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Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Um, not really

We got our hands on some exclusive polling about one of the hottest issues in Springfield: the Invest in Kids Act, a scholarship program that’s set to end Dec. 31 if the General Assembly doesn’t act.

About the law: The law gives tax credits to those who contribute to the scholarship program, which benefits low-income families at non-public schools. It’s opposed by the Chicago Teachers Union.

The topline takeaway: Two-thirds of Illinois voters support the program, “especially” parents, voters of color and voters with annual incomes under $40,000, according to the polling memo from Brian Stryker and Oren Savir, the pollsters who count President Joe Biden as a client.

More details: “Support remains unchanged after voters hear statements from both proponents and critics of the program,” according to the poll memo. Most of those surveyed weren’t even bothered by statements such as: “Wealthy Illinoisans get to take their tax dollars, give them to private schools, and leave public schools underfunded.”

1) According to the polling memo itself, the program is supported by Illinoisans 56-25, not “two-thirds.”

2) We don’t know the wording of the poll’s support or oppose question because it was not in the polling memo.

3) Here are the pros and cons presented to respondents

Supporters say this program provides low income kids, including many children of color, with a high-quality education they may not have gotten from their local public school. And it doesn’t use a dime of taxpayer money to do it—it is all funded through private donations.

Opponents say this is a school voucher program that funds private schools through a seventy-five million dollar tax break for millionaires and corporations. Wealthy Illinoisans get to take their tax dollars, give them to private schools, and leave public schools underfunded.

The donations qualify for a 75 percent state income tax credit. That’s money the state would’ve normally received.

Methodology

Findings are based on a phone and text-to-web survey conducted August 16-21, 2023 among n=600 likely 2024 general election voters in Illinois. The margin of error for the full sample is +/- 4%; for subgroups it varies and is higher.

* From Sen. Durbin

Our immigration courts are essential to a functional and orderly immigration system, but they are in desperate need of reform and improvements. As of August 2023, there were more than 2.6 million pending cases before the nation’s immigration courts. As a result, many immigrants must wait for years until their cases are decided.

While the Department of Justice has made significant progress in hiring more immigration judges, reducing this backlog will require additional efforts. For example, similar advances have not yet been made in hiring the support staff that judges need to help efficiently manage their daily dockets, reduce the backlog, and stay on top of new cases.

* WAND TV

Federal investigators found that a lack of preventative maintenance on the explosion suppression system of a bucket elevator was a major factor in an April 21, 2023, explosion at Archer-Daniels-Midland Company’s West Plant that resulted in the hospitalization of three employees with burns and other injuries and extensive damage to the grain elevator

U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigators responding to the combustible corn germ dust explosion determined that the explosion suppression system on the indoor bucket elevator leg was non-functional and in a state of disrepair. Investigators found the Decatur grain processing facility had not conducted inspections and testing of the explosion suppression systems since late 2016. […]

OSHA cited ADM for two willful, one serious and one other-than-serious health and safety violations and proposed $324,796 in penalties related to this explosion at the West Plant.

* Update on yesterday’s story

Despite “heroic efforts” to protect animals threatened by a fire at Miller Park Zoo, officials said late Tuesday afternoon that a 20-foot reticulated python had to be euthanized due to smoke exposure.

The 11-year-old snake, named Nani, had lived at the zoo since 2017. A faulty heating element in her habitat was found to be the source of a fire at the historic Katthoefer Animal Building where a number of animals are housed.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * WBEZ | St. Louis groups seek to resettle Chicago migrants to boost workforce and population: The nonprofit International Institute of St. Louis is partnering with unions and philanthropic leaders to resettle hundreds — if not thousands — of Latin American migrants in their city. The goal is to bolster St. Louis’s workforce and stem its population decline. “It could be the potential for a great relationship between both cities,” said Karlos Ramirez, vice president of Latino outreach for the International Institute. “If the [migrants] are going to be in a better place, St. Louis is going to be in a better place, and Chicago is going to be in a better place, I think everybody wins.”

    * Block Club | At South Side Garden, Migrant Families Build A Community As ‘Burned Out’ Volunteers Ask For Help: There are 24 tents at the garden, 1812 W. Monterey Ave., sheltering roughly 100 asylum seekers. […] “You can only work it strongly for a few weeks at a time,” said Kathy Figel, director of the Edna White Community Garden, where the overflow of asylum seekers from the station have been sheltering in tents. “Then they have to take a break. That’s what happened to a lot of volunteers [who helped out in the summer.]” The city, Figel said, hasn’t provided anything. All funds and support has come from volunteers and even her own personal funds.

    * ABC Chicago | Alderman visiting Mexican border says disaster declaration needed to better help Chicago migrants: Among their first stops were shelters in El Paso run by nonprofits to help better establish connections between organizations in the Lone Star State and in the Windy City. But, even on their first day to the southern border, these city leaders are saying it is obvious that more help from the federal government is absolutely crucial.

    * NYT | Texas Has Bused 50,000 Migrants. Now It Wants to Arrest Them Instead.: Mr. Abbott is now pursuing an even more audacious effort: to change Texas law to make crossing the border from Mexico without authorization a state crime, allowing the police in Texas to arrest people coming across the Rio Grande, including asylum seekers.

    * NYT | Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois Starts Group to Promote Abortion Rights: A spokeswoman for Think Big America said the group was providing “financial and strategic support” to the campaigns in Ohio, Arizona and Nevada, including putting members on advisory boards, helping to develop messaging and analyzing polls. She added that it was also prepared to help with direct voter contact and, if applicable, legal challenges.

    * Capitol News Illinois | Assault weapon registration period remains open as Illinois State Police seeks further input: ISP says it plans to hold additional public hearings about that process and may refine the rules before they become permanent next year. “We are happy to address all questions and comments submitted to ISP and will be doing so in the weeks to come,” ISP said in a statement this week.

    * WGEM | JCAR members bash DCFS, reject daycare rule proposal: “We need daycares to get people back to work after COVID,” said Rep. Dave Vella, D-Rockford. “We need daycares to make sure that our kids are taken care of and not in unapproved places. We need just need daycares and, not just the rule, but the whole system has been very frustrating.”

    * Block Club | Chicago Top Cop Larry Snelling Says Technology Is ‘No. 1 Way’ To Fix Crime: “Officers have a focus” on using technology like license plate readers to identify drivers and stolen cars, which are often then used to commit more crimes, Snelling said. The department is also using “technology across borders” to identify people who travel between city police districts to commit robberies — a “pattern” leaders have noticed, Snelling said.

    * Sun-Times | Slain Palestinian American boy remembered: ‘We are Plainfield strong; we are here for Wadea’: “Tonight is to celebrate the life of this child and make sure that this does not happen again,” said Mohammed Faheem, president of American Muslims Assisting Neighbors, the Plainfield nonprofit that organized the vigil. “This is to express our solidarity as one community. Plainfield is a very welcoming community, and we want to make sure that people understand that.”

    * Shaw Local | Thousands attend vigil in Plainfield for slain Muslim boy: Nearly two thousand turned out in Plainfield Tuesday night to mourn the slaying of a Muslim boy and to oppose the hatred and prejudice that authorities said motived the attack on him and his mother. […] Wadea’s father Oday Al-Fayoume and several others spoke at the vigil. Among them was Zaki Basalath, of the Islamic Foundation of the Southwest Suburbs.

    * Tribune | Lawyers for ex-assistant state’s attorneys standing trial criticize handling of third Jackie Wilson trial in heated questioning of special prosecutors: The trial entered its second day Tuesday at the Rolling Meadows branch court in northwest suburban Cook County, with Wilson’s special prosecutors Lawrence Rosen and Myles O’Rourke taking the stand for hours. Rosen and O’Rourke dropped charges against Wilson after learning about Trutenko’s longtime friendship and recent contact with a witness they had been unable to locate.

    * Fox Chicago | $5 million in grants to help Cook County domestic violence victims: The grants were awarded to local nonprofits as part of the Cook County Domestic Violence Intervention and Support Services Initiative. Preckwinkle said the grants will change lives. “We cannot let these patterns continue,” Preckwinkle said. “This Domestic Violence Awareness Month we are making an important investment to disrupt this trend. We’re investing in programs and services that provide critical support to survivors and their families.”

    * ABC Chicago | Cook County domestic violence survivor center opens in Markham: The new facility is located in the basement of the Cook County Circuit Court Building in Markham, and it is out of public view. The center includes a private and comfortable space for victims to meet with advocates, a space for Zoom hearings and a children’s area.

    * PJ Star | Peoria City Council debates new $321 million proposed budget. Here’s what we know: The new budget proposed to the council by City Manager Patrick Urich and Finance Director Kyle Cratty for 2024 would have $321.8 million in spending — an increase of 5.4% from 2023. […] A major source of the revenue decline for 2024 is coming from a loss 26% decrease in corporate income and a 20% decrease in real estate transaction taxes and “some level of financial pullback in the economy.”

    * Block Club | Chicago State Unveils $250 Million Plan For 95th Street: The economic development plan targets 95th Street between King Drive and Cottage Grove Avenue. The plan recommends several projects on vacant land with a focus on adding to the community’s housing and retail options and improving pedestrian experiences, among other points.

    * Shaw Local | After McHenry rejects gravel mine, industry tries to show elected officials its benefits to county: In August, the McHenry City Council rejected a controversial plan to annex a proposed gravel mine to the city. On Thursday, the same business owner who submitted that proposal, Jack Pease, joined McHenry County officials for a tour of gravel pits.

    * SJ-R | Downtown Springfield Inc. holds 30th annual awards ceremony, dinner Wednesday: Downtown Springfield Inc. will hold its 30th annual awards and dinner at the Bank of Springfield (BoS) Center at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher will give her first State of Downtown address. It is DSI’s major fundraiser to support its work to revitalize downtown.

    * Crain’s | Fulton Market developer ditches luxury condo plan in favor of ‘modern social bathhouse’: It’s a sign that even the hot Fulton Market area isn’t immune to slowing condo demand in Chicago. The city’s condo market has been hit hard in the 2020s, with the slower-than-expected return of office workers and downtown draws like theaters struggling to regain pre-pandemic activity levels, as well as the perception that crime is out of control in and around downtown.

    * Streetsblog | Pedestrian fatally struck at Chicago/DLSD, which has stoplights, but no east-west crosswalks: According to the preliminary police report, on Tuesday, October 17, at about 5:25 a.m., two men were attempting to cross DLSD on foot on the 800 North block. The police report mentions that the men were “not in a crosswalk.”This intersection has stoplights in all directions to accommodate drivers entering and leaving the drive. But there are no east-west crosswalks here because pedestrians aren’t supposed to cross to and from the lake at this location. That must be confusing to some Chicago visitors trying to walk to the lakefront from Streeterville.

    * Crain’s | Hyde Park is the world’s 19th-coolest neighborhood: “Notable for being the home of the University of Chicago and President Barack Obama, Hyde Park embodies the spirit of a small town while providing all the amenities of a bustling metropolis,” according to Time Out’s sixth annual list, published Tuesday.

    * Esquire | The DOJ Is Cracking Down on the Dumbest Form of Climate Denialism: These are the folks driving the big rigs who have adapted their vehicles to belch as much carbon waste product as they can produce. It’s is an own-the-libs deal, as you’ve probably guessed. I gotcher climate change right here, Snowflake. Whoo-hoo! Mercy sakes alive, looks like we’ve got ourselves a cloud bank.

  26 Comments      


After Bailey attack, Bost touts National Right to Life endorsement, tries to keep up on Trump

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Darren Bailey earlier this week

No wonder [Mike Bost] has voted to send $500 million plus to PlannedParenthood among other liberal things that do not align with the values of our district.

Today’s Bost retort…


* Earlier this month

Bost gets in on the act…


  17 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Kam Buckner’s HB4168

Amends the Election Code. Changes the minimum voting age to 16 years old (instead of 18 years old) for State and local elections. Makes conforming changes.

* Rep. Margaret Croke introduced HB4175

Amends the School Code. Provides that a nonpublic school may not engage in slapping or paddling a student, the prolonged maintenance of a student in a physically painful position, or the intentional infliction of bodily harm on a student.

* 25 News Now

The tragedy of losing a child to an undiagnosed pulmonary embolism is the driving force behind a new legislative proposal.

State Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth has worked with the Hubbard family and the Bleeding and Clotting Disorders Insitute to create “Stop the Clot” legislation.

It aims to raise awareness and offer more education about blood disorders.

The measure is an effort to reduce morbidity and mortality rates for people with blood clots with earlier detection.

HB4172

Creates the Deveraux Hubbard II Blood Clot Prevention and Treatment Act. Requires the Department of Public Health to carry out projects to increase education, awareness, or diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism and to reduce the incidence of morbidity and mortality caused by blood clots. Requires the Director of Public Health to establish the Advisory Committee for Deep Venous Thrombosis or Pulmonary Embolism Prevention. Sets forth the Advisory Committee’s duties, membership, reporting requirements, and termination of the Advisory Committee. Requires the Department to conduct or support a study on model systems of deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism surveillance and submit a report to the General Assembly detailing the results of the study.

* Vandalia Radio

The Illinois chapter of a political advocacy organization is speaking out against a bill that would grant utilities the right-of-first refusal in the construction of transmission lines. The measure, which was vetoed by Governor J.B. Pritzker, would have given Ameren Illinois the power to build high-voltage transmission lines without going through the bidding process. Jason Heffley is the Illinois State Director for Americans for Prosperity:

    “Obviously we’re looking to protect the consumer/tax payer. But with this bill in particular, its a priority for our organization across the country. But particularly in Illinois we’ve seen skyrocketing energy prices already because of some of the polices implemented and federal level.”

Pritzker vetoed HB3445 in August. From the governor’s release

House Bill 3445 is an omnibus energy bill that makes changes to the Adjustable Block Grant program to make it more available to public schools, requires IPA to conduct a study evaluating several policy proposals, amends existing law regarding siting for renewable energy projects, requires the Illinois Commerce Commission to conduct a thermal energy network workshop, and gives incumbent utility providers the right of first refusal over new transmission projects in the MISO region.

The Governor has issued an Amendatory Veto due to the right of first refusal language inserted by Senate Amendment 4 that will raise costs for rate payers by giving incumbent utility providers in the MISO region a monopoly over new transmission lines. Eliminating competition will cause rates to increase in the MISO region, where there is currently over $3.6 billion in planned transmission construction in the Ameren service territory. Without competition, Ameren ratepayers will pay for these transmission projects at a much higher cost, putting corporate profits over consumers.

* Rep. Jed Davis introduced HB4173 on Friday

Amends the School Code. Allows a METT Educator District License for teaching a course in manufacturing, engineering, technology, or a trade (METT) to be issued to an applicant who has at least 10,000 working hours in a trade. Provides that a METT Educator District License may be issued to qualified individuals who have not obtained a bachelor’s degree or an equivalent number of hours in an educational program at an institution of higher education. Provides that a METT Educator District License is valid until June 30 immediately following 5 years of the license being issued and may be renewed. Provides that a METT Educator District License is valid only for the teaching of a course that the State Board of Education has identified as related to the work experience of the licensee. Sets forth other provisions regarding the license. Amends the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act. Provides that the State Board of Education, in conjunction with the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity or the Department of Labor, shall expand a database to identify METT labor shortages. Provides that by July 1, 2026, school districts in identified regions shall be notified by the State Board and shall participate in a College and Career Pathway Endorsement program and offer a METT endorsement. Makes other changes.

* Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado introduced HB4165 last week

Amends the Public Utilities Act. Requires all entities that receive renewable energy credits through the Illinois Power Agency for renewable energy credit projects to submit an annual report by April 15 on all procurement goals and actual spending for female-owned, minority-owned, veteran-owned, and small business enterprises in the previous calendar year. Requires the goals to be expressed as a percentage of the total work performed by the entity submitting the report, and the actual spending for all female-owned, minority-owned, veteran-owned, and small business enterprises shall also be expressed as a percentage of the total work performed by the entity submitting the report.

* HB4164 from Rep. La Shawn Ford

Amends the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Provides that by January 1, 2024, the Department of Agriculture shall adopt emergency rules and begin accepting applications for the conversion of transporting organization licenses to third-party transporting organization licenses. Provides that there shall be no applicable fees for the conversion application process, and the Department shall process these applications and convert qualifying transporting organization licenses to third-party transporting organization licenses within 60 days after application submission. Provides that third-party transporting organizations are subject to the same standards and requirements for transporting organizations under the Act. Provides that a cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or infuser agent shall not transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products and shall use third-party transporting organizations for all transports authorized under the Act, unless (1) the licensee possesses a transporting organization license, (2) the licensee requires delivery within 36 hours, and (3) the licensee has offered a right of first refusal to all third-party transporting organizations and confirmed there are no available third-party transporting organizations to complete the delivery. Amends the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to make a conforming change. Effective immediately.

  30 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This has always been true to some extent, but feels like it’s even more true today. And it’s not just a national thing. Look at the news media coverage lavished on a small handful of state legislators and Chicago alderpersons who know exactly what to say and how to say it to get themselves on the teevee

“Politics today rewards attention and money more than it rewards actually getting bills passed into law,” said Mac Thornberry, a 13-term congressman from Texas who was the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee before announcing his retirement in 2019.

Thornberry likened the shift to a social media algorithm that serves up ever more outrageous content to get more eyeballs.

The people who do the actual work are usually not as astute about their media presence. Workhorses are rarely interviewed, and only rarely consent to interviews when asked.

The difference between state/local and the DC crowd is that being a showhorse here doesn’t usually get you elevated into actual leadership positions because fellow members know the game and just smile and roll their eyes. Out there? Way too often, the clicks rule.

  15 Comments      


New Yorker profiles Pritzker

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was interviewed for this New Yorker profile of Gov. JB Pritzker. The reporter covered some familiar ground, but he had stuff in here I didn’t know or didn’t quite absorb, like this bit about how Pritzker’s inherited wealth has tripled

Money has long opened political doors for Pritzker. He inherited $1.3 billion and roughly tripled it, then poured a hundred and seventy-one million dollars into his first gubernatorial campaign, in 2018, and at least a hundred and forty million more into his reëlection. When he flies on state business, he charters a jet and pays for it himself. He tops up the salaries of senior aides and maintains a paid political staff on the side. These days, he is showering contributions on Democratic candidates and, especially, organizations that seek to advance abortion rights. Next year, he will host the Democratic National Convention, which he helped lure to Chicago with assurances that the event, which is expected to cost ninety million dollars, wouldn’t take on any debt, and that Illinois would provide a complimentary backdrop for the Party’s message. At fifty-eight, Pritzker has left little doubt that he will spend whatever it takes to achieve his political ends. A Democratic strategist told me, “I think everyone in the political world in Illinois is thinking about the fact that he has Presidential ambitions.”

* The governor has told me off the record about this brutal focus group

Given Rauner’s troubles and voter anger with Trump, he decided to try again at electoral politics. But could a wealthy Jewish investor from Chicago win statewide against the deep-pocketed Rauner, who had made his own fortune in private equity and beat a Democratic primary field that included Christopher Kennedy, a son of Robert F. Kennedy? At one early focus group, Pritzker watched from behind a two-way mirror as nine of ten participants said that they preferred Kennedy. “When I walked in the door, I thought it was going to be hard,” he recalled. “When I walked out, I thought it was going to be harder.” But Pritzker had virtually unlimited resources, and he concluded that running was “not a ridiculous endeavor.”

* Sad details about the death of his parents

Pritzker has an abiding faith in what government can accomplish, especially for those who need it most. He traces this to his parents, Donald and Sue, who were dynamic and, as it turned out, doomed. Donald Pritzker, along with his brother, Jay, turned a single hotel near the Los Angeles airport into the prosperous Hyatt chain. Donald was gregarious, “somebody people loved being around,” Penny Pritzker, J.B.’s sister, a former U.S. Commerce Secretary, told me. He was the finance chairman of Edmund Muskie’s Presidential campaign and likely would have run for office one day. But, in 1972, visiting Hawaii to open a new Hyatt, he died of a heart attack while playing tennis. He was thirty-nine.

For his three children—Penny was thirteen, J.B. was seven, and a brother, Anthony, was eleven—the next decade was tumultuous. Their mother suffered from alcoholism, and her addiction deepened after Donald died. She was frequently in and out of treatment. In the mid-seventies, she served as the Northern California women’s chair for the state Democratic Party. (Penny recalled Nancy Pelosi coming by the house to help Sue stuff envelopes for a Senate candidate.) During the worst stretches of Sue’s illness, Pritzker told me, he would sometimes bike to the house of one of her friends to spend the night, just to get away. More frequently, he stayed awake at home, constantly checking to see if his mother had again fallen asleep in bed while smoking. Several times, he called 911 because she had passed out. In May, 1982, Sue was driving drunk when her Cadillac broke down. She called a tow truck. As she and the driver were hauling her car to a garage, she jumped from the truck’s front seat, hit her head, was run over, and died. Pritzker, away at boarding school in Massachusetts, was on his own. He later said that life as an orphan means carrying “a sense of being robbed. Grief ebbs over time, but it never stops stealing a piece of your joy in the moments when you deserve to be happiest.”

Go read the rest.

  29 Comments      


More like this, please

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dean Olsen at the Illinois Times

Sangamon County’s State’s Attorney Dan Wright will become the 7th Judicial Circuit’s newest associate judge.

And it appears likely that former state’s attorney John Milhiser will return to his old job in mid-November.

Dan Wright, state’s attorney since 2018, has been selected to fill the vacancy created by the July 23 death of Matthew Mauer, according to an announcement Oct. 16 from Marcia Meis, director of the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts.

Milhiser served as a United States Attorney from January of 2019 until 2021. He could’ve cashed in right away and gone into private practice, which is what most former US Attorneys do. It’s a little-discussed revolving door and they really make bank.

Instead, he taught government, history and English at Lawrence Education Center, the Springfield Public Schools’ adult education program, and ran unsuccessfully for secretary of state. He then returned to work as an assistant state’s attorney handling felony cases.

Milhiser was a solid state’s attorney, so I’m glad to see he’ll likely be appointed to fill the vacancy. We could use more public servants like him.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A look at the leaders

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More veto session preview stuff

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The CCS Opportunity In Illinois

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Carbon capture and storage, or “CCS,” is a technology that captures carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at their source and stores them deep underground. CCS is a proven and safe process and the Illinois State Geologic Survey has confirmed that our state’s geology is perfectly suited for this technology. The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) enforces federal requirements to regulate the safety of the pipelines that will support CCS.

In addition to delivering a cleaner environment, CCS will generate $3.3 billion in value for the region and could spur 14,440 jobs. Now is the time to bring carbon capture technology and its environmental and economic benefits to Illinois. Policymakers must pass legislation to advance CCS and bring this opportunity to Illinois.

Learn more about the CCS opportunity in Illinois.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated x4)

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Caption contest!

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* They seem pretty amused at something


It's almost time for the Senators to head back to Springfield for the annual Fall Veto Session! Here's a sneak peek of what you can expect in the Capitol building next week…

Posted by Illinois Senate Republican Caucus on Tuesday, October 17, 2023

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

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Governor Pritzker launches abortion rights group Think Big America…

    Politico: Think Big America, a take-off of the “Think Big” campaign theme from Pritzker’s first run for governor in 2018, will operate as a 501(c)(4) issue-advocacy organization. Think Big America plans to focus on promoting ballot measures that would codify abortion rights. It’s supporting ballot measures in Nevada, Ohio and Arizona.

    The 19th: Think Big America, a 501(c)4 nonprofit, is Pritzker’s latest step to centralize and formalize that work. The organization is now funded just by Pritzker but will accept other donations, an aide said, and will contribute to ballot measure campaigns in Ohio and Nevada “in the coming days.” Several senior Pritzker advisers and other members of the governor’s campaign team will start to split their time with the new organization.

    Sun-Times: The creation of the group — and the split of political resources — further signals Pritzker is not mulling a presidential run next year, despite plenty of speculation. But it also raises his national profile and could set him up for a 2028 run. Pritzker’s staffers likened the group to Tom Steyer’s nonprofit NextGen America, which he created in 2013. It also helped lead up to a presidential run in 2019.

* Pritzker launched the group with his own money, but will be accepting donations from elsewhere…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois is revamping its literacy plan. Parents, advocates say it needs more for students with dyslexia: Illinois has also taken steps to change literacy instruction with the passage of a law that requires the Illinois State Board of Education to create a literacy plan by Jan. 31, 2024. In June, the state board released an initial draft of the plan, which says universal screening for literacy skills is essential and aspiring teachers need to be trained in the science of reading. However, because the draft plan does not mandate districts to change how reading is taught in classrooms, literacy advocates worry that it is not enough to push schools to get rid of balanced literacy.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago casino a sure bet for ramp-up in gambling addiction, experts say: Chicago-area addiction treatment experts who spoke with the Sun-Times said that while there hasn’t been an influx of people seeking help for gambling disorder since Bally’s opened downtown, they’re bracing for a steady increase in clients — just like they’ve seen after other gaming expansions in Illinois.

    * NPR | What was the impact of COVID on the Illinois teacher workforce? A new report examines what really happened: Is there a teacher shortage in Illinois? Which school positions are hard to staff? Did a ton of teachers leave the field during the pandemic? WNIJ’s Peter Medlin spoke with Robin Steans of Advance Illinois – a nonpartisan education policy organization — about their new report “The State of Our Educator Pipeline 2023” that set out to answer those questions and more.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Muddy River News | ‘People need to know they’re being heard’: Beardstown businessman to run for 99th District seat: When asked about what people aren’t being heard about, Snellgrove said abortion. “No preacher who I’ve ever been in front of has jumped up in the pulpit and said, ‘You know, abortion is OK, and it’s a good thing,’” he said. “That’s the number one thing that any churchgoer probably feels somewhere deep in their soul that needs to be changed … that should be changed.”

    * WAND | Gov. Pritzker announces tax relief for people, businesses affected by Middle East conflict: Gov. JB Pritzker announced tax relief for individuals and businesses affected by the attacks that took place in Israel a week ago and the resulting Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Impacted taxpayers may request to waive penalties and interest with the Illinois Department of Revenue if they cannot file their returns or make timely payments for income, withholding, sales, specialty, and excise taxes.

    * CBS Chicago | Illinois sees 44% more electric cars on the road in 2023: This year alone, there are 44% more electric vehicles on the roads than at this time last year. The state has awarded nearly $13 million for fast-charging ports. There’s also up to $4,000 in rebates for Illinois residents who buy electric cars.

    * Tribune | New CPD boss promises to balance reform and aggressive policing through transparency: “I don’t think we’ve done a very good job of explaining what real constitutional, proactive police work looks like,” Snelling said Tuesday. “The way that we balance this is to, one, be transparent about what we do. Sometimes police work does not look good. But if we can explain the constitutionality of stops, of our interactions with individuals, I think it’ll be a lot more palatable for those who just don’t understand what they’re looking at.”

    * Sun-Times | Outgoing Police Board president urges City Council to reject arbitrator’s ruling, says it would undermine police reform: The August ruling would allow Chicago police officers accused of the most serious wrongdoing and recommended for firings or suspensions longer than a year to bypass the board and take their cases to an independent arbitrator, who might be more sympathetic to their arguments and would hold proceedings on those cases behind closed doors.

    * Crain’s | The $5 million pot sweetener in Johnson’s $16.6 billion budget: For years, members of the City Council have been asking for additional funding to boost their office staff from three full-time employees to four in an effort to stay on top of connecting residents to city services through their ward offices, meeting with developers and shaping policy at City Hall.

    * NBC Chicago | Invoices show how millions of dollars flowed to Favorite Healthcare Staffing to staff migrant shelters: In the past year, city financial records show nearly $60 million has flowed to an out-of-state company, Favorite Healthcare Staffing, which holds the contract to staff the city’s migrant shelters. […] When it came to employees assigned to security, the invoices show that Favorite charged Chicago taxpayers a median payrate of $24,000 apiece for each security guard, for four weeks’ worth of work. That translates to an annual charge, for each security guard, of $312,000.

    * Daily Herald | Train horns return in some Lake County towns, for now : Following inspections, the Federal Railroad Administration mandated upgrades in seven communities including installation/maintenance of “No Train Horn” signs and changes in curb height and length, according to Molly Gillespie, Buffalo Grove’s director of communications and community engagement. The village is the point agency for the Lake County Quiet Zone, which temporarily was suspended Oct. 11.

    * The Telegraph | Striking statue of Jacksonville’s Civil War governor turns 100: The Yates statue was one of two sculptures dedicated in front of a sizable crowd on Oct. 16, 1923. The other was the likeness of John M. Palmer, a Carlinville man who was a Civil War corps commander, Illinois governor from 1869 to 1873, and U.S. senator from 1891 to 1897.

    * AP | Report: Young driver fatality rates have fallen sharply in the US, helped by education, technology: Using data from 2002-2021, a non-profit group of state highway safety offices says in the report made public Wednesday that fatal crashes involving a young driver fell by 38%, while deaths of young drivers dropped even more, by about 45%. For drivers 21 and older, fatal crashes rose 8% and deaths rose 11%.

    * Sun-Times | Metra to buy zero-emission, self-propelled rail cars with $169.3M federal grant: The grant supports the purchase of up to 16 train sets, with a new type of propulsion that could accelerate and brake faster than traditional trains. Buying the train sets would allow Metra to retire some of its oldest, most polluting diesel locomotives. If Metra could take 16 locomotives out of service six years earlier than planned, it would reduce Metra’s carbon dioxide emissions by about 567,000 tons over that period, said Metra spokesperson Michael Gillis.

    * NYT | Barnes & Noble Sets Itself Free: “Any design agency would have a heart attack if they could see what we’re doing,” James Daunt, the Barnes & Noble chief executive, said. “We don’t have any architect doing our design at any stage. There’s no interior designer.”

    * AP | Europe is looking to fight the flood of Chinese electric vehicles. But Europeans love them: Chinese EV makers are drawn to Europe because auto import tariffs are just 10% versus 27.5% in the U.S., independent auto analyst Matthias Schmidt said. Europe also has the world’s second-biggest EV battery market after China. Nevermind the geopolitics. Climate-conscious car buyers in Europe who are grappling with an increased cost of living rave about how Chinese EVs are affordable yet packed with features and stylish design. Concerns about the threat to local carmakers and jobs just aren’t a factor for them.

    * Sun-Times | Demolition of Thompson Center facade, atrium for Google makeover approved by city: The move isn’t a complete surprise. Renderings released after the tech giant’s takeover of the building last year show prospective views of the renovated edifice with new exterior and interior glazing that either abandoned or muted the building’s current blue, salmon and white color scheme — one of its signature features — and other architectural details.

  23 Comments      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Oct 18, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news.

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The CCS Opportunity In Illinois

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Carbon capture and storage, or “CCS,” is a technology that captures carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at their source and stores them deep underground. CCS is a proven and safe process and the Illinois State Geologic Survey has confirmed that our state’s geology is perfectly suited for this technology. The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) enforces federal requirements to regulate the safety of the pipelines that will support CCS.

In addition to delivering a cleaner environment, CCS will generate $3.3 billion in value for the region and could spur 14,440 jobs. Now is the time to bring carbon capture technology and its environmental and economic benefits to Illinois. Policymakers must pass legislation to advance CCS and bring this opportunity to Illinois.

Learn more about the CCS opportunity in Illinois.

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Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the FBI yesterday

The FBI’s crime statistics estimates for 2022 show that national violent crime decreased an estimated 1.7% in 2022 compared to 2021 estimates:

    • Murder and non-negligent manslaughter recorded a 2022 estimated nationwide decrease of 6.1% compared to the previous year.
    • In 2022, the estimated number of offenses in the revised rape category saw an estimated 5.4% decrease.
    • Aggravated assault in 2022 decreased an estimated 1.1% in 2022.
    • Robbery showed an estimated increase of 1.3% nationally.

Click the pic for the entire graph, but this is the rate per 100,000 people, by year, with Illinois in blue and national rate in grey

That’s quite a steep drop-off compared to the national numbers (287 vs. 381 per 100,000 last year)

* Illinois Policy Institute

Illinois Policy Institute polling found 60% of Illinois voters would not support Gov. J.B. Pritzker in seeking the Democratic presidential nomination in 2024.

The Lincoln Poll found 60% don’t want Pritzker to run for president, 28% do and 12% were unsure. The survey of 800 registered Illinois voters from Sept. 20-24 was conducted by Echelon Insights for the Illinois Policy Institute.

No reasons were given for why they don’t want him to run, but Biden is running, so the question is moot. The poll also found Pritzker’s job approval was at 48-47. It also found that 68 percent of Republican voters and 69 percent of Republican-leaning voters oppose vote-by-mail for elections in Illinois. Just 13 percent in both GOP categories strongly support mail-in voting. 89 percent of Democrats and 87 percent of Democratic-leaners support mail-in voting, while 7 and 9 percent, respectively, strongly oppose.

* The video is here. Press release…

llinois Secretary of State employees will begin sporting brand new navy-blue vests at all 138 DMV facilities statewide as part of a rebranding effort aimed at improving the overall customer experience, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced today.

As part of the announcement, Giannoulias’ office released a video displaying the new vests, which were union made in Illinois, that the more than 1,800 DMV employees started wearing today.

“The vests will make it easier for all DMV visitors to immediately identify employees as they walk in while creating a sense of professionalism and approachability that will improve customer satisfaction,” Giannoulias said. “They will also help build a sense of teamwork and enhance the workplace environment for employees.”

A few hours after sending out that press release, he sent out a fundraising email about the vests and other office improvements.

* Letter to the editor published by Crain’s

Crain’s should spend less time falsely attacking me from afar and instead focus on the real issues important to the future of the people of Chicago.

KEN GRIFFIN
Florida

I mean, if you’re gonna leave, then leave already.

* Thoughts?…


* Heh

* Background is here. I’ll finish with an animal story. Firefighters rescued a python yesterday during a fire at Miller Park Zoo in Bloomington

* Isabel’s roundup…

  34 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m not trying to single out one person here. It just brings up an important point. From Block Club Chicago

Ald. Jim Gardiner (45th) is facing financial consequences for instructing a city employee to ticket a vocal critic in his ward in 2019.

The Chicago Board of Ethics slapped the alderman with a $20,000 fine Monday, after ruling that Gardiner retaliated against Jefferson Park resident Pete Czosnyka.

Czosnyka, who has routinely criticized the alderman online, was hit with a $600 fine for overgrown weeds and rodents. He said his garden was not violating any city ordinances, and the city ultimately agreed with him. Block Club was first to report on the incident.

Under current state law, the alderman could pay that fine with campaign funds. But there is some ambiguity in state law. From the Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling in Byron Sigcho-Lopez vs. Illinois State Board of Elections

Byron Sigcho-Lopez, the alderman for Chicago’s 25th Ward, filed a complaint with the Illinois State Board of Elections (Board), alleging that his predecessor’s campaign committee, the 25th Ward Regular Democratic Organization (Committee), unlawfully paid personal legal fees from campaign funds. […]

Until the General Assembly amends the statute to, for example, specifically prohibit payment from campaign funds for legal fees incurred in defense of criminal allegations against a public official or candidate, the issue requires the Board’s consideration on a case-by-case basis, applying the plain language of the applicable statutory provisions. In this case, despite the parties’ arguments regarding legal defense fees incurred as a result of public corruption allegations, the record here reveals that Solis had not been indicted on criminal charges but only that he had worked with federal investigators using his official capacity to expose public corruption. Considering the evidence before the Board, we find that the Board’s conclusion—that Solis’s legal fees amounted to a proper expenditure not prohibited as “satisfaction or repayment” of a personal debt (10 ILCS 5/9-8.10(a)(3) (West 2018)) but incurred “to defray the customary and reasonable expenses of an officeholder in connection with the performance of governmental and public service functions” (id. § 9-8.10(c))—was not clearly erroneous. Thus, we affirm the Board’s decision, finding that the complaint was not factually and legally justified.

The State Board of Elections referred me to that ruling when it responded to my question…

Yes, he could use [campaign funds] to pay the fine but someone could file a complaint about it and our board might rule otherwise. … A complaint could be filed alleging that this fine did not result from customary and reasonable expenses of governmental/public service functions. … Just as with legal fees, there is no specific [state] prohibition on paying fines.

* The Question: Should the Illinois General Assembly specifically prohibit elected officials from paying governmental ethics violation and similar fines with campaign funds, and require them to pay the fines with their own personal funds, perhaps deducted directly out of their government paychecks, or should this be left up to the State Board of Elections? Explain.

  17 Comments      


Read beyond the headlines

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

More than 204,800 Illinoisans have lost Medicaid coverage over the last three months as the resumption of a nationwide eligibility process continues, according to data from the Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services.

* But, according to the article, almost half of those folks had other health coverage

Of those that lost coverage, more than 86,000, or 42%, had another source of health care or liability coverage and about 14,300, or about 7%, had Medicare, HFS said.

* A large number no longer met income requirements

Of those that lost Medicaid in August, September and October, about 62,179, or 30%, lost coverage because they were no longer eligible for Medicaid based on income requirements.

* And while 69 percent didn’t submit the required paperwork, a big chunk have filed paperwork to be reinstated

Meanwhile, an additional 142,642, or 69%, residents were disenrolled because they did not submit required paperwork showing need for the program.

As of Oct. 6, more than 43,200, or 21%, of those who lost Medicaid over the last three months have returned redetermination paperwork to HFS, the agency said, meaning they may have the opportunity to be reinstated to the program.

It seems that many of those who didn’t submit the paperwork may have known they weren’t eligible anyway.

  1 Comment      


Fingers crossed

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This likely has as much to do with the situation in the Middle East as the migrants, or maybe even more. But if it helps staunch the flow out of Venezuela, that’ll certainly help. Washington Post

The Biden administration and the Venezuelan government of President Nicolás Maduro have agreed to a deal in which the United States would ease sanctions on Venezuela’s oil industry and the authoritarian state would allow a competitive, internationally monitored presidential election next year, according to two people familiar with the breakthrough talks.

The sanctions relief is to be announced after Maduro’s government and Venezuela’s U.S.-backed opposition sign an agreement to include commitments by the socialist government to allow a freer vote in 2024, the people said. They are expected to do that during a meeting in Barbados on Tuesday with U.S. officials in attendance.

Maduro, who claimed victory in a 2018 election widely viewed as fraudulent, would agree to a process for lifting bans on opposition candidates running, one of the people said, though it is not clear how quickly that process would take place. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the talks.

The deal, which follows multiple attempts at negotiation between the Maduro government and opposition, would be the most significant progress in Venezuela’s political stalemate in years. It also suggests a willingness on behalf of the Biden administration to provide incentives to Maduro in the hopes of ensuring free and fair presidential elections in 2024.

* AP

Mexico hosted multiple rounds of talks in 2021 and 2022. When the sides last met, in November 2022, they agreed to create a U.N.-managed fund to finance health, food and education programs for the poor while the U.S. government agreed to allow oil giant Chevron to pump Venezuelan oil.

Colombia and other countries have tried in recent months to restart negotiations between the sides, but Maduro has demanded that the U.S. drop economic sanctions and unfreeze Venezuelan funds held overseas as a condition of resuming talks.

Norway’s statement Monday said the two sides had decided to resume the dialogue “with the objective of reaching a political agreement.” […]

Earlier Monday, a U.S. official who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive negotiations said there was no “deal” between the U.S. government and Venezuela.

The official said the Biden administration supported Venezuelan-led negotiations and was prepared to provide relief from sanctions in response to concrete actions toward holding competitive elections.

* BBC

Previous attempts at finding a way out of the political deadlock have stalled and while Mr Maduro struck an optimistic note on Monday, he provided little detail.

“We are on the verge of signing new agreements with the opposition, agreements beneficial for peace and the upcoming election,” he said, referring to presidential elections due to be held in Venezuela in 2024. […]

While the Maduro government frequently bashes the US in public, labelling it an “imperialist aggressor” and blaming it for Venezuela’s dire economic state, Mr Maduro is keen to come to an agreement with the Biden administration in order to have US sanctions on Venezuela relaxed.

The US, in turn, has a vested interest in the crisis in Venezuela easing as the dire state of the economy in the Andean country has driven more than seven million to emigrate, with many heading for the United States.

An unnamed US official told the Washington Post that the Biden administration was “prepared to provide sanctions relief in response to concrete actions toward competitive elections”.

* Reuters

Reuters reported last week that Venezuela and the United States had progressed at their own talks in Qatar toward a deal that could allow at least one additional foreign oil firm to take Venezuelan crude oil for debt repayment if Maduro resumed negotiations with the opposition.

Maduro said late on Monday his government and the opposition would sign a deal he said would be beneficial for a 2024 election, though he offered no further details.

Sources have told Reuters the deal will include an election date in the latter half of next year and allow the participation of opposition figures currently barred from holding office, among other things. It remained unclear whether all opposition candidates would have their bans lifted. […]

The United States imposed sanctions on Venezuela to punish Maduro’s government following a 2018 election that Washington considered a sham. Since 2019, U.S. sanctions have banned PDVSA from exporting its oil to its chosen markets.

  11 Comments      


Ald. Walter Burnett says he’s telling commercial building owners to stop offering space to the city for migrants

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Leigh Giangreco and Justin Laurence for Crain’s

In September, the city entered a deal to turn a 50,000-square-foot office building at 344 N. Ogden Ave. into a temporary shelter, Crain’s reported. While the shelter would operate out of an office rather than a residential building, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s emergency declaration allows more flexibility around zoning restrictions, according to Pacione-Zayas.

Commercial landlords have been calling the city to offer their vacant space because of the city’s ability to pay lease terms comparable to high-end office tenants even as the demand for office space has lessened. The pairing could prove beneficial to both parties as the city scrambles to find space to care for migrants in an effort to stop relying on the city’s police districts and airports. However, downtown council members like Burnett are pushing back, arguing that enough shelters have opened in his neighborhood. Of the 24 shelters in operation, at least three have opened in Burnett’s ward, including the sites at 344 N. Ogden, 1640 W. Walnut St. and 939 W. Lake St.

“We’ve got a number of vacancies in my community, and the builder-owners are asking the city and I’m telling them they can’t, there’s enough in our ward,” he said.

Thoughts?

* Related…

    * ‘We feel unsafe’ – migrants sheltering at local police stations fear cold, shooting: The Martinez and Suarez families are among approximately 3,064 migrants currently sleeping on the floors or outside of police stations across the city, according to Cassio Mendoza, a mayoral spokesperson. The stations, officials have said, are temporary accommodations as the city works to relocate migrants to more than 20 city-run shelters. About 10,800 people are currently housed in these temporary shelters, according to Mendoza.

    * City’s Spending Plan For Migrants Doesn’t Add Up, Critics Say: But alderpeople during Monday’s budget hearing remained skeptical the city is allocating enough for 2024, and they worried the council will be asked to come back to approve additional funds throughout the year. Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th), chair of the council’s Committee on Immigration and Refugee Rights, said the city should prepare for a “worst-case scenario” plan in case outside funding sources did not come through. “As people have been kind of mentioning almost ad nauseam, it looks like we’d run out of those funds before the year is over. I get that the answer we’re hearing is what we’re hoping that the state or the federal government are going to provide the funding and make up the gap. But hope isn’t a strategy,” Vasquez said.

    * Renderings show proposed Chicago migrant base camp: There are multiple areas for housing, a few for sanitation, a central location for dining, and a spot for intake. The draft takes up almost an entire city block and borders residential homes as well as Metra tracks. The developments contradict what CBS 2 heard from Alderwoman Julia Ramirez (12th) whose office told CBS 2 she was unaware of crews working here on Monday. Ramirez’s office maintains the city only told her they’re “surveying” the area, though the Johnson administration does not need aldermanic approval to move forward with a base camp.

    * Video: Camp Johnson site walk

  49 Comments      


Do The Right Thing – Extend The Tax Credit Scholarship

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

If the General Assembly fails to take action to save the Tax Credit Scholarship Program, then over 9,500 students from low-income families will lose their scholarships, causing many to leave their best-fit schools.

The kids who stand to lose opportunities are 20% Black and 30% Hispanic – proportions considerably higher than demographic populations in Illinois — and 100% of these students are from families with demonstrated financial need. Additionally, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist hoping to receive the same opportunities as some of their peers.

This program is an investment in poverty reduction and economic acceleration, so lawmakers should do the right thing: Extend the Tax Credit Scholarship Program.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Hundreds attended funeral of Palestinian boy, landlord detained on murder and hate crime charges. Tribune

    - The funeral was attended by hundreds of mourners, including Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson.

    - Landlord, Joseph Czubam made his first court appearance Monday, where he was denied pre-trial release.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

  25 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news.

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Legislative staff union surveying potential members ahead of town hall

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it…


* Survey

The ILSA Town Halls will be a place to discuss what has been going on with ILSA, HB 4148, and give your input on what changes you’d like to see implemented. […]

Which provisional asks would you like to see implemented in the workplace prior to ILSA entering into a collective bargaining contract?

    • Minimum monthly salary increase for all positions
    • Proposed salary increases would preserve raises included above base pay
    • Pay increases would be retroactive to the beginning of Fiscal Year 24 (July 1, 2023)
    • Base payroll money for district staff being separate from district allotment funds
    • Staff to member ratios increase to accommodate how many members in HDems Caucus
    • Annual inflation COLA
    • Comp time formula transparency
    • Comp time formula changed to 1:1 if no overtime paid
    • Comp time be awarded for all sessions (Veto, Lame Duck, Special Session, etc.)
    • On non-session periods, minimum remote work 3 days per week without a special reason or additional requirements
    • Flex hours (such as summer flex hours offered to Speaker’s Staff this summer) be extended as normal procedure during non-session periods and consistent through all units
    • All staff receive one Friday off per month during non-session months without impacting leave balances
    • Fully paid parental leave for all parnets (birthing and non-birthing) commensurate with the rest of Illinois state government (12 weeks)
    • Rotating staff kept in office after adjournment, rather than arbitrarily keeping everyone in office
    • Leaving at 4:30 p.m. on Mondays before a Tuesday session
    • No doctor’s notes required for sick days
    • Timekeeping be performed through TES only - not worksheets or other methods
    • Training for staff is structured, comprehensive, and detailed–including for district staff

Thoughts?

  33 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From December of 2018

* The 2018 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best In-House Lobbyist goes to Adrienne Alexander with AFSCME Council 31…

    Adrienne is smart and strategic and has great relationships. She understands politics and policy, from numerous angles. She’s been extremely effective as a lobbyist for years at both the state and city level. I wish I could steal her from AFSCME.

Alexander was listed as one of Crain’s Chicago Business’ “40 under 40″ today

Union membership runs in Adrienne Alexander’s blood.

Her grandfather moved to Michigan during the Great Migration to work in a General Motors plant. Her grandmother served as a union steward in a hospital, and her other grandfather joined the ranks of the U.S. Postal Service. Those jobs, and their associated pensions, paved a path toward the middle class for a Black family, Alexander said.

“It was very clear to me the difference that it made for their lives,” she said. “They were able to send many of their kids to college and, in one generation, because of that union, it completely changed the family trajectory.”

It’s no surprise, then, that Alexander’s own career at the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees has focused on pension fight after pension fight in Illinois since she joined the public employee union in 2010. As a lobbyist for AFSCME, Alexander herds elected officials at the city, state and county levels in Illinois. While she describes their work on pensions as a team effort, she emerged as the point person for a Chicago City Council ordinance passed this spring— referred to by supporters as a “labor peace agreement” — requiring labor deals for human services workers.

Congratulations!

* IDFPR…

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (“IDFPR”) announced today that Camile Lindsay will serve as the next Acting Director of Professional Regulation, pending confirmation by the Illinois Senate. Appointed by Governor JB Pritzker, Lindsay previously served in the Pritzker Administration as First Assistant Deputy Governor for infrastructure, public safety, environment, and energy. […]

As First Assistant Deputy Governor for infrastructure, public safety, environment, and energy, Lindsay was responsible for overseeing several Illinois state agencies, including the Department of Transportation, State Police, Department of Corrections, Emergency Management Agency, and the Capital Development Board. Prior to joining the Governor’s office, Lindsay served as Chief of Staff and Chief Legal Counsel for the Illinois Department of Corrections. Earlier in her career, she worked as Supervisory Regional Counsel for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, Assistant Attorney General for the Illinois Attorney General’s office, and Assistant State’s Attorney for the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office.

Lindsay has a big job ahead of her.

* I’m hearing at least two state legislators have tested positive for COVID ahead of veto session

The Illinois Department of Public Health says that although COVID-19 hospitalizations are at a low level across the state, Illinoisans should not wait to get vaccinated against wintertime respiratory illnesses.

IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra said Illinois is beginning to see an increase in RSV activity, which will likely be followed by flu and COVID-19 over the coming weeks and months. Dr. Vohra says the best protection against these diseases is having vaccinations up to date.

“We are fortunate to have tools this season to protect Illinois residents from COVID-19, flu, and RSV,” he said.

Last month, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended newly reformulated COVID-19 shots for everyone over the age of 6 months. The federal agencies have given the green light for updated mRNA vaccines developed by Moderna and Pfizer that target the currently circulating strains of the COVID-19 virus. They also have recently approved an updated Novavax COVID-19 vaccine. These newly approved shots are considered safe when given at the same time as other vaccines for the flu and RSV.

* She reported giving her campaign $15,000 back in June…


* Interesting…


* No mention of the hilarious spat with the Senate in this Fra Noi hagiography

In a political landscape that’s bitterly divided, Illinois Rep. Anthony DeLuca is an increasingly rare breed of elected official.

“Anthony is a bridge builder. He’s a consensus builder,” Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans President Ron Onesti says. “His fellow legislators know that if their constituents have a need, Anthony will listen to them and do everything in his power to meet that need, regardless of their party, because it’s the right thing to do. As a result, he’s one of the most respected legislators in Springfield.”

Though rooted in principle, DeLuca’s approach has a significant fringe benefit. “When the time comes for him to need help, [his colleagues] are very interested in hearing what it’s all about and how they can be a part of it, even if their positions don’t directly align with his,” Onesti notes.

DeLuca drew deeply from that reservoir of good will to assure the passage of House Bill 1199, Section 1. The legislation finally achieved the long sought-after goal of permanently recognizing October as Italian American Heritage Month in Illinois.

* I never heard of a Serval until one got loose in Decatur


Animal Control is aware of a Serval that is loose on the North East side of the City of Decatur. We are working with an…

Posted by Macon County Animal Control and Care Center on Monday, October 16, 2023

* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

    * Sun-Times | Plainfield man fatally stabbed 6-year-old Muslim boy after listening to conservative talk radio, worrying about his safety, prosecutors say: In the 45-minute hearing, prosecutors explained how Czuba became increasingly concerned about his safety while listening to media about the Israel-Hamas war before violently attacking his Muslim tenants. Czuba’s wife told detectives that he “believed he was in danger and she [his tenant, Shaheen] was going to call Palestinian friends to come and harm them,” Michael Fitzgerald, a Will County assistant state’s attorney, said during a detention hearing Monday.

    * Tribune | Man accused of fatally stabbing of Palestinian boy ordered detained on murder, hate crime charges: Meanwhile, federal authorities including the FBI and the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice have launched an investigation into the attack. A statement released Monday said the FBI “takes the investigation of hate crimes extremely seriously” but did not provide further information, citing the ongoing probe. Federal prosecutors can seek the death penalty for defendants convicted of causing a death related hate crime.

    * Daily Herald | Authorities: Landlord who killed 6-year-old boy ‘heavily interested’ in Middle East events: Fitzgerald said Czuba and his wife rented two rooms to the boy’s mother, Hanaan Shahin, for the last two years. Czuba’s wife told authorities that her husband had been listening to conservative news programs and was “heavily interested” in events in the Middle East and reports about the Day of Jihad in the United States on Oct. 13.

    * Crain’s | Illinois politicians condemn anti-Muslim hate crime in Plainfield: “To take a six-year-old child’s life in the name of bigotry is nothing short of evil,” Pritzker said. “Wadea should be heading to school in the morning. Instead, his parents will wake up without their son. This wasn’t just a murder — it was a hate crime.” Around 85,000 Palestinians live in the Chicago area, making up 60% of the region’s Arab population, the website Arab America reports. Chicago has drawn Palestinian immigrants since the turn of the century, according to Marquette University sociologist Louise Cainkar.

    * WCIA | IDHS agency holding listening session on homelessness in Decatur: The goal of the gathering is to hear feedback on what needs improvements, what is working well, and recommendations people have for homeless services and the Home Illinois Plan. All voices are welcome, especially those who have experienced homelessness themselves. The feedback is intended to help the state better serve the homeless and those who are experiencing housing insecurity.

    * Tribune | Trial opens for 2 former Cook County state’s attorneys charged in fallout over infamous Jackie Wilson case: The former assistant state’s attorneys, Nicholas Trutenko and Andrew Horvatare so eager to prove their innocence, their attorneys have said, that they demanded a speedy trial at arraignment despite nearly 290,000 pages of evidence in discovery. The pair were charged in connection with the prosecution of a man who the courts have said was wrongfully convicted — Jackie Wilson — continuing the 40-year chronicle of the case against Wilson, who was charged along with his brother Andrew with killing Officers William Fahey and Richard O’Brien in 1982.

    * Crain’s | Johnson’s ‘Treatment Not Trauma’ plans start to take shape: Budget documents show Johnson is allocating $4.8 million to specifically expand mental health services provided under the Chicago Department of Public Health, which includes opening two pilot clinics in existing CDPH buildings and adding mental health workers to support them.

    * WCVB | ‘We do not have enough space’ in Massachusetts shelters, Gov. Healey says: Massachusetts’ emergency shelter system is “on the verge of reaching capacity,” and Gov. Maura Healey’s administration is implementing capacity limits while demanding more support from the federal government. Forty families have entered the Massachusetts emergency shelter system in the past 24 hours, according to state data that shows the total number of families in the system is now nearing 7,000.

    * Rockford Register Star | Rockford-area official faces more than 100 years in prison on several charges: The indictment alleges that, while serving as county clerk and recorder, Bliss stole money from the county and used a Boone County credit card to pay for personal expenses, including purchasing groceries and tires for her personal vehicle and paying off personal debt.

    * WMBD | Students ordered out of unlicensed facilities by Illinois Education Board: An ISBE news release shows that the three facilities are owned by Menta and function as therapeutic day schools for students with social-emotional disabilities. The Menta facilities had applied for ISBE approval in the spring of 2023. However, none had received approval before serving and enrolling students. […] Investigators discovered “troubling” restraint and time-out practices at the Springfield and Centralia locations.

    * SJ-R | Dan Wright appointed as Seventh Judicial Circuit associate judge: It will be up to the Sangamon County Board to appoint an interim state’s attorney. There was no immediate word on when Wright was going to be sworn-in as judge. A Republican, Wright was appointed state’s attorney in 2018 succeeding John C. Milhiser, who had been appointed U.S. attorney for the Central District of Illinois by then-President Donald Trump.

    * Daily Herald | Donald Trump Jr. to appear at McHenry County GOP committee fundraiser: Karen Tirio, chair of MCGOPAC, a Republican political action committee, said the party is “blessed with a very robust” group of presidential candidates. But the MCGOPAC is endorsing Donald Trump as the Republican for president in next year’s election, she added.

    * Patch | McHenry Co. State’s Attorney Responds To ‘Marijuana Moms’ Claims: McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally announced in September that cannabis dispensaries in McHenry County would be required to warn customers of potential side effects of the use of cannabis.

    * Crain’s | A French meat alternative startup chooses Chicago for its U.S. headquarters: The announcement comes as the company said it raised $34.7 million, bringing its total The U.S. headquarters here is expected to open in early 2024 with expansions over the year, according to John Hatto, managing director of Umiami and former vice president of strategy for PepsiCo. Hatto will oversee the company’s North American operations. to $107 million in three years.

    * Daily Herald | Nonprofit SCARCE gives trash a useful future: The nonprofit is called SCARCE, which stands for School & Community Assistance for Recycling and Composting Education. There, things many people would toss in the garbage without a second thought are given another chance at a useful future. Plastic bread chips are sent to Indianapolis to be melted down and remade into hangers. Pill bottles go to an emergency relief organization near Cincinnati. Plastic bags go to the local Jewel-Osco for recycling.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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It should be illegal to shoot a dead horse this many times

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we’ve discussed before, a financial transaction tax has been off the table at least since May, when the governor, the House Speaker and the Senate President all turned a big thumbs down. Once again, here’s Bloomberg on September 18th

The letters are stamped all over the hallways of Chicago’s giant skyscrapers and grand office buildings. DRW, IMC, CME, Cboe.

These are some of the derivatives firms that collectively handle trillions of dollars a year in trades, greasing the wheels of global markets with everything from stock options to corn futures. Most of them have called Chicago home for decades — providing thousands of jobs within the city’s $75 billion finance industry.

Now, the firms’ commitment to the Windy City is being tested by some $800 million in taxes proposed by a new mayor staring down a budget gap that’s swelled to half a billion dollars. One idea is a levy on financial transactions, which has alarmed companies already worried about a jump in crime that shows few signs of abating.

Behind the scenes, market makers and exchanges are working together to press their case with policymakers, with firms that typically compete with each other sharing data to help explain their economic benefits to Chicago. While executives haven’t explicitly threatened to leave, in private conversations it’s clear they will consider quitting the city if crime remains an issue and the financial transaction tax passes.

* Bloomberg on September 27

Abbott’s remarks follow reports that CME and other financial firms in Chicago, including CBOE Global Markets Inc. and IMC, are alarmed by Mayor Brandon Johnson’s idea for $800 million in taxes, including a levy on financial transactions.

* Another article from Bloomberg on September 27

Trading firms currently occupy more than 3.5 million square feet in the city, equivalent to 60 football fields. In the past three years, they’ve added about 700,000 square feet, and that doesn’t include the trading divisions of large banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co. […]

[Johnson’s] administration has proposed new levies, including higher real estate transfer taxes and a financial transaction tax, prompting a reaction from Chicago’s trading community to push their case to the city.

* Bloomberg on October 6

CME Chief Executive Officer Terry Duffy’S] commitment to Chicago is being tested as stubbornly high crime rates and a slew of taxes — including a financial-transaction levy proposed by Mayor Brandon Johnson — have him considering his options.

* Johnson, as expected, did not propose a transaction tax. So Bloomberg found another way to get at the issue today

Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker said he would veto any legislation to impose a financial transaction tax that could harm Chicago’s storied exchanges and cause them to leave the state.

“Let me be clear, there is no financial transactions tax on the table, period,” the Democratic governor said in an interview with Bloomberg News. “There will not be support. I would veto it.” […]

At a press conference last week, the mayor dodged Bloomberg questions about what taxes proposed during his campaign are still on the table, limiting his comments to what has been presented in the budget.

“What I presented on Wednesday is what’s actually on the table,” he said. “There’s nothing new that I’m hiding. That’s what’s on the table.”

Still, he is setting up a subcommittee in City Council to find new sources of revenue.

Johnson dodged the question? *Facepalm*

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Do The Right Thing – Extend The Tax Credit Scholarship

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

If the General Assembly fails to take action to save the Tax Credit Scholarship Program, then over 9,500 students from low-income families will lose their scholarships, causing many to leave their best-fit schools.

The kids who stand to lose opportunities are 20% Black and 30% Hispanic – proportions considerably higher than demographic populations in Illinois — and 100% of these students are from families with demonstrated financial need. Additionally, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist hoping to receive the same opportunities as some of their peers.

This program is an investment in poverty reduction and economic acceleration, so lawmakers should do the right thing: Extend the Tax Credit Scholarship Program.

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Bost boasts about fundraising, Bailey calls on him to return money from ‘woke companies’

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bailey is a different sort of candidate, so he doesn’t need to keep pace with a seasoned fundraiser like Bost, but this is still not great. Sorensen and Budzinski did well…


* From Bost…

U.S. Representative Mike Bost (IL-12) today announced that his campaign has raised $517,000 in the quarter ending on September 30th and is approaching $1.2 million cash-on-hand. Bost outraised his primary opponent Darren Bailey by nearly $400,000 over the last 90 days and has nearly 12 times more money cash-on-hand.

“The scale of our fundraising advantage and the strength of our grassroots operation prove we have the momentum heading into the final quarter of 2023,” said Bost. “Southern Illinois voters understand how important it is that we have a proven, conservative leader at the helm for the battles ahead in Washington. There is still a lot of work left to be done, but I am confident that our campaign has the resources and experience to win a competitive primary.”

* Bailey…

Darren Bailey: Woke corporations like Bud Light fueling Mike Bost’s campaign

Xenia, IL – Darren Bailey, candidate for Congress in the 12th District, is calling on Mike Bost to stop taking money from woke companies and to return the donations, or donate them to a 12th District charity.

“Mike Bost claims to be a conservative, but he is taking thousands of dollars from companies that are going out of their way to promote woke ideology and attack conservative values,” Bailey said. “He has accepted campaign donations from JPMorgan Chase & Co., which has publicly stated they will pay their employees’ travel expenses to go out of state to have an abortion if they live in a state with more restrictive abortion laws. He even took money from Bud Light! Mike Bost continues to demonstrate his most sacred ‘value’ is his own re-election.”

According to the newest FEC quarterly filing report, Mike Bost has recently received upwards of $50,000 from woke companies and prominent Joe Biden donors in just the 2023 third quarter alone. Bailey is calling on Rep. Bost to either give the money back or give it to charity.

“How are we ever going to restore our nation if our own leaders continue to do the bidding of companies and organizations committed to undermining the values and principles that have made our nation great?” Bailey said. “Mike Bost may claim he is not going to be influenced by his donors, but we all know he is aware of who is donating to his campaign. There is a price that comes with donations from these woke corporations. I am not willing to pay that price even if it costs me this election. Mike Bost apparently is willing to sell his values to the highest bidder. He should give the money back or give it to charity.”

View Mike Bost’s latest report here.

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The CCS Opportunity In Illinois

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Carbon capture and storage, or “CCS,” is a technology that captures carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at their source and stores them deep underground. CCS is a proven and safe process and the Illinois State Geologic Survey has confirmed that our state’s geology is perfectly suited for this technology. The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) enforces federal requirements to regulate the safety of the pipelines that will support CCS.

In addition to delivering a cleaner environment, CCS will generate $3.3 billion in value for the region and could spur 14,440 jobs. Now is the time to bring carbon capture technology and its environmental and economic benefits to Illinois. Policymakers must pass legislation to advance CCS and bring this opportunity to Illinois.

Learn more about the CCS opportunity in Illinois.

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Emerson College Poll: Biden’s Illinois job approval at 35-44, while Pritzker is at 41-35

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The pollster only surveyed 468 registered voters. Among those, just 108 were college graduates (excluding postgraduates), so we can probably ignore the subgroups right off the bat…


The full Emerson College poll is here. Biden won Illinois by 17 points, and when the pollster asked respondents for whom they voted in 2020, Biden led by 17 points. But, again, this is a small sample size. Grain of salt, etc.

* From the pollster

An Emerson College Polling survey of Illinois residents finds President Joe Biden with a 35% approval rating, while 44% disapprove of the job the president is doing in the Oval Office. Governor J. B. Pritzker carries a 41% approval rating, while 35% disapprove of the job he is doing as governor.

President Biden leads former President Trump by nine points in a hypothetical 2024 general election matchup, 43% to 34%. Fourteen percent support someone else and 9% are undecided. […]

Illinois residents were asked how much of a problem, in terms of affordability, is it to rent or buy a home in their area. Housing affordability is a ‘big problem’ for 41% of Illinois residents, while 31% say it is a ‘medium problem.’ Seventeen percent say housing affordability is a slight problem, and 11% say it is not a problem at all. Idaho residents were asked the same question this October, and 67% of residents described renting or buying to be a ‘big’ problem, while 23% considered it a medium problem, and 7% considered it to be a slight problem.

* Methodology

The Emerson College Polling Illinois poll was conducted October 1-4, 2023. The sample consisted of 468 Illinois voters with a credibility interval, similar to a poll’s margin of error of +/- 4.5 percentage points; the sample of Illinois residents is n=489 with a credibility interval of 4.4 percentage points. The data sets were weighted by gender, age, race, party, and education based on the general population using a sample of n=489 participants and allowing the natural fallout to create the sample of n=468 voters. Turnout modeling is based on US Census parameters, and Illinois voter registration and voter turnout data by regions (IL SOS). Data was collected by contacting a list of emails provided by Aristotle, along with an online panel of voters provided by Alchemer.

Emerson has an A- rating from 538.

* Meanwhile

Gov. J.B. Pritzker deposited another $12 million into his J.B. for Governor campaign fund earlier this month, his first personal cash infusion into the account since he won election to another term last November over Republican Darren Bailey.

Pritzker has put $335.55 million into his own campaign fund since March 2017, close to four times the amount that Bruce Rauner, his predecessor who briefly was the state’s top self-funding candidate, spent on his gubernatorial campaigns in 2014 and 2018.

There’s plenty more Pritzker money available, according to Forbes, which recently placed the governor’s net worth at $3.4 billion.

Thoughts?

  36 Comments      


Chicago Bears open thread

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sigh

Fighter jets practicing for a routine flyover at Sunday’s Chicago Bears game caused alarm for many on Friday.

Four jets were spotted flying over the city just after 1 p.m., causing confusion and concern among residents.

Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications confirmed in a statement Friday afternoon that the city “has not received any actionable threats” related to the latest war between Israel and Hamas, and the fighter jets reported along the lakefront and over downtown were practicing for the flyover before the start of the Bears game against the Minnesota Vikings.

* Hard sigh…


* Hard, hard sigh…


…Adding… Shaw Local

Bears coach Matt Eberflus said Monday that quarterback Justin Fields is doubtful to play against the Las Vegas Raiders on Sunday after dislocating the thumb of his throwing hand.

Fields suffered the injury in the third quarter against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday. X-rays came back negative and Eberflus didn’t have results from a MRI done Monday.

The Bears will know more by the end of the week.

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*** UPDATED x2 *** Asylum-seekers coverage roundup

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP on the legal front

A federal judge on Friday denied a bid by immigration advocates to prohibit U.S. officials from turning away asylum-seekers at border crossings with Mexico if they don’t have appointments on a mobile phone app.

The ruling is a victory for the Biden administration and its approach to creating new pathways to enter the United States, while, at the same time, making it more difficult for those who don’t follow prescribed methods to seek asylum. […]

The government appealed a decision to block a new rule that makes it more difficult to claim asylum for anyone who travels through another country, like Mexico, and enters the U.S. illegally. That rule remains in effect while under appeal.

Another closely watched case challenges a policy to grant a two-year stay for up to 30,000 people a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela if they apply online with a financial sponsor and arrive at an airport. Texas is leading 21 states to argue that Biden overreached, saying it “amounts to the creation of a new visa program that allows hundreds of thousands of aliens to enter the United States who otherwise have no basis for doing so.”

* ABC7 on the local politics front

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson will visit the southern border with multiple alderpeople this week.

Johnson said earlier this month that he will be making a trip to the border to see the migrant crisis first-hand.

*** UPDATE 1 *** The mayor changed his mind…


*** UPDATE 2 *** Johnson is still sending a delegation…


[ *** End Of Updates *** ]

* CBS2 showed video of city trucks clearing out the parking lot last week, so I’m thinking the city might be doing more than just considering this site

City officials are considering building a massive tent to house the more than 3,500 migrants now living at police stations and O’Hare International Airport on a vacant, privately-owned lot in Brighton Park, Ald. Julia Ramirez (12th Ward) said Sunday.

In a statement posted to her official social media accounts, Ramirez said she was working to gather information from the mayor’s office about the city’s plan to open a temporary shelter on a vacant lot near 38th Street and California Avenue.

A spokesperson for Mayor Brandon Johnson did not respond to two requests for comment from WTTW News. Cristina Pacione Zayas, Johnson’s first deputy chief of staff, told reporters Thursday that an announcement of the location of what city leaders call “winterized base camps” was “imminent.” […]

More than 3,567 migrants are living in police stations across the city and at O’Hare International Airport with another 11,043 migrants living in city shelters as of Friday, according to city data. Johnson has said the crisis was caused by “right-wing extremists bent on sowing chaos and division in our city.”

Still curious how the asylum-seekers are gonna stay warm in those tents. Chicago isn’t exactly known for mild winters.

* The Tribune has a story entitled “Democrats welcome mat for migrants is also fraying party’s base”

From almost the moment he took office, Gov. J.B. Pritzker has championed the state as a sanctuary for immigrants. But in his quest to keep Illinois a “welcoming state,” the welcome mat is becoming politically frayed as Chicago tries to cope with an influx of more than 18,000 asylum-seekers.

What was once altruistic idealism delivered 1,200 miles away from the nation’s southern border is now colliding with realism in how to temporarily house, provide for and resettle thousands of asylum-seekers in a crisis largely orchestrated by Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott to use his state’s long-standing border issues to paint leaders in Democratic cities and states as hypocrites.

As each new bus arrives here from Texas and other locales, more political pressure mounts on Pritzker and on Chicago’s new progressive Democratic leadership under Mayor Brandon Johnson.

With no firm plans in place and the only concrete advice to incoming migrants being Pritzker’s warning that “it’s gonna get cold in Chicago and New York very soon,” cracks among the Democratic base, particularly among key ethnic and racial blocs, have emerged over spending taxpayer dollars and housing for migrants.

It’s definitely worth a full read.

* Cold weather is definitely a theme right now

Even as temperatures drop, Yaritsa Leal and a dozen of her family members are sleeping outside the Town Hall District police station. There isn’t enough room for them inside.

They’ve jury-rigged a tent to shield them from the elements, but it’s not enough to keep out Chicago weather.

“We huddle under there and give each other warmth,” said Leal, 43. “I feel cold, I feel uncomfortable, and I feel scared, but I know that I can’t come here and demand too much.” […]

The North Side police station is one of the few where migrants have recently found some relief inside a city warming bus overnight, but that’s not offered at all stations, and those with little protection are facing a precarious situation advocates worry could become disastrous.

* Sun-Times

A judge said Friday he was “horribly disturbed” by accusations that a man opened fire at a group of migrants outside a South Side police station, wounding a man from Colombia and a Venezuelan woman holding her child.

Anthony Evans, 25, then led police on a high-speed chase that ended in a crash with serious injuries to an officer that may require amputation, according to prosecutors.

Judge Joseph Gump ordered Evans held in jail while awaiting trial on counts of aggravated battery with a firearm, aggravated driving under the influence and unlawful use of weapon.

* More from Isabel…

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A deeper dive into the new Illinois Economic Policy Institute study

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We talked about the new Illinois Economic Policy Institute study the other day. From the Tribune’s coverage

From 2013 to 2022, Illinois saw significant growth in its number of higher-paid taxpayers, including a 52% increase in those earning $100,000 to $500,000 per year, and an 80% surge in taxpayers earning more than $500,000 per year.

Inflation may have helped drive some of that increase. Raises in the minimum wage also may have helped reduce the number of people claiming the earned income tax credit by 11%.

People who moved into Illinois were better educated and more likely to come to attend college than those who moved out. In census surveys, the most common reasons people cited for leaving were work, such as a new job or transfer, along with shorter commutes, better schools, housing and family ties. The main reason most stayed was to be near family.

Those who left Illinois earned 16% lower incomes, were less than half as likely to be homeowners, and less likely to be married than those who stayed. Pandemic-related business closures may have driven some lower-income workers to leave, creating further inequalities between high- and low-income residents.

* I reached out to IEPI economist Frank Manzo to ask him about an Illinois Policy Institute examination of IRS data this past June

Data from the Internal Revenue Service shows Illinois in 2021 lost residents of every age and income level, with the majority of them prime working-age adults and earning more than $100,000.

Of the residents who left, 51% made more than $100,000 per year, 25% made less than $50,000 and 24% made $50,000 to $100,000.

The IPI ran a similar analysis in 2022.

* What explains the discrepancy between the two looks at tax and other data? Here is Manzo’s response…

The short answer to your question is that the Illinois Policy Institute’s analysis is incomplete, leading to a distorted picture of migration changes in Illinois.

Professor Robert Bruno from the Project for Middle Class Renewal (PMCR) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and I examined a decade of Illinois Department of Revenue tax statistics and a decade of household survey data from the Current Population Survey to assess broad migration patterns (1). With this data, we are able to assess who is moving out of and into Illinois. Importantly, we also look at who chooses to stay. To ensure robustness, our report looks at multiple sources, looks over a long period of time, and includes more observations rather than fewer. I’ve bulleted a few methodological distinctions below.

    • First, by focusing exclusively on “net domestic migration,” or people moving within the U.S., the IPI omits people from abroad—which includes active-duty military, students, and expatriates as well as highly-skilled immigrants, asylum-seekers, refugees, and the undocumented. Illinois is an importer of people from abroad, 62% of whom are foreign-born.

    • Second, a missing group in IRS tax data is those who do not file taxes. People who don’t earn incomes are not included (but are in surveys). If those individuals are more likely to move out, then the average household income of leavers is lower than a reliance on IRS data would indicate.

    • Third, tax return data can be somewhat misleading without understanding what happened to people who stay. As a simple example, let’s say a cook quits an Illinois restaurant and moves to Florida. Illinois loses that tax return. However, if a formerly unemployed resident is hired to fill that position, then there is no net loss in tax returns to the state. The restaurant may even increase the wage to attract a new cook, producing a higher income and more tax revenue. But in the net migration data from the IRS, all that shows up is the lost resident and lost taxes. It is worth noting that the total number of Illinois-resident tax returns grew by 200,000 between 2010 and 2020 and increased in 8 out of the 10 years.

    • Similarly, the survey data—considered with economic data—dispels the mythology around why people stay or leave Illinois. The data show increases in taxpayers, lower incomes and disproportionate reliance on government assistance among those who leave, and that migrants tend to be younger (others find that “young people move more” as well) and move for job-related reasons—not because of estate taxes or state and local taxes.

    • Finally, in reporting income changes, a focus on 2020 and 2021 is a potentially selective use of data during a once-in-a-century pandemic. We note in our study that post-pandemic dynamics may have resulted in new migration patterns that diverge from earlier trends, but recent data appears to show migration returning to pre-pandemic trends and levels.

Overall, complete datasets and additional context are required for a sound understanding of Illinois’ economy, migration patterns, and the likely impact of public policies.

People should remain wary about Census population estimates going forward. Unfortunately, the Census projections continue to rely on a mix of the official 2020 Census count (which likely undercounted Illinois by 2%), the “Vintage 2020 Population Estimates” (which only thought we were going to have 12.59 million residents, itself a 2% undercount from the official count), and net domestic migration data that led to the “wildly erroneous” projections last decade (2).

To be sure, our report supports a finding that the economy is in transition. As Illinois became a $1 trillion economy, its migration patterns made the state more urban and suburban, more educated, and higher paid. But we also detail how those who are being left behind in under-resourced areas are disproportionately leaving the state. It is for this reason that Professor Bruno and I include potential policy options to suggest how Illinois could better attract and retain people, based on a review of the data on who leaves, who arrives, and who stays—instead of relying on an incomplete picture with key pieces of the puzzle missing.

—————————————————-

1) The Illinois Economic Policy Institute (ILEPI) often partners with academic institutions to ensure that our approaches are methodologically sound and that we are calling balls and strikes in our analyses.

2) The Census’ net domestic migration numbers suggested Illinois lost 966,000 residents from 2011-2020. This means Illinois added at least 948,000 more people from births minus deaths and from net immigration in order to get to a minimum of -18,000 between the two Census counts. Where did these extra 948,000 people come from? Those who assume 100% accuracy of the net domestic migration data should be asked to answer that.

  21 Comments      


Mayor finally accepts Statehouse reality

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Gov. JB Pritzker and House Speaker Chris Welch both threw cold water on the idea of a veto session supplemental appropriations bill to help Chicago handle the increasing influx of asylum seekers from Venezuela.

Speaker Welch told reporters last Thursday he had “made it clear” to Mayor Brandon Johnson that “we were not expecting to do a supplemental budget in the veto session,” while the governor told reporters the week before that he hadn’t heard about any plans for a supplemental. Governors always know about supplementals because their office writes them.

There is simply no appetite in the General Assembly to tackle any super controversial issues during the veto session, which runs from Oct. 24 through Nov. 9.

A big part of the reason for wanting a delay until the spring session is that veto session falls smack dab in the middle of petition-gathering season. The migrant issue is super divisive, legislators are getting an angry earful at the doors as they gather petition signatures, and a public vote on spending more tax dollars could very well cause some irate constituents to run against them.

It’s the same basic situation with extending the Invest in Kids Act, a $75 million income tax credit for contributing to groups that then pay for private and religious school scholarships. Teachers unions and progressives hotly oppose extending the program beyond its Dec. 31 expiration date, but some Democrats would still like to see it extended. Unless a reasonable compromise can be found, it’ll likely be kicked to next spring as well.

Plus, Johnson’s recent budget proposal cut the city’s earlier projected spending on the new arrivals by $50 million while increasing spending on other items. That didn’t go over too well with legislators, either.

The message did not seem to get through to City Hall, however. Members of the Johnson administration continued trying to negotiate their case through the news media, before ultimately abandoning their quest.

“Just because there isn’t necessarily a supplemental (appropriation) on the horizon — and I mean, I think those discussions are still happening — there’s ways that there can be funds redirected to the city,” Johnson’s deputy chief of staff, Cristina Pacione-Zayas, told reporters, according to the Chicago Tribune. She also said the city wanted the state to look at “reapplication” of certain state funds.

According to the article, CPZ, a former state senator, pointed to state funding of official Welcoming Centers, which she said could be repurposed to help the migrants. Among many other things last fiscal year, the Illinois General Assembly appropriated $31 million in additional funds for the city and more than $50 million for the state to help deal with the asylum seekers out of the Welcoming Centers program.

“Welcoming Centers are not for asylum seekers exclusively,” Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh emphasized to me. “There are other costs that appropriation has to account for.”

The legislature did approve appropriations for the city’s and state’s migrant responses in the current fiscal year, which will bring total state spending since the crisis began to close to half a billion dollars, the governor’s office says.

And since the city has not done a good job of standing up shelters and then moving people into housing, handing it money intended for the state’s response probably would likely not accomplish all that much. The situation is so bad that migrants are camped in tents outside of police stations now.

But it’s true that not every reallocation of state funding requires a supplemental appropriation bill. Budget items “like rental assistance, support for community-based organizations doing case work and HOME IL lines are increasingly funding services for the asylum seeker response,” Abudayyeh said. The HOME IL program is designed to alleviate homelessness.

This is a very tricky topic. Reallocating money to help asylum seekers only validates complaints by Black and Latino political leaders, including legislators, that their own constituents are being short shrifted by state government in favor of the new arrivals.

Finally, on Friday, Johnson got the message, telling reporters he would wait until next spring to ask for more state money. “When they pass their budget in May, we’ll have some very intentional asks about how we can align our levels of government to meet this demand,” he told reporters, according to Crain’s Chicago Business.

That should help lower the temperature a little by ending the lobbying via news media, which usually doesn’t work in this business anyway. Hopefully, everybody can now get together on the same page and find some actual solutions.

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

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in Illinois today?…

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Governor Pritzker released his tax returns on Friday. Dan Petrella from the Tribune

    - Pritzker and his wife, M.K., reported $2.2 million in taxable income.
    - His trusts paid $7.2 million in state taxes and 42.3 million in federal taxes.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

  4 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, Oct 16, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news.

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This song popped up on a music feed the other night and, man, I almost forgot how much I love this stuff

Drink some mellow wine

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Friday news dump! Pritzker releases tax returns

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Nothing like a Friday news dump during crazy times. From the Pritzker campaign…

Reporters-

Attached are the state and federal tax return summaries for JB and MK Pritzker for the 2022 tax year.

According to the information provided by the trustees, in 2022, trusts benefitting JB Pritzker paid $7.2 million in Illinois taxes and $42.3 million in federal taxes.

JB and MK Pritzker made $1.1 million in personal charitable donations last year.

Will be a fun weekend going through all this. Click here for the federal return and click here for the state return.

  11 Comments      


Attorney general files lawsuit against CWLP over massive 2021 coal ash release

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The lawsuit is here. From Sierra Club Illinois

Today, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed a lawsuit against Springfield’s municipal utility City, Water, Light & Power (CWLP) for multiple violations of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act, Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB) regulations, and CWLP’s Clean Air Act operating permit when CWLP released a massive dust cloud of coal ash across the city in August of 2021.

The lawsuit comes on the heels of the September 7 decision from the IPCB that found CWLP responsible for ongoing groundwater contamination from leaching coal ash ponds in Springfield. The ruling advances litigation that was first filed in 2017 by Sierra Club, Prairie Rivers Network, and Springfield NAACP for documented violations of Illinois groundwater standards.

In addition to the mounting liability on CWLP for coal ash pollution, the utility faces critical decisions about how to meet state emissions reduction requirements and federal power plant standards. Although the Inflation Reduction Act has offered groundbreaking clean energy incentives for publicly owned utilities, CWLP has not conducted a public integrated resource plan since 2018 to guide future decision-making for the Dallman power plant and its future power supply.

In response, Sierra Club Illinois released the following statement:

“We applaud the Illinois Attorney General for taking this critical first step to hold City Water, Light & Power accountable for its pollution, broad mismanagement of handling coal ash, and failure to complete basic record-keeping,” said Christine Nannicelli, Senior Campaign Representative for the Beyond Coal Campaign with Sierra Club Illinois. “From CWLP’s leaching coal ash ponds contaminating groundwater next to Lake Springfield, to the massive coal ash dust cloud and maintenance failures at the center of the Attorney General’s lawsuit, CWLP has repeatedly demonstrated that it can not properly manage its dangerous waste from burning coal.”

“This is a clear call to action, not only for CWLP to make significant improvements to its handling of coal ash, but also to the City of Springfield to make a responsible transition plan beyond coal,” said Nick Dodson, Chair of the Sangamon Valley Group of Sierra Club Illinois. “Ongoing coal use at our power plant only continues to threaten our community and create financial liability for ratepayers. CWLP and Springfield City Council are overdue in their fiduciary responsibility to conduct our next utility planning process to transparently assess the best courses of action for the future of the Dallman plant and our power supply.”

  6 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More back and forth…


* Speaking of Congress

Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin is running for Congress against longtime U.S. Rep. Danny Davis while she continues to face fallout from recently revealed allegations of unethical conduct in her administration from two former top aides.

A former state representative first elected city treasurer in 2019, Conyears-Ervin was a prominent Davis supporter in 2022 when the incumbent faced a strong challenge from anti-violence activist Kina Collins. This time, Conyears-Ervin is challenging Davis, currently in his 14th term in Congress, and Collins, who is running again. […]

In a letter to the city from the former employees’ lawyers, the two alleged Conyears-Ervin had used government workers to plan her daughter’s birthday party, repeatedly misused taxpayer resources and attempted to force BMO Harris — one of the banks where city money is deposited — to issue a mortgage tied to the building that houses the aldermanic office for the treasurer’s husband, Ald. Jason Ervin, 28th.

Investigators with Chicago’s inspector general last month seized computers from the treasurer’s City Hall offices. The move by Inspector General Deborah Witzburg’s staff came after the release of the letter. It also came after the head of the Chicago Board of Ethics said the agency referred the letter to the inspector general’s office years ago but said the board couldn’t do more unless it received detailed findings from the IG.

* Press release…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) launched $2.5 million in funding for the new Illinois Economic Empowerment Centers Program (EEC). Eligible career education agencies and non-profit organizations can now apply to serve as EECs to provide entrepreneurship training to prepare individuals from historically marginalized communities to pursue business opportunities in a more inclusive business ecosystem. EECs will be selected through a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) process. […]

EECs will provide business advice, technical assistance, education, and cohort training, including resources and training tailored toward start-ups, existing businesses, and dislocated workers. Selected EECs will provide a variety of services, including management analysis and counseling, business planning and financial planning assistance, market analysis, referrals to educational programs and more.

* I asked Mark Denzler with the IMA if he rode the bus for this entire 8-day, 2,000-mile trip. Yep, he said. Mad props to him and everyone else…


* Hope this doesn’t happen in Illinois with the dreaded Copi…


* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

  17 Comments      


Illinois a ‘key player’ in $1 billion federal project to develop hydrogen energy hubs

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois is a key player in a Midwest project that will receive $1 billion in federal funding to develop hydrogen as a clean energy source.

The $1 trillion infrastructure bill that was passed in 2021 included $7 billion for clean-hydrogen hubs. The Biden administration announced seven hubs this morning, including the Midwest Alliance for Clean Hydrogen, known as MachH2, which involves Illinois, Michigan and Indiana.

The Biden administration estimates that the Midwest hub will create 12,100 construction jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs. […]

Illinois has been pursuing the project for more than a year. The group involved governors of Illinois, Michigan and Indiana, as well as 70 corporate and university partners, including energy companies such as Constellation Energy — which operates several Illinois nuclear plants — Exelon, Nicor, Invenergy and Ameren, as well as Argonne National Laboratory, the University of Illinois, University of Chicago, Governors State University, Illinois Institute of Technology, University of Illinois Chicago, Northwestern and several other Big Ten universities. Other corporate partners include BP and USG.

* From the Biden administration

Midwest Hydrogen Hub (Midwest Alliance for Clean Hydrogen (MachH2); Illinois, Indiana, Michigan) — Located in a key U.S. industrial and transportation corridor, the Midwest Hydrogen Hub will enable decarbonization through strategic hydrogen uses including steel and glass production, power generation, refining, heavy-duty transportation, and sustainable aviation fuel. This H2Hub plans to produce hydrogen by leveraging diverse and abundant energy sources, including renewable energy, natural gas, and low-cost nuclear energy. The Midwest Hydrogen Hub anticipates creating 13,600 direct jobs—12,100 in construction jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs. (Amount: up to $1 billion)

* Midwest Alliance for Clean Hydrogen…

“I couldn’t be prouder that once again, Illinois and the Midwest will be leading the way in equity-conscious clean energy development through the construction of a major hydrogen production and distribution hub,” said Illinois Governor JB Pritzker. “When I signed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act in 2019, it was with this sort of collaborative, economically sound manufacturing and expansion in mind, and we are seeing the results of those efforts play out every day. We’re grateful that the Biden administration has recognized our regional strength in workforce, education, and innovation, and look forward to working with MachH2 and our neighboring states to continue this project.”

* Sen. Sue Rezin…

“As a member of the Illinois Hydrogen Economy Task Force for the past year, I have been proud to support MachH2’s bid because I know that Illinois has the means and expertise to set a national standard for how clean hydrogen production and distribution can work,” said Sen. Rezin “Today’s announcement of this billion-dollar grant for the MachH2 is extremely exciting news as it is the next step in establishing this regional hydrogen hub that will help lead our state and nation to a better energy future.”

* Sen. Dave Koehler…

“When I led the hydrogen use tax credit, I wanted to display Illinois as an attractive option for hydrogen hubs that will support our agricultural, refinery and transportation industries and create jobs for workers across the state,” said Koehler. “With this announcement, our energy industry will continue to thrive and be known across the country. I would like to thank State Representative Terra Costa Howard and Deputy Governor for Public Safety, Infrastructure, Environment, and Energy Bria Scudder for being champions for Illinois energy.”

* US Rep. Nikki Budzinski…

“By embracing 21st century energy infrastructure, we can create good-paying jobs and protect our planet for future generations,” said Congresswoman Budzinski. “I’m thrilled that the MachH2 Regional Hydrogen Hub will be receiving up to $1 billion in federal support as we work to drive American energy production and economic independence. This project will build on Illinois’ strong leadership in renewable energy innovation.”

Thoughts?

  9 Comments      


Republicans, Democrats, And Independents Agree – NO ROFR In House Bill 3445

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A statewide survey in Illinois shows that voters are overwhelmingly against the higher electricity costs that would result from “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation.

Opposed to ROFR:

    • 73% Republicans
    • 81% Democrats
    • 75% Independents

Voters know that ROFR leads to higher electricity costs. As one woman told her representative on Facebook: “Kindly vote no for higher prices on electricity. We already are paying high prices on everything else!”

ROFR is widely referred to as “crony capitalism” that kills competition, leading to rate hikes for consumers. ROFR has been found to be unconstitutional in some states – one reason why Illinois voters also believe passage would lead to wasteful spending on lawyers and lawsuits.

The Illinois Commerce Commission explains the benefits of competition: “…competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.”

Transmission construction projects cost billions of dollars, and competition can deliver savings of 20-30%. Illinois ratepayers deserve affordable and reliable electricity. A vote for ROFR is a vote for higher electricity prices for consumers and a weaker grid.

Vote NO on ROFR!

See the survey results: https://www.fairenergyprices.org/il-rofr-survey

  Comments Off      


Man charged with making bomb threats in Cook County now charged with bomb threats in Kane County

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wednesday

Police have arrested a suspect for making numerous bomb threats to public libraries, businesses, suburban governments and at least one police station during approximately the past seven weeks, according to information from the Niles, Morton Grove and Skokie police departments.

Jacob N. Spiro, 23, of the 4600 block of Davis Street, Skokie, was arrested Monday in Niles by Niles police with the assistance of Morton Grove police and the FBI Joint Terrorist Task Force, police said in statements. […]

Niles police said 11 threats occurred in Niles and Morton Grove police said 12 occurred in Morton Grove, including some directed at the Morton Grove Library, the Village of Morton Grove and businesses.

Skokie police said in a statement that 16 threats were made in Skokie.

* This morning

Aurora police arrested and charged a 23-year-old Skokie man determined to be responsible for making the bomb threats against all three Aurora libraries in September, officials said.

Jacob Spiro, of the 4600 block of Davis Street, was charged with two counts of disorderly conduct, false bomb threats, after he was brought into custody Thursday following the issuance of an arrest warrant out of Kane County.

Aurora police worked in cooperation with the North Regional Major Crimes Task Force to investigate the bomb threats made Sept. 12 and Sept. 14 against the libraries located at 101 S. River St., 233 S. Constitution Drive and 555 S. Eola Road.

All three libraries were evacuated around 2:40 p.m. Sept. 12 after police were dispatched to investigate and conduct a physical search at each location, finding no devices, Patch reported. […]

The Skokie man is currently being held in the Cook County jail for unrelated charges, according to spokesperson Joseph Howe, who said additional charges for Spiro have not been ruled out.

  14 Comments      


*** UPDATED x2 *** No way to run a railroad

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Johnson’s deputy chief of staff, Cristina Pacione-Zayas, acknowledged the lack of buy-in from many aldermen who were asked to find locations to house migrants in the administration’s race against time before winter.

In September, Johnson rolled out his plan to house new migrants in winterized base camps rather than the Chicago police stations and airports where many are currently huddled. He tasked all 50 aldermen to help scout suitable locations. Pacione-Zayas told reporters Thursday only “about 25%” of them have fulfilled that request.

“We’ve had some of them that understood the assignment,” Pacione-Zayas said. “We’ve had others that, with their back against the wall, have now offered up things, but it’s a work in progress.” […]

She added that she doesn’t see [House Speaker Chris] Welch’s denial of migrant funding in the veto session as a closed door, and said the city appropriating only $150 million in next year’s budget for migrants is “an acknowledgment that this is a shared responsibility.”

1) Their “assignment”? That’s an interesting choice of words, particularly after what we discussed here yesterday.

2) CPZ, who I had great respect for when she was in the Senate, basically acknowledged that the city is reducing its appropriation by $50 million to put pressure on the state. I just don’t see how that’s gonna do anything but backfire.

I went through some other aspects of the Trib story with subscribers earlier today, so I’ll just leave it at that.

*** UPDATE 1 *** It’s actually worse than we thought

Mayor Brandon Johnson set aside $150 million to cover the cost of housing, feeding and caring for the men, women and children sent to Chicago from the southern border in 2024, even though that is less than half of what the city will have spent to care for Chicago’s newest arrivals through the end of 2023. […]

The migrant crisis is likely to cost taxpayers $361 million between January and December 2023, an increase of more than 4% in the past week, according to updated financial projections released Thursday by the mayor’s office.

*** UPDATE 2 *** At least they finally got the message. Maybe they can figure out an actual ask by next May…

  52 Comments      


Sorry, not buying it

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Wisconsin-based PAC referenced here, McHenry County Citizens for Lower Taxes, was funded solely by Republican congressional candidate Catalina Lauf…


* School board president Andy Bittman received the most money from the PAC. From the Northwest Herald story

The prospect of Huntley schools accepting a library grant from the state of Illinois – whose new anti-book-ban law means those who take the money can’t restrict material for “partisan or doctrinal” reasons – raised some red flags among District 158 school board members.

Board President Andy Bittman, who called the law “political popcorn” at a Thursday evening board meeting, said he was concerned about the strings attached to the funding, particularly whether they would limit the district’s ability to restrict what students can access on the internet.

“I don’t want to make the internet wide open,” Bittman said.

Wait. Let’s stop right there. According to a spokesperson for Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, the grant “has nothing to do with the internet.”

* Back to the story

Bittman and Murray ran for the school board last spring on a slate alongside board member Michael Thompson and former board member Gina Galligar, who resigned last month.

Thompson previously told the Northwest Herald about his objections to certain books, specifically mentioning “This Book is Gay” and “Gender Queer,” two books that discuss LGBTQ+ topics, but Thompson said that wasn’t why he objected to them.

Sure.

Also, according to the secretary of state’s office, this round of grants is exempt from the state’s new law.

Hey, they’re free to turn down the state money. But they do need to be called out on their “reasoning.”

[Isabel Miller contributed to this post.]

  21 Comments      


Best. Meteorologist. Ever.

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Not only has Tom Skilling been perhaps the nation’s most influential TV meteorologist (he’s a god to Chicago’s agriculture exchange markets), he also comes across as a truly nice and decent man. I don’t think I speak only for myself when I say that while I’ve never met him, I feel like I know him and I really like him. Block Club Chicago

Tom Skilling, longtime WGN meteorologist and perhaps one of Chicago’s most recognizable broadcast personalities, will retire from the role next year after 45 years delivering local weather forecasts.

Skilling made the announcement on WGN Evening News on Thursday night, reminiscing on his storied career over archives clips of him in action.

Skilling’s final broadcast will be Feb. 28, 2024.

He started working with WGN in 1978, saying with a chuckle: “I had hair back in those days.”

“If you had told young Tom Skilling that he would go on to have a career in weather spanning seven decades, working in Chicago, with some truly wonderful people, I think he would be overjoyed,” Skilling said. “And that’s how I feel today. Overjoyed at the colleagues I’ve worked with, the viewers I’ve met, the stories I’ve covered. Overjoyed and grateful. I wouldn’t trade a single minute of it for anything.”

* Tribune

An Aurora native, Skilling started his broadcasting career as a 14-year-old high school student at WKKD Radio in his hometown. He studied meteorology and journalism at the University of Wisconsin-Madison while continuing to work in radio and television. After stops in Madison and Milwaukee, where he was a meteorologist at WITI-TV, he landed at WGN, where Skilling became synonymous with Chicago weather for more than four decades. […]

In addition to his TV duties, Skilling hosted nearly 40 years of severe weather seminars at Fermilab in Batavia. […]

Skilling said he wants to do some traveling and he plans to remain in Chicago after retirement. Beyond that, his future remains up in the air.

* Watch his announcement

  42 Comments      


Do The Right Thing – Extend The Tax Credit Scholarship

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

If the General Assembly fails to take action to save the Tax Credit Scholarship Program, then over 9,500 students from low-income families will lose their scholarships, causing many to leave their best-fit schools.

The kids who stand to lose opportunities are 20% Black and 30% Hispanic – proportions considerably higher than demographic populations in Illinois — and 100% of these students are from families with demonstrated financial need. Additionally, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist hoping to receive the same opportunities as some of their peers.

This program is an investment in poverty reduction and economic acceleration, so lawmakers should do the right thing: Extend the Tax Credit Scholarship Program.

  Comments Off      


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

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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  Comments Off      


Open thread

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Friday! How are y’all doing today?…

  18 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois’ shortage of teachers have improved, John O’Connor from the AP writes

    - The report by Advance Illinois found the amount of new teachers has increased in recent years.
    - The report also revealed there are enough teachers in the state who could become principals. But those teachers are not distributed equally.
    - However, special education teachers and bilingual education are still declining.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Tribune | Illinois leaders tepid about more quick funding for Chicago’s migrant crisis: During an appearance with Gov. J.B. Pritzker, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said Chicago will not see a state grant for asylum-seekers in the fall veto session, when Springfield will have the option of designating additional funding for the fiscal year that ends June 30. That means the state might not provide more substantial financial help on migrants until legislators reconvene in the spring.

    * Tribune | Stuck in red tape: A Venezuelan migrant’s labyrinthine pursuit of the American dream for her US-born son: She had just received her son’s Social Security card, and was hoping to use it to apply for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. But, after waiting all day with her newborn, she was told she was at the wrong office. She needed to go somewhere else. Meanwhile, authorities still haven’t released her son’s birth certificate to her because she doesn’t have the right documents. “I’m really sad because if I want to bring Derick home, he needs a passport. And in order to get a passport, he needs his birth certificate,” she said in Spanish. “It’s all impossible.”

    * Sun-Times | ‘Karina’s Bill’ advocates aim to take guns from those accused of domestic violence : “I’m here today because two of my constituents, Karina Gonzalez and her daughter, were shot and killed just a few blocks away from my district office,” state Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, said at a press conference Thursday. […] Currently, an order of protection revokes a person’s FOID card but “does nothing to get guns out of the hands of those causing harm,” said Amanda Pyron, executive director of the Network, a collection of domestic violence prevention groups.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

  35 Comments      


Live coverage

Friday, Oct 13, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news.

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* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
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* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
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* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
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* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Open thread
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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
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