like what’s required of a department’s background investigation, which right now is only required to include a check of the Officer Professional Conduct Database.

In a statement, a spokesperson hired by ILETSB pointed to its “multiple mandates to implement” for its delay in “the establishment of discretionary decertification hearings.”

“We are committed to leading this work thoughtfully and deliberately to ensure our law enforcement maintains the highest level of professional standards, and have made significant progress in building this new initiative from the ground up,” the statement continued. “We have engaged a range of partners and studied best practices from across the country to ensure we get this right from day one.”

The spokesperson wrote that the agency “anticipates” that “day one” will come in the “4th quarter of 2024.”

  19 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Thursday, Sep 5, 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 Gillian, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


What in the heck is going on at TopGolf?

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NCTV

Located just off I-88, Naperville’s Topgolf, 3211 Odyssey Ct., offers a high-tech driving range and full-service restaurant. But just outside the facility, Naperville police have over the past year found numerous guns, sometimes in plain sight, in cars throughout the parking lot.

Since Aug. 1, 2023, there have been 23 gun-related arrests outside Topgolf, according to Naperville Police Commander Ricky Krakow.

Many of the firearms, Naperville Police Chief Jason Arres said, are discovered during officer foot patrols of the facility’s parking lot. […]

Why are guns being left out in plain view inside cars? It’s a question on the mind of Arres and his department.

“I don’t know how to speculate why someone wouldn’t properly secure a firearm. Laziness? Not thinking they’re going to get caught? I can’t really guess. But what I can say is what we do,” said Arres. […]

Despite the influx of incidents outside Topgolf, Arres says gun-related arrests in Naperville have been trending down.

“In 2022, if you take the average out, it’s about 12 gun arrests per month, 2023 that dropped to 10, and actually in 2024, we’ve averaged nine gun arrests per month, so actually, the numbers are going down,” Arres said. “Not as fast as I or anyone in this community would like but we’re going to continue proactively patrolling this with the hope that those gun-related arrests are zero.”

* Make that 24 arrests. Naperville Sun

A 24-year-old from Calumet Park was arrested Friday night for having a firearm inside his car while it was parked in the Naperville Topgolf parking lot, the 24th time a suspect’s been charged with a firearm-related offense since August 2023, officials said.

Demonte G. Dennis was arrested about 9:15 p.m. at the 3211 Odyssey Court lot on one charge of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, a class 4 felony, and a misdemeanor charge for possession of cannabis.

Dennis was taken into custody after police discovered a firearm illicitly stored inside his car while patrolling the Topgolf lot, according to Naperville police Cmdr. Rick Krakow.

Officers were performing a proactive foot patrol of the lot when they detected an odor of cannabis from the area around a parked Buick, Krakow said. The vehicle was unoccupied, but when officers looked through its windows, they observed a handgun in plain view. […]

Consistently making headlines for more than a year now, the trend of people bringing guns into Naperville’s Topgolf parking lot was first observed in August 2023. Since then, Naperville police have been routinely doing foot patrols around the business and making arrests for illegal gun possession, among other offenses.

* The Naperville Sun in April

What have alleged offenders arrested at Topgolf been charged with?

There have been a range of weapons charges, including aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, armed violence, armed habitual criminal and unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon.

* More from the Sun

The city’s strategic response unit conducts foot patrols at the facility “at least a couple times a week,” McLean said. […]

The facility has enhanced security measures.

[Naperville police Sgt. Michael McLean] said police have met with Topgolf “probably three or four times” and that they are taking steps “to try and make things safer out there.”

  33 Comments      


What’s going on at Menard?

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Southern

Last week, State Rep. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro) went to Menard Correctional Center after hearing about people at the prison being taken to the hospital after becoming ill. She posted a video to her Facebook Friday after being denied access to the prison.

“I just want you all to know I didn’t come here for some kind of political stunt. I cam here to be responsible to not only the staff you work here but to all of those who are incarcerated here,” Bryant said in the video.

Monday, Aug. 26, five people were sent to the emergency room, according to Bryant. That number included three staff members, one inmate and one emergency services employee. On Wednesday, she said a dozen people from Menard were sent the hospital, which included three or four members of the prison’s medical staff.

Southern Illinois Fire Incidents Facebook page reported St. Clair Emergency Special Services was dispatched to the prison on Wednesday in response to around a dozen people becoming ill. […]

Although the incident was first reported as an exposure to some unknown substance, Illinois Department of Corrections was no longer using the word “exposure.” They just said people became ill. […]

When they called to get permission for her to enter the prison, IDOC Deputy Dir. Angela Locke said she could not go into the prison. She also talked to Liaison Morgan Williams, who told Bryant it was not safe for her to go into the prison.

* From the Illinois Department of Corrections…

On Monday morning [last week], two staff members at Menard Correctional Center reported to the facility’s Health Care Unit after experiencing medical symptoms following their response to a medical emergency involving an individual in custody in North 2 Cell House. Both staff members were treated at an outside hospital and released. During the transportation of the individual in custody to an outside hospital for treatment, the accompanying officer also reported feeling ill and was similarly treated and released. In response, the St. Clair County EMA’s Hazmat Team was contacted to assist with the investigation, and movement within the affected galleries was temporarily suspended. All staff in North 2 were instructed to wear personal protective equipment (PPE) and monitor the galleries for any further medical issues. No additional incidents were reported on Monday or Tuesday.

On Wednesday morning [last week], a staff member at Menard Correctional Center experienced medical symptoms and was promptly transported by ambulance to an outside hospital. Shortly after, additional staff members responding to the incident began to experience similar symptoms. Out of an abundance of caution, 11 more Menard CC staff members were transported to an outside hospital for evaluation via state vehicle. All Menard CC staff members were treated and released from the hospital. In response to Wednesday’s events, the facility was placed on a Level 1 lockdown and made personal protective equipment (PPE) available to all staff. The facility leadership took immediate action by contacting the Illinois Poison Control Center and requesting the St. Clair County EMA’s Hazmat Team to conduct another inspection. The St. Clair County EMA’s Hazmat Team did not locate any hazardous materials during their second inspection. Senator Bryant was not on the premises during those inspections. On Friday, when Senator Bryant made an unplanned visit to Menard Correctional Center on Friday without an appointment, her request for access was declined. We appreciate the Senator’s understanding and cooperation and have offered to schedule a visit to Menard on a later date.

The facility has remained on lockdown since Wednesday, 8/28, for safety and security purposes due to staff members experiencing medical symptoms. All impacted staff members have been treated and released from the hospital. We commend our staff for their swift and effective response, ensuring that everyone impacted has received the necessary medical care. The Department is strongly encouraging staff to utilize PPE until further notice. The Department is currently collaborating with our partners at IDPH to investigate the symptoms experienced by Menard staff. The Department is conducting a thorough ongoing investigation into the events at Menard, and we will share further information as it becomes available. Our top priority remains the safety and well-being of our staff and the individuals in our custody.

Menard was still on a Level One lockdown when Sen. Bryant attempted to gain access last Friday.

Also, I’m told that St. Clair Emergency Special Services refused to respond to a third call from the prison because they hadn’t found anything at all on the two prior trips.

More background is here and here and here and here.

  28 Comments      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  2 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Experts say anti-immigrant rhetoric led to viral — and incorrect — allegations of a migrant takeover: Immigration experts — who pointed to similar incidents that have unfolded across the country in recent days — said some people are spreading misleading content about migrants on social media to sway voters for anti-immigrant candidates and causes. Panic over the emergence of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua spread in Colorado last week after Fox News in Denver aired a surveillance video. The footage, which also went viral, showed a group of men armed with semi-automatic long guns and pistols in an apartment complex in the city of Aurora.

* WTTW | Illinois Doesn’t Have Parole. A Group of Incarcerated Men is Working to Change That: At 46 years old, Raúl Dorado is 26 years into a life sentence at Stateville Correctional Center. […] “All of us who formed this nonprofit, we all either had a life without parole sentence or we had a de facto life sentence, or virtual life, which means you have so much time, you can’t outlive your sentence,” he said before his Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project (PNAP) class in Stateville’s education building.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Fox 2 Now | Illinois to soon ban mini shampoo bottles in hotel rooms: The law goes into effect beginning July 1, 2025, for hotels with 50 rooms or more and beginning Jan. 1, 2026, for hotels with less than 50 rooms. […] However, the law says a hotel may still provide personal-care products in small, single-use plastic bottles at no charge to a person, but only upon request at a place other than a room or public bathroom.

*** Statewide ***

* KHQA | Union leaders demand overhaul of Illinois job posting system amid vacancies: Representatives from the local AFSCME took to the streets to let their voices be heard about the frustrations with the Illinois Central Management Services. The Illinois CMS posts job openings for state workers, but has seen some issues in the recent months. Since February, CMShas failed to post job openings for union related positions.

* WICS | Doctors scramble for solutions amid mental health worker shortage: “The whole mental health system suffers, and the whole healthcare suffers when you don’t have access to psychiatrists,” said Dr. Kari Wolf, Chair of Psychiatry for the SIU School of Medicine. Many doctors have been feeling the impact of not having enough mental health professionals, which has been declining since before the pandemic. “Other professionals are left trying to manage psychiatric conditions,” Wolf said, “and they just don’t have the training or expertise.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Zone offense? Cardona says he has votes to become Zoning Committee chair — with or without mayor’s support: Business and labor leaders opposed to the mayor’s choice, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, drafted Ald. Felix Cardona to run as a compromise candidate. The Northwest Side alderperson is so confident he has enough support, he’s advising Mayor Brandon Johnson to back off or risk an embarrassing defeat. Sigcho-Lopez is not so sure.

* Sun-Times | City Council’s Budget Committee chair to summon CPS CEO Martinez to explain pension defiance: Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) called it borderline “malfeasance” for Schools CEO Pedro Martinez to push through a $9.9 billion school budget that does not include the pension payment the city had absorbed until then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot shifted the cost to CPS.

* Tribune | Safe Passage workers honored for protecting CPS students on walks to and from school: Glenda Rivera’s teenage son was shot while walking just across the street from his high school in Hermosa. Rivera’s son survived. But eight years later, when her daughter enrolled in the same school, Rivera felt that she needed to do something to protect the children in her neighborhood from violence on their way to get an education. So she joined her local Safe Passage team, donning a neon vest and standing guard every morning and afternoon as local students walked to and from class. She has now worked for Chicago Public Schools’ Safe Passage program for seven years and counting, she said.

* Sun-Times | Pace, CPS paratransit drivers reach tentative contract deal, potentially ending weekslong strike: Nearly 800 drivers walked off the job Aug. 16 in protest of what they said were unfair wages. After reaching a tentative deal with SCR Medical Transportation, they could be back at work by the end of the week if they vote to ratify the contract Thursday. […] Chicago Public Schools said it is “encouraged” that a new deal could soon be reached.

* Tribune | Obama Foundation fundraising slows; new museum teaser video released: The foundation raised $129 million in 2023, its lowest sum of the last seven years, according to IRS Form 990 filings, which are required annually from nonprofits. The year before, it raised $311 million, though the bulk of that sum came from tech titans Jeff Bezos and Brian Chesky. The development team raised $1.5 billion through the end of 2023, foundation spokeswoman Gloria Nlewedim told the Tribune in a statement, but “we saw fewer gifts of $25M+ than in previous years, which led to slightly below-average results,” last year.

* Block Club | Chicago’s Getting A Picture-Perfect Weekend With Sunny Skies, Cooler Temperatures: Thursday is expected to be mostly sunny and warm, with a high near 85 degrees, while Friday will top out at 69 degrees and could see isolated showers, according to the National Weather Service. But the good weather really kicks in Saturday, when the skies are expected to be sunny and temperatures will hit 65 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

* WBEZ | What’s That Building? Old Town School of Folk Music: In the 1990s, a Chicago public library building that had sat unused for a decade got a second life. Or maybe, because of the traditions at the Old Town School of Folk Music, which took over the Art Deco building, it’s more accurate to say it got a Second Half. The building is now a fine place to watch live music — or make some. In the main auditorium, 450-seat Maurer Hall, nobody’s more than 45 feet from the stage, and over that stage hangs a mural from the WPA era.

* Sun-Times | White Sox top Orioles, halt 12-game losing streak: Producing a formula not seen in weeks — three homers, a strong effort from the starting pitcher, scoreless relief pitching and two excellent defensive plays — the Sox improved to 5-38 since the All-Star break. At 32-109, they need to finish 11-10 in their last 21 games against the Red Sox, Guardians, Athletics, Angels, Padres and Tigers to avoid the 1962 Mets’ record of 120 losses.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Attorney for embattled Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard labels trustees corrupt, says she has ‘not committed any crimes’: At what was to have been a regularly scheduled Village Board meeting, Beau Brindley, an attorney hired some weeks ago by Henyard, said trustees who are at odds with her have “taken it upon themselves to try to take away the power of the mayor,” and labeled it “political corruption of the worst kind.” Brindley said that Henyard “is under attack by a corrupt board of trustees that believe they can subvert the will of the people.”

* Fox Chicago | Dolton’s new Village Administrator faces scrutiny over past allegations: The latest appointment by Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard has sparked significant controversy, as newly hired Village Administrator Michael A. Smith faces questions about his past legal troubles, including allegations of sexual harassment involving a 15-year-old girl and a history of multiple criminal charges.

* WGN | Tiffany Henyard’s party goes on, despite trustees’ efforts to stop it: “Let me make sure I’m crystal clear about this: I ain’t never took a goddam thing in my life,” Henyard told Facebook viewers during a livestream from the outdoor gathering. The event was promoted as the “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard Picnic,” which immediately set off alarm bells among her opponents, who noted that “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard” is also the name of the embattled politician’s campaign fund.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk sued in dispute over how her bills are paid: The DuPage County state’s attorney’s office has asked a judge to order DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek to comply with county regulations regarding the payment of her bills so vendors can be paid in a timely manner. The lawsuit, called a writ of mandamus, was filed Wednesday. It claims the clerk is breaking state law when she refuses to indicate from where in her budget a bill should be paid when the budget line item for the expense does not have enough money for the payment.

* Daily Herald | Kane County free speech zone questioned by board members, public: Kane County Board Chairman Corinne Pierog said Wednesday that a First Amendment zone was created at the Kane County Government Center to ensure people had a place to speak — not to prohibit them from doing so anywhere else on the campus. But people who have been handing out leaflets at the county campus in Geneva say Pierog established the zone last week because the materials criticized her.

* Daily Herald | Fox River to flow freely through Carpentersville with dam removal: The Fox River will soon flow freely from Algonquin to Elgin. Crews will begin work on a $1.2 million project to remove the Carpentersville Dam this month. The project, which will be finished in November, will create a 10.2-mile unimpeded flow of the Fox River — the longest free-flowing stretch through Kane County. “May this be the model and lead domino in a movement that carries river restoration efforts progressively downstream,” said Friends of the Fox River President Gary Swick at a ribbon-tying event Wednesday to celebrate the start of the project.

* Daily Herald | How a nonprofit is tackling math anxiety in girls: Now Mission:MathMinds has entered into a partnership with the Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund and the Herman + Rasiej Mathematics Initiative to further its mission and support innovative programs addressing math anxiety in girls. Programs include mentoring, scholar camps, national conferences, a global literacy campaign, and STEM kit donations to schools, as well as working with partners around the globe.

*** Downstate ***

* KWQC | East Moline mayor helps save veteran’s life after heart attack: Mayor Freeman says he was attending the Rock Island County Democrats Labor Day Picnic at Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council in East Moline. His friend, who is a 76-year-old Navy veteran was also in attendance and collapsed after he had a heart attack. Mayor Freeman’s friend’s grandson alerted him that his grandfather was having a heart attack, and that’s when he jumped in to perform CPR.

* WCIA | ‘We have made no progress on the issues that we organized around:’ UIS non-tenured faculty union file deamand for federal mediation: The non-tenured faculty union at UIS is fairly new, forming at the beginning of the year. Now, they’re hoping to create a more productive conversation to get a new contract. “Many of our non-tenured faculty were suddenly given contracts that asked them to teach additional classes without any additional compensation,” Fenton said.

* Pantagraph | Illinois State University rally denounces discrimination after hate crime report: ozens of students, faculty, staff and others at Illinois State University demonstrated Wednesday afternoon against discrimination of queer students on the Redbird campus. The rally came 10 days after the ISU Police Department issued an advisory on Facebook stating that four suspects confronted a student and knocked him off his scooter in the early morning hours of Aug. 24 outside the Bone Student Center. Investigators said the student was repeatedly punched in the face and called offensive, homophobic terms, prompting the police department to investigate the incident as a hate crime.

* Journal Gazette | Charleston, Mattoon wastewater treatment plants getting solar power: The cities of Charleston and Mattoon are pursuing the construction of solar arrays at their wastewater treatment plants with the goal of helping save money on powering these facilities. In Charleston, construction is underway for the array across from the wastewater treatment plant at 1200 W. Madison Ave. In Mattoon, the City Council voted Tuesday night to approve a power purchase agreement for the planned array at the 820 S. Fifth Place plant. Both cities are working with Renewable Energy Evolution and Commercial Electric Inc. of Lake Forest on these projects.

* WSIL | Low water levels in the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers impact local businesses: With lower water levels, Golcanda’s Marina Manager Keith Collier says they could see fewer people stopping by. “We have a lot of visitors, river traffic, pleasure crafts that come from the Evansville area down here regularly. So if they’re having issues north of us or south of us, it could affect us,” Collier said.

*** National ***

* AP | Right-wing influencers were duped to work for covert Russian influence operation, US says: An indictment filed Wednesday alleges a media company linked to six conservative influencers — including well-known personalities Tim Pool, Dave Rubin and Benny Johnson — was secretly funded by Russian state media employees to churn out English-language videos that were “often consistent” with the Kremlin’s “interest in amplifying U.S. domestic divisions in order to weaken U.S. opposition” to Russian interests, like its war in Ukraine.

  12 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


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

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Thursday, Sep 5, 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.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A federal judge on Friday denied Illinois’ request to end court oversight of its disability services.

Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman, with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, agreed with legal advocates who argued that the state still hasn’t met its decade-old promises to help people with intellectual and developmental disabilities live outside large institutions.

The ruling stems from a legal settlement that established court oversight of the Illinois Department of Human Services’ programs in 2011. Known as the Ligas consent decree, it followed a 2005 lawsuit accusing Illinois of failing to support people who wanted to live in community settings — whether with family, in their own homes, or in small group homes. The lawsuit claimed Illinois violated a 1999 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, which mandated that states provide options for care in integrated community settings. […]

In her ruling, Coleman acknowledged that while the state had made “significant progress” since 2011 in expanding community-based services, it had not fully met the mandates of the consent decree. Her one-page decision denying the state’s request to end oversight did not provide specific opinions on these issues but indicated that they will remain the focus in future proceedings.

A spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Human Services said the agency is reviewing the order to determine next steps.

* Update…


* Former Rep. Brent Hassert passed away last week. From his obituary

Brent Alan Hassert, age 71, passed away Thursday August 29, 2024, at his residence in Plainfield, IL, formerly of Romeoville, IL. Brent Hassert was a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives, representing the 85th district where he served from 1993 until January 2009. He served as Deputy House Republican Leader. He was also a former Will County Board Member. Prior to his political career Brent was the owner of Hassert Landscaping Co., as Brent never stopped working, he was the President of Brent Hassert Consulting since 2009.

*** Statewide ***

* WGEM | Health departments in Illinois monitoring Mpox cases, but threat level is low: But the case count in the Tri-State area is much lower — try zero. That’s according to Adams County Infectious Disease Supervisor Jon Campos. He said due to increasing cases of Mpox in areas where it’s endemic, like central and west Africa, Illinois is looking to get ahead of the curve. “We’ve decided to increase surveillance,” said Campos. “The state of Illinois is asking local health departments to just be on the lookout for it, just in case.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Alleged Blue Line shooter ordered detained pending trial: The suspect charged in the quadruple homicide on a CTA Blue Line train earlier this week made their initial court appearance in Maywood on Wednesday, where a Cook County judge ordered they be detained pending trial. Rhianni Davis, 30, faces four counts of first-degree murder in the fatal shootings of four people who were sleeping on a Blue Line train early Monday as it passed through the near west suburbs.

* Block Club | Mexican Independence Day Fest Planned Downtown As Police Pledge ‘Zero Tolerance’ For Caravans: Residents blasted El Grito festival organizers at a virtual community meeting Tuesday, citing concerns over potential caravanning the festival could attract Downtown — an activity police will have “zero tolerance” for, a police official said. El Grito, a two-day festival celebrating Mexican Independence Day, is slated for Sept. 14-15 in Grant Park and is expected to draw 12,000 people per day. The festival is being organized by the city, the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, Chicago Park District and the Mexican Consulate in Chicago.

* Tribune | Northerly Island’s potential as an urban oasis goes unrealized as grand plans come and go: During its colorful history, the manmade island was the center of the Chicago World’s Fair from 1933 to 1934, made the short list of potential United Nations headquarters in 1945 and had a stint as an airport for elite business travelers until it was abruptly closed by former Mayor Richard M. Daley in a controversial move in 2003. Today, Northerly Island houses a seasonal music venue and the little-known nature preserve. Waves smash against the shore, testing the structural integrity of a manmade seawall. A singular access point makes traffic terrible on concert days and leaves the island eerily quiet otherwise. A century after it was built, Northerly Island exists with no clear purpose.

* Block Club | Another Boat Left Abandoned And Sinking On The Chicago River — And It Could Be There Awhile: In these cases, the Coast Guard will usually investigate to find the owner of the boat and figure out what kind of salvage needs to happen, Lt. Junior Grade Santiago Tamburini of the U.S. Coast Guard said. “On our end, we make sure that at least our notification of a hazard to navigation is still current to make sure nearby boaters are safe and can expect to see it as they transit through there,” Tamburini said. “We obviously, sometimes can’t do much without the owner first having an opportunity to handle it directly. And obviously, if that avenue doesn’t work, we step in and work with salvage companies to have it removed.”

* Tribune | Ultra swimmer nicknamed ‘The Shark’ abandons his 4th attempt to cross Lake Michigan again: An online tracker showed Jim Dreyer returned to Grand Haven, Michigan, where he started his planned 82-mile swim to Wisconsin on Monday night. Dreyer, 61, has tried four times since 2023 to swim across Lake Michigan, including an effort just a few weeks ago, but has been unsuccessful due to lake conditions or other factors.

* Block Club | The O’My’s’ Dreamy, Soulful Sound Leads Right Back To Rogers Park: It’s the peak-summer type of sound that flows through Chicago’s streets during festivals, beach days and dancy backyard hangs. The genre-defying group takes inspiration from hip-hop, jazz, soul, blues, gospel and house — “music that helped raise us,” the members wrote on Facebook. […] Comprised of duo Nick Hennessey and Maceo Vidal-Haymes on the keyboard and guitar, respectively, The O’My’s’ spacey, soulful, eclectic sound makes complete sense. The two Chicago natives live and record in Rogers Park — a Far North Side enclave known as a place where artists and nature can flourish together.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | State panel denies parole for suburban serial killer: The Illinois Prisoner Review Board has denied parole for a serial killer linked to at least 12 murders of young women and teens, including three in the suburbs, authorities announced Wednesday. The decision means Mark Alan Smith, 75, will continue serving the 500-year sentence handed to him in 1971, after he was convicted of killing two women in McHenry County and a third in Des Plaines.

* Sun-Times | Billionaire Crown family sells pizza maker Miracapo to private equity firm: Adding to its portfolio of Chicago-area food manufacturers, a private equity firm announced Tuesday that it has purchased Elk Grove Village-based Miracapo Pizza Co. from the billionaire Crown family. The acquisition gives Brynwood Partners its fourth Chicago-area company producing a range of grocery products, with an emphasis on pizza, and brings its total number of Chicago-area jobs to 1,500. Brynwood deals in “corporate carveouts,” slicing off respected brands from conglomerates whose priorities are elsewhere. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, and the sale closed last month.

* US Attorney’s Office | Former Chief Operating Officer of Covid-19 Testing Kit Company Sentenced to More Than Six Years in Federal Prison for Embezzling $1.85 Million: he former Chief Operating Officer of a suburban Chicago company that sold Covid-19 testing kits has been sentenced to more than six years in federal prison for embezzling more than $1.85 million in company funds. While on pre-trial and pre-sentencing release for an earlier fraud scheme, Dennis W. Haggerty, Jr. issued fraudulent payments from the Willowbrook, Ill.-based company’s bank account for services and goods purportedly provided by himself or the company’s main vendor, a manufacturer from whom the company purchased Covid-19 testing kits. In reality, the services and goods had not been provided.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Coroner’s affidavit shows as many as 800 human remains could have been misidentified: As many as 800 families across the country who patronized a Carlinville funeral home may never know if the remains on their mantles belong to their loved ones, according to an affidavit signed by Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon. The affidavit was filed in a lawsuit pending against Carlinville-based Heinz Funeral Home and its director August Heinz for mishandling remains and providing the wrong cremated remains to family members.

* Capitol City Now | Bigger deficit greets D-186: The deficit looks to be $21 million, more than twice that of a year ago: a deficit which the district managed to erase by spending only 95 percent of the budget. Still, it does not sit well with board president Micah Miller. “I trusted the process last time,” he said. “This time we need to consider how much of that fund balance we are holding onto.”

* WSIL | SIU Carbondale sees biggest enrollment increase since 1991: Overall, the school saw 11,790 students enroll for classes at the Carbondale campus this year. This number was released by the school on Wednesday along with further enrollment discussions. For the first time since 2000, that number rose for a second consecutive year compared to last year. Specifically, an extra 431 students enrolled in classes this semester.

* WSIL | John A. Logan enrollment grows for fall semester: The school saw a 2.8% increase in headcount and 3.1% increase in credit hours enrolled this semester, according to the college’s Assistance Vice President of Marketing and Communications Dr. Steve O’Keefe. Overall, the school has gained an 8.6% growth since 2021.

* WCIA | Champaign County estimated to be short more than 300 nursing home beds by 2026: Advocates for Aging Care and the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District conducted a needs assessment this year. They found the 65+ population has grown by 67% in the last 20 years. That will be bring a unique set of challenges to the area.

* WSIL | Carbondale officials still searching for name for entertainment space: The city first asked residents for ideas back in January. Officials say the city received many responses suggesting the names of individuals credited with having an impact on the music scene of the city. The city hopes, though, to find a name a bit more broad. “Rather than naming this space after a specific individual, we are striving to broaden the scope of this venue name to be inclusive, diverse, and unifying,” said the city on Facebook.

* First Alert 4 | Over $170k of donations save Illinois prairie that’s rapidly disappearing: The goal was for $175,000 by August 30. It was simple, if funds could be reached by that date – a disappearing section of natural Illinois prairie might be saved. Technically called the Trout Hollow Hill Prairie, the land has been family owned and in this natural state is a rarity, according to people familiar with the fundraising and property. It’s located in Monroe County, Illinois. Less than 1% of the Prairie State is actually still prairie in 2024, according to the National Forest Service and USDA. Once, over 20 million acres of prairie land covered the state – now only tiny, isolated patches stay true to the nickname.

*** National ***

* KCCI | Illinois governor to deliver keynote speech at annual Polk County Democrats Steak Fry: The Polk County Democrats announced Wednesday that JB Pritzker, an Illinois Democrat first elected to the governor’s office in 2018, will be the keynote speaker at the annual event. The rest of the speaker lineup will be announced next week. […] The Steak Fry will feature several prominent Iowa Democrats, including Auditor Rob Sand, Iowa Democratic Party leader Rita Hart, Senate Leader Pam Jochum and House Leader Jennifer Konfrst. Congressional candidates Lanon Baccam (3rd District) and Ryan Melton (4th District) will be featured as well.

* WaPo | A louder voice in fighting abortion bans: Men in red states: Thomas Stovall grew up in a strict Baptist family in Mississippi and always believed that anyone involved with abortion was destined for hell. But his lifelong conviction crumbled when his wife, Chelsea, was 20 weeks pregnant with their third child. Tests showed a severely malformed and underdeveloped fetus, one that was sure to be stillborn if carried to term. There was other devastating news, too. Continuing with the pregnancy could threaten Chelsea’s health and future fertility, doctors warned.

  9 Comments      


Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

  Comments Off      


Citing news media coverage that ‘bordered on obsession,’ Madigan attorneys want to delve deeply into potential jurors’ views

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the filing…


* Tribune

“For at least the past two decades, the press coverage of Madigan has bordered on obsession,” defense attorneys for Madigan and co-defendant Michael McClain wrote in a filing late Monday, calling the coverage “intense and grossly unfair.” […]

But the bulk of the publicity that defense attorneys complained about centered on Madigan, who spent decades at the top of the Springfield hierarchy and statewide Democratic politics.

The coverage – along with attack ads from Republican opponents – cemented Madigan’s image as an iron-fisted boss who derived power from a political machine, an image that could be hard for potential jurors to shake, the filing wrote. […]

The pretrial filings in Madigan’s case have also been written about at length; Tribune journalists, who have no obligation to hide the details of publicly available records, recently described a wiretapped recording that Madigan’s attorneys are trying to prevent jurors from hearing. That seemed to particularly draw the defense attorneys’ ire.

* From the filing

The first step in determining if a potential juror may have biases that cannot be set aside is reviewing their public facing social media information. Potential jurors who publicly share their negative feelings of Madigan are less likely to be able to put their biases aside and judge Madigan fairly and impartially. Such individuals need to be identified and questioned about their opinions of Madigan during the individualized questioning. The next step is to ask several detailed questions in the written questionnaire regarding potential jurors’ exposure to Madigan and this case. These questions need to be asked in a variety of ways to determine if the potential 14 jurors have any strong feelings or preconceptions resulting from the negative media coverage of Madigan and all of the related criminal cases covered by the news media. If the potential juror has been exposed to this negative information, detailed questioning through voir dire is necessary to evaluate the credibility of each potential juror and assess their ability to evaluate the evidence presented at trial.

Thoughts?

  7 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to yesterday’s edition and some other stuff (Updated)

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


A peek behind the curtain

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From the Tribune’s campaign contribution story

Madigan was a master of the state’s campaign finance laws and knew how to obscure the original source of donations. A former top Madigan lieutenant explained one such tactic, called “directed money,” in detail last summer in federal court.

Former state Rep. Lou Lang, a deputy Democratic majority leader when Madigan was speaker, explained that donors would send money to certain campaign funds with the expectation that Lang and others would pass that cash to another candidate in a competitive race.

“Directed money is a phrase referring to campaign donations procured by a third party, in this case likely the speaker, to go to a legislator or some other public official that has a campaign account for the purpose of re-donating it to other folks,” Lang testified.

Viewed in Springfield as legal money laundering, the activity not only allows donations to be masked, but it could allow politicians to keep getting cash from contributors who have given them the maximum amount allowed by law.

Lang said he would receive a list of which candidates needed a financial boost and then be told to “send the money out.”

The funds sent to the lawmaker would be directed by Madigan or the Madigan-controlled Democratic Party of Illinois, said Lang, who testified at the federal perjury-related trial that led to the conviction of Madigan’s chief of staff, Tim Mapes, who was also the state party’s longtime executive director. […]

While every system has questionable workarounds, candidates running for federal office are required to be more transparent. An actual notation is required by the Federal Election Commission when the original donor is explicit about the ultimate recipient, said Derek Willis, a University of Maryland data journalism teacher who specializes in campaign finance.

“If a donor wants to give money to a candidate via a third party, that third party is required by law to submit to the FEC the name and information about the donor and the recipient — even if the amount is under $200, which is the threshold for reporting individual contributions,” Willis said. “That additional layer is important because, without it, we know less about donors and what they might want from the people they give to.”

That federal procedure doesn’t really apply to this situation. The ultimate decisions are not made by the original contributors, they’re made by the people in charge usually after the contributions are given.

But, yes, the practice does allow for an evasion of the contribution caps. I’ve been writing about this behavior for years. It obviously increases the power of the chamber leaders. And it allows groups and companies that may not be popular with voters to participate in crucial elections without being unmasked.

  10 Comments      


As deadline looms, abortion providers and advocates warn about possible loss of Greyhound bus station

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NBC 5 with some background

This Labor Day travel holiday could be the last for Chicago’s intercity Greyhound bus station.

The Greyhound bus line has been sold to German operator Flixbus, but much of its real estate has not and could soon be sold to a developer.

The possible closure of the terminal located in the 600 block of West Harrison Street could make Chicago the largest city in the Northern Hemisphere without an intercity bus terminal, according to a new report from the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development at DePaul University.

“We may be down to the last few weeks with the station. No real plan has been formed to save it,” Chaddick’s director Joe Schwieterman said. “That’s all bad for lower income and disabled communities. We need a fix.”

Although advocates have been sounding the alarm about a possible closure for more than a year, efforts to address the situation have only picked up in the last few months. Chicago’s Chief Operating Officer, John Roberson, said in a statement that the Johnson administration is continuing to work with Greyhound and other stakeholders to “find a viable solution for intercity bus services and its passengers in downtown Chicago.”

* Press release…

A coalition of Illinois abortion providers and advocates sounded the alarm on Wednesday about plans to close Chicago’s Greyhound bus station.

“The Chicago Greyhound station is crucial for access to abortion in Chicago. Pregnant people from other parts of Illinois and from abortion-restricted states all across the country use Greyhound to reach Chicago for care,” the coalition said in a statement. “We urge the City of Chicago to work with Greyhound and other stakeholders to identify and implement a solution that preserves this critical mode of transportation to Chicago for abortion seekers. We stand ready to support them in that work.”

Partners signing on to the statement include Chicago Abortion Fund; Family Planning Associates; Dr. Jonah Fleisher, Abortion Provider & Complex Abortion Regional Line for Access (CARLA) Co-Director; Illinois Choice Action Team; Dr. Laura Laursen, Abortion Provider & CARLA Co-Director; Personal PAC; and Planned Parenthood Illinois Action.

* More from Isabel…

    * Streetsblog Chicago | Wake them up *before* September ends: New statements from Amtrak, Ald. Conway, Mayor’s Office on Greyhound terminal negotiations: “The Johnson Administration continues, as it has over these past months, to work with Greyhound and other stakeholders to find a viable solution for intercity bus services and its passengers in downtown Chicago,” replied the City’s Chief Operating Officer John Roberson in a statement. “While we have looked at a number of different options, it should be noted that Greyhound has an option to renew its lease at its current Harrison Street location under the same terms and conditions that it currently operates under.” (The Greyhound company was bought in October 2021 by the Germany-based firm FlixBus. DePaul’s Chaddick Center Director Joe Schwieterman said at Tuesday’s webinar, “The property tax on this station alone, paid by Greyhound, has topped $120,000 a year in the past,” which could be a deterrent to renewing the lease.) “The City has had productive conversations with Amtrak, which has agreed to work in partnership to solve Greyhound’s problem of providing a clean and safe terminal facility for intercity bus passengers,” Roberson added. “These conversations are ongoing, and the City continues to work in close partnership with Amtrak and other stakeholders on a long-term comprehensive solution for travelers and Chicagoans.”

    * Crain’s | Chicago faces dubious distinction with Greyhound station closure looming: Amtrak claims in a statement that Flix told the company “we don’t do stations,” and plans to move forward with a stop on the traffic lane on Jackson Boulevard. Amtrak is now asking the city to help find an alternative solution. The train service confirmed it had a meeting with city officials this week but declined to disclose what was discussed.

    * CBS | DePaul says if Greyhound station closes, Chicago will be only 1 of 3 top world cities with no intercity bus depot: The study by the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development at DePaul focused on the world’s 130 largest cities—out of which Chicago ranks 114th in population. Only two cities currently lack an intercity bus station, and both are in Sub-Saharan Africa—Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.

  8 Comments      


Privacy for me, but not for thee

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

An election conspiracy peddler exposed dates of birth and home addresses online for more than 6 million Illinois voters earlier this year, including dozens of state and federal judges whose places of residence are legally protected, a WBEZ investigation has found.

An analysis of more than 30 websites of Lake Forest-based Local Government Information Services also identified home addresses for those involved in a high-profile federal narcotics case involving a foreign drug cartel, prosecutors involved in public-corruption cases, prominent Illinois-based actors and musicians, Chicago sports luminaries and several billionaires.

The company operates local news websites that critics have derided as politically one-sided “pink slime” operations. LGIS is being sued by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul for allegedly breaking state election law by publishing privileged voter information held by the State Board of Elections and that was accessible only to registered political committees.

The state lawsuit alleged the company’s actions, which date back to January, subjected Illinois voters to possible identity theft. LGIS’ mass publication of names and addresses also “poses a grave threat to certain classes of individuals, such as domestic violence victims, judges, and law enforcement officers, whose safety will be endangered by having their private information published on the internet,” the lawsuit said. […]

While [LGIS president Brian Timpone’s] websites published sensitive information about millions of other Illinois voters, information about his date of birth and home addresses couldn’t be found on LGIS’ voter rolls.

Cook County election records, however, show Timpone was registered to vote and did so in 2020.

“It’s pretty clear that he’s providing himself extra privacy whereas he’s not doing that for everyone else [whose] information he has,” Cangelosi said. “I don’t see any good reason for it.”

Timpone did not specifically address in his statement to WBEZ why his name did not show up in LGIS voter roll data.

  7 Comments      


The implausible “New Illlinois”

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Center Square

Illinois Separation revealed that seven counties will vote on separating from Cook County and forming a new state.

Spokesman Eric Ivers, a member of the Jersey County Board, said he is confident that a vast majority of residents will vote to form a new state. […]

Iroquois County will be the first county to vote on the issue that is not more southerly than Peoria, as the movement has been predominantly in the southern half of the state. The other counties putting the question on the ballot include Madison, Jersey, Clinton, Calhoun, Greene and Perry counties.

Ivers said the possibility that downstate Illinois could become a new state increased recently when Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer expressed openness to next year ending the ability of minorities to block Senate legislation using a filibuster. It’s conceivable that Democrats could trade statehood for Washington D.C. or Puerto Rico in return for statehood for downstate Illinois.

Emphasis added by me, lol.

* WGN

Should Cook County, home to Chicago and sprawling suburbs, break away from Illinois to form a new state? Voters in several Illinois counties could encounter a striking question, similarly phrased, on their ballots this fall.

The vote, however, is non-binding and doesn’t ensure such a change would happen. Instead, it serves as a declaration from voters toward the possibility of splitting Cook County from the rest of Illinois. […]

As recently as last year, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul submitted an opinion that would seemingly strike down the idea of not only Cook County, but any Illinois county separating from the state. The opinion stated that “any referendum on the issue of county secession would have no binding legal effect.”

Based on Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1 of the U.S. Constitution, in the hypothetical situation that Cook County would separate from Illinois, such a possibility would need approval from the Illinois General Assembly, Illinois governor, both houses of U.S. Congress and the President of the United States of America.

* Justia

There are at least two constitutional questions that the U.S. Supreme Court has never answered that might bear on New Illinois effort:

    - Can new states be validly created out of territories located entirely within existing states? Founding history and past practice (especially the additions of Kentucky and West Virginia) would suggest that the answer to this is yes, but some scholars (most elaborately Michael Paulsen) have pointed out that Article IV’s text and punctuation could easily be read to mean that while new states can be formed out of the territory formerly belonging to two or more states, a single state cannot be carved up into multiple ones.
    - Would the people (or their representatives) of eachof the newly created states have to agree to the new arrangement, or would it be enough for the people (or legislature) of the State as a whole (as Illinois currently exists) to agree? In other words, when Article IV speaks of the need for the consent of the “States concerned,” does that mean (in the context of a single state that is being subdivided) only consent of the mother state (which is to be divided), or also of the newly created states? Are these newly defined states “States [that are] concerned” within the meaning of Article IV?

Thoughts?

  71 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  2 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Motive unknown in fatal shooting of 4 on Blue Line. Sun-Times

    - Rhanni Davis, facing four counts of first-degree murder, is expected to appear for an initial court hearing today in Maywood.
    - Cook County State’s Atty. Kim Foxx said “right now we don’t have answers as to why anyone would engage in such a heinous, heinous act,” she said. “I think it is safe to say that this was a random attack.”
    - When asked about the safety of people who sleep on trains CTA President Dorval Carter Jr. said that Monday’s attack doesn’t mean those who choose to sleep on trains should fear for their lives.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | He boasted on social media about paying strangers to take pictures of his children and ex-partner. Now he’s under arrest.: Micah Berkley, 41, had outstanding warrants in Cook County, Miami and Florida’s Palm Beach County at the time of his arrest, according to the Miami-Dade Police Department. He is being held without bond pending an extradition hearing later this month, according to records from Miami-Dade County Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

* Tribune | UAW-Stellantis faceoff over Belvidere plant’s future centers on a single contract sentence: One sentence in a contract document that runs more than 300 pages is drawing scrutiny as the United Auto Workers warns it could strike Stellantis NV over the automaker’s delays reopening the Belvidere Assembly Plant in Illinois. The language says that the company’s investments and employment levels are “contingent upon plant performance, changes in market conditions, and consumer demand continuing to generate sustainable and profitable volumes for all of the U.S. manufacturing facilities described above.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Banks push for quick end to Illinois law reducing credit card processing fees: The industry is already racking up costs to prepare for implementation of the law, which is to take effect next summer. […] The Illinois Attorney General’s Office downplayed the urgency, arguing there was currently no enforcement of the law so there was no need to expedite a hearing on the banking industry’s request for a preliminary injunction.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | More Illinois communities explore reinstating grocery tax: Highland, Normal and River Forest are just some of the communities considering reinstating the tax, with more likely to follow. Each Illinois city will have until October 2025 to pass an ordinance to continue the 1% tax on groceries in order to avoid a lapse in revenue.

* NBC Chicago | Debates, Illinois early voting and other key dates ahead of November election: Early voting starts on Sept. 26 in Illinois and Oct. 8 in Indiana. The National Conference of State Legislatures has a full list of when each state begins early voting. On Oct. 1, the running mates, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Ohio Sen. JD Vance, are set for their televised debate.

* NBC Chicago | All Illinois newborns to be screened for genetic disorder, thanks to Oswego family: The developmental discrepancies illustrate why early detection is key. The Robinsons worked with their medical team and other advocacy groups to push for creatine deficiency disorders to be part of the heel stick screening that newborns undergo in the hospital. “Adding GAMT or creatine disorders will be a significant milestone because you can diagnose them first week, second week of life,” [Dr. Carlos Prada, the Division Head of Genetics, Genomics and Metabolism at Lurie Children’s Hospital] said.

* The Real Deal | State regulators slow to act when Illinois brokers behave badly: FPR receives an average of 450 complaints against real estate professionals each year, according to state data from 2020 through June of this year. The number of annual complaints has grown in recent years, with a 20 percent increase from 2022 to 2023. Of those complaints, about 30 percent are closed at the intake interview. This may be because the complainant did not file enough evidence, or because their complaint does not constitute “unlawful or unprofessional conduct,” according to the agency.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Agricultural hub for small biz, energy and produce sets up shop on the South Side: The Green Era Campus, a 9-acre facility at 650 W. 83rd St., transformed a site once used as an auto impound lot for the Chicago Police Department into a hub for green energy, jobs, fresh produce, small business incubation and educational programming, according to a statement from the joint venture.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard appoints new village staffers despite absence of trustees at meeting: Tuesday night’s regularly scheduled Board of Trustees meeting was canceled because there were not enough trustees present. But Mayor Tiffany Henyard still showed up and appointed a new village administrator and a new village attorney. Dolton Trustee Jason House told ABC7 those appointments are not valid, and the appointees will not be paid.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville police make 24th gun-related arrest since August 2023 at Topgolf parking lot: A 24-year-old from Calumet Park was arrested Friday night for having a firearm inside his car while it was parked in the Naperville Topgolf parking lot, the 24th time a suspect’s been charged with a firearm-related offense since August 2023, officials said. […] Consistently making headlines for more than a year now, the trend of people bringing guns into Naperville’s Topgolf parking lot was first observed in August 2023. Since then, Naperville police have been routinely doing foot patrols around the business and making arrests for illegal gun possession, among other offenses.

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect passes ethics ordinance; trustee says it unfairly targets him, wife: The ordinance covers a wide range of potential ethical pitfalls. They include rules regarding trustees representing clients with business before the village board and would ban immediate family of trustees serving on commissions. It also carries penalties including possible fines and even expulsion from the board.

* Daily Northwestern | ‘A gut punch’: End of CTA 201 Ventra card program draws student rebuke: Days after Northwestern announced it would discontinue its Chicago Transit Authority 201 Ventra card program — which provided free 201 bus fares for undergraduate students — the response from students has been swift and sharp. Since Saturday, a petition to restore the program has gathered over 850 signatures, with a goal of reaching 1,000 before being delivered to University administration next month, according to Weinberg junior Beth Asfaw, the petition’s organizer.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County offers rare glimpse at Elmhurst Quarry: The first line of defense against flooding in DuPage, the mammoth reservoir has a floodwater capacity of 2.7 billion gallons and is the largest of the county’s 17 flood control facilities. In previous years, tours of the facility have quickly sold out.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | ‘Everybody just wants you to be OK.’ Sonya Massey was subject of 911 call hours before shooting: The roughly 45-minute footage shows a Springfield Police officer, who had responded to a call about Massey the week before, talking to her calmly. “(Your kids) are worried about you, too,” the officer said. “They’re both good. Everybody just wants you to be OK, that’s all it is.”

* WCIA | First listening session for Massey Commission co-chairs announced: The three co-chairs of the commission — Dr. Jerry Kruse, Dean and Provost of the SIU School of Medicine; Pastor T. Ray McJunkins, pastor of Union Baptist Church; and Nina Harris, chair of the Illinois Commission on Equity and Inclusion — will all be in attendance.

* SJ-R | Springfield pulls ordinance that would give city authority to address homeless encampments: Mayor Misty Buscher said the ordinance was put on “emergency passage” because two “campers” have died with the past couple of weeks and Springfield Police were “concerned about the safety of campers.” But Buscher, who proposed the ordinance with Ward 5 Ald. Lakeisha Purchase, also acknowledged that route created “angst within the community.”

* Sun-Times | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign settles federal civil rights complaint: The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights investigated 139 incidents reported at the school between 2015 and 2023, of which 135 were anti-Jewish discrimination complaints and the others were allegations of anti-Muslim, anti-Palestinian and anti-Arab discrimination allegations, the department said. Allegations included reports of swastikas drawn throughout campus, a brick thrown through a Jewish fraternity’s window, and a university employee writing, “I won’t tolerate Islam,” on social media, the agency said. Another employee allegedly hit a pro-Palestinian student who was protesting the war in Gaza.

*** National ***

* Louisiana Illuminator | Doctors grapple with how to save women’s lives amid ‘confusion and angst’ over new Louisiana law: When a woman starts bleeding out after labor, every second matters. But soon, under a new state law, Louisiana doctors might not be able to quickly access one of the most widely used life-saving medications for postpartum hemorrhage. […] In May, Gov. Jeff Landry signed legislation reclassifying misoprostol and mifepristone as Schedule IV controlled dangerous substances, despite more than 200 doctors signing a letter against the measure. The law goes into effect on Oct. 1, and doctors and pharmacists are scrambling to come up with postpartum hemorrhage policies that will comply with the law while still providing proper medical care for women.

* WaPo | In a first, Phoenix hits 100 straight days of 100-degree heat: At 11 a.m. local time, temperatures in Phoenix hit 100 degrees for the 100th day in a row. The longest previous 100-degree streak was 76 days in 1993. In other words, this year has seen an uninterrupted stretch of 100-degrees days at least 3½ weeks longer than in any other year since records began in 1896.

* STL Today | Cost of Missouri secretary of state’s failed ‘woke’ investing rules could top $2 million: Two weeks after a federal judge struck down a controversial set of investing regulations pushed by Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft, an industry group filed a request for attorney fees in connection with the case. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association said in a court filing last week that Ashcroft’s failed gambit cost the group $1.3 million in attorney fees. In addition to potentially paying for the organization’s legal bills, public payroll records show taxpayers have already paid more than $876,000 to a politically connected law firm representing Ashcroft, putting the initial price tag for the lawsuit at $2.1 million.

  12 Comments      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 4, 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.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Sep 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Do better
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts (Updated)
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller